I'd like to cat a Swedish txt file.
For special characters (like ä or é) I get back these characters: �.
eg.
�r han fr�n Apornas planet.
I have multiple files from multiple sources and some of them gives back the correct results, (Eg. Det här är fel!) some of them produces the above mentioned issue.
Based on that I'm pretty sure, that the issue is with the file's character (en)coding, but I just simply can't find how to encode the file at the command line.
I've tried:
iconv -f UTF-8 -t UTF-16 file.txt
and similars.
But I've ended up in an error message all the time.
Do you have any tips?
Thanks!
Based on comments the solution was:
First execute:
chardet file.txt
to find out the character encoding.
Then:
iconv -f iso-8859-1 -t utf-8 file.txt
to create the "translation".
I have a document which contains various special characters such as é ÿ ° Æ oºi
I've written the following two commands which both work on 'single looking' characters such as à ± È.
However neither of which work with the special characters listed above.
This command works using two byte hex decimals (To replace é with A)
sed -i 's/\xc3\xA9/A/g' test.csv
This command uses utf8 to replace characters:
CHARS=$(python -c 'print u"\u00a9".encode("utf8")') sed -i 's/['"$CHARS"']/A/g' $filename
Either of these commands should work but neither do.
It looks like you are viewing UTF-8 data as ISO-8859-1 (aka latin1).
This is what you'd experience when handling a UTF-8 encoded file in a ISO-8859-1 terminal:
$ cat file
The café has crème brûlée.
$ iconv -f utf-8 -t iso-8859-1 < file
The café has crème brûlée.
$ iconv -c -f utf-8 -t ascii//ignore < file
The caf has crme brle.
This usually only happens for PuTTY users, because PuTTY is one of the few terminal emulators that still uses ISO-8859-1 by default. You can set it to use UTF-8 in the PuTTY configuration.
Here's the same example in a UTF-8 terminal:
$ cat file
The café has crème brûlée.
$ iconv -f utf-8 -t iso-8859-1 < file
The caf� has cr�me br�l�e.
$ iconv -c -f utf-8 -t ascii//ignore < file
The caf has crme brle.
The only correct solution is to fix your setup so that it uses UTF-8 throughout. ISO-8859-1 does not support the languages and features we take for granted today, and is not a useful option.
I'm trying to transcode a bunch of files from US-ASCII to UTF-8.
For that, I'm using iconv:
iconv -f US-ASCII -t UTF-8 file.php > file-utf8.php
My original files are US-ASCII encoded, which makes the conversion not happen. Apparently it occurs because ASCII is a subset of UTF-8...
iconv US ASCII to UTF-8 or ISO-8859-15
And quoting:
There's no need for the textfile to appear otherwise until non-ASCII
characters are introduced
True. If I introduce a non-ASCII character in the file and save it, let's say with Eclipse, the file encoding (charset) is switched to UTF-8.
In my case, I'd like to force iconv to transcode the files to UTF-8 anyway. Whether there is non-ASCII characters in it or not.
Note: The reason is my PHP code (non-ASCII files...) is dealing with some non-ASCII string, which causes the strings not to be well interpreted (french):
Il était une fois... l'homme série animée mythique d'Albert
Barillé (Procidis), 1ère
...
US ASCII -- is -- a subset of UTF-8 (see Ned's answer below)
Meaning that US ASCII files are actually encoded in UTF-8
My problem came from somewhere else
ASCII is a subset of UTF-8, so all ASCII files are already UTF-8 encoded. The bytes in the ASCII file and the bytes that would result from "encoding it to UTF-8" would be exactly the same bytes. There's no difference between them, so there's no need to do anything.
It looks like your problem is that the files are not actually ASCII. You need to determine what encoding they are using, and transcode them properly.
Short Answer
iconv will use whatever input/output encoding you specify regardless of what the contents of the file are. If you specify the wrong input encoding, the output will be garbled.
You can try to use the file command to detect a file's type/encoding.
file only guesses at the file encoding and may be wrong (especially in cases where special characters only appear late in large files).
even after running iconv, file may not report any change due to the limited way in which file attempts to guess at the encoding. For a specific example, see my long answer.
you can use hexdump to look at bytes of non-7-bit-ASCII text and compare against code tables for common encodings (ISO 8859-*, UTF-8) to decide for yourself what the encoding is.
7-bit ASCII (aka US ASCII) is identical at a byte level to UTF-8 and the 8-bit ASCII extensions (ISO 8859-*). So if your file only has 7-bit characters, then you can call it UTF-8, ISO 8859-* or US ASCII because at a byte level they are all identical. It only makes sense to talk about UTF-8 and other encodings (in this context) once your file has characters outside the 7-bit ASCII range.
Long Answer
I ran into this today and came across your question. Perhaps I can add a little more information to help other people who run into this issue.
ASCII
First, the term ASCII is overloaded, and that leads to confusion.
7-bit ASCII only includes 128 characters (00-7F or 0-127 in decimal). 7-bit ASCII is also sometimes referred to as US-ASCII.
