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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TIKA-2771?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16680404#comment-16680404
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Nick Burch commented on TIKA-2771:
----------------------------------

I'm not sure we do. We have documents along with the encoding that their web 
server claimed them to have, but I'm not sure I'd trust those server reported 
ones very far....

It's possible that you could find some useful files in the ICU4J test suite, 
though those would probably need wrapping in html tags as I think they're 
mostly (all?) plain text

Otherwise, it might be worth finding some "complicated" and "typical" files 
from a range of non-English languages, in known encodings, then use iconv (or 
similar) to convert them to other encodings to test with

> enableInputFilter() wrecks charset detection for some short html documents
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: TIKA-2771
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TIKA-2771
>             Project: Tika
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: detector
>    Affects Versions: 1.19.1
>            Reporter: Hans Brende
>            Priority: Critical
>
> When I try to run the CharsetDetector on 
> http://w3c.github.io/microdata-rdf/tests/0065.html I get the very strange 
> most confident result of "IBM500" with a confidence of 60 when I enable the 
> input filter, *even if I set the declared encoding to UTF-8*.
> This can be replicated with the following code:
> {code:java}
> CharsetDetector detect = new CharsetDetector();
> detect.enableInputFilter(true);
> detect.setDeclaredEncoding("UTF-8");
> detect.setText(("<!DOCTYPE html>\n" +
>         "<div>\n" +
>         "  <div itemscope itemtype=\"http://schema.org/Person\"; id=\"amanda\" 
> itemref=\"a b\"></div>\n" +
>         "  <p id=\"a\">Name: <span itemprop=\"name\">Amanda</span></p>\n" +
>         "  <p id=\"b\" itemprop=\"band\">Jazz Band</p>\n" +
>         "</div>").getBytes(StandardCharsets.UTF_8));
> Arrays.stream(detect.detectAll()).forEach(System.out::println);
> {code}
> which prints:
> {noformat}
> Match of IBM500 in fr with confidence 60
> Match of UTF-8 with confidence 57
> Match of ISO-8859-9 in tr with confidence 50
> Match of ISO-8859-1 in en with confidence 50
> Match of ISO-8859-2 in cs with confidence 12
> Match of Big5 in zh with confidence 10
> Match of EUC-KR in ko with confidence 10
> Match of EUC-JP in ja with confidence 10
> Match of GB18030 in zh with confidence 10
> Match of Shift_JIS in ja with confidence 10
> Match of UTF-16LE with confidence 10
> Match of UTF-16BE with confidence 10
> {noformat}
> Note that if I do not set the declared encoding to UTF-8, the result is even 
> worse, with UTF-8 falling from a confidence of 57 to 15. 
> This is screwing up 1 out of 84 of my online microdata extraction tests over 
> in Any23 (as that particular page is being rendered into complete gibberish), 
> so I had to implement some hacky workarounds which I'd like to remove if 
> possible.
> EDIT: This issue may be related to TIKA-2737 and [this 
> comment|https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TIKA-539?focusedCommentId=13213524&page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#comment-13213524].



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