ASCII
UTF-8
UTF-8 encoding uses the same encoding as 7-bit ASCII for its first 128 characters. So a text file that only contains characters from that range of the first 128 characters will be identical at a byte level whether encoded with UTF-8 or 7-bit ASCII.
Codepage layout
ISO 8859-* and other ASCII Extensions
The term extended ASCII (or high ASCII) refers to eight-bit or larger character encodings that include the standard seven-bit ASCII characters, plus additional characters.
Extended ASCII
ISO 8859-1 (aka "ISO Latin 1") is a specific 8-bit ASCII extension standard that covers most characters for Western Europe. There are other ISO standards for Eastern European languages and Cyrillic languages. ISO 8859-1 includes encoding for characters like Ö, é, ñ and ß for German and Spanish (UTF-8 supports these characters too, but the underlying encoding is different).
"Extension" means that ISO 8859-1 includes the 7-bit ASCII standard and adds characters to it by using the 8th bit. So for the first 128 characters, ISO 8859-1 is equivalent at a byte level to both ASCII and UTF-8 encoded files. However, when you start dealing with characters beyond the first 128, you are no longer UTF-8 equivalent at the byte level, and you must do a conversion if you want your "extended ASCII" encoded file to be UTF-8 encoded.
ISO 8859 and proprietary adaptations
Before the ISO 8-bit ascii extension standards (ISO 8859-*) were released, there were many proprietary 8-bit code-pages (mapping bytes to characters) from IBM, DEC, HP, Apple, etc.
One notable way in which ISO character sets differ from code pages is
that the character positions 128 to 159, corresponding to ASCII
control characters with the high-order bit set, are specifically
unused and undefined in the ISO standards, though they had often been
used for printable characters in proprietary code pages
i.e. in all the ISO 8-bit extensions, characters 128-159 (80-9F) are not used, whereas in the previous proprietary code-pages these were used for ASCII control characters (that already exist in 7-bit ascii) but with the 8th bit set.
The above statement about 80-9F not being used/defined is not exactly true. Apparently in the ISO/IEC standard, this range is defined for control characters, but in the IANA character set of the same name, this range is not defined. I got this from some archived discussion on the confusingly written and misleading wikipedia page for windows-1252...but was unable to verify as the ISO standards are paywalled.
windows-1252
...to further confuse things.
After the ISO 8-bit extensions came out, Microsoft released a new code-page windows-1252 which is a superset* of ISO-8859-1 that uses the unused ISO range of characters 128-159 (80-9F) for things like smart quotes. Compare rows 8x and 9x of the code tables (iso-8859-1 windows-1252) if you don't understand.
Superset means that if you render ISO-8859-1 as windows-1252 it looks fine (because all printable characters in ISO-8859-1 also exist in windows-1252 with the same encoding)...but if you try to render windows-1252 as ISO-8859-1 and the rendered data happens to contain bytes in the 128-159 range, then those characters won't display properly.
It is very common to mislabel Windows-1252 text with the charset label
ISO-8859-1. A common result was that all the quotes and apostrophes
(produced by "smart quotes" in word-processing software) were replaced
with question marks or boxes on non-Windows operating systems, making
text difficult to read. Most modern web browsers and e-mail clients
treat the media type charset ISO-8859-1 as Windows-1252 to accommodate
such mislabeling. This is now standard behavior in the HTML5
specification, which requires that documents advertised as ISO-8859-1
actually be parsed with the Windows-1252 encoding.
So in the html5 standard, there is no encoding named ISO-8859-1, instead iso-8859-1 is one of multiple labels for encoding windows-1252.
windows-1252
html5 encodings
* - note, not technically a superset of the ISO/IEC 8859-1 standard, because the standard defines control characters in the 80-9F range and windows-1252 defines different characters in this range. But the IANA characterset 8859-1 does NOT define characters in this range, so technically it is a superset of the IANA characterset but not the ISO/IEC standard? (This is why standards should be open, so we can check these things.)
Detecting encoding with file
One lesson I learned today is that we can't trust file to always give correct interpretation of a file's character encoding.
file (command)
The command tells only what the file looks like, not what it is (in the case where file looks at the content). It is easy to fool the program by putting a magic number into a file the content of which does not match it. Thus the command is not usable as a security tool other than in specific situations.
file looks for magic numbers in the file that hint at the type, but these can be wrong, no guarantee of correctness. file also tries to guess the character encoding by looking at the bytes in the file. Basically file has a series of tests that helps it guess at the file type and encoding.
My file is a large CSV file. file reports this file as US ASCII encoded, which is WRONG.
$ ls -lh
total 850832
-rw-r--r-- 1 mattp staff 415M Mar 14 16:38 source-file
$ file -b --mime-type source-file
text/plain
$ file -b --mime-encoding source-file
us-ascii
My file has umlauts in it (ie Ö). The first non-7-bit-ascii doesn't show up until over 100k lines into the file. I suspect this is why file doesn't realize the file encoding isn't US-ASCII.
$ pcregrep -no '[^\x00-\x7F]' source-file | head -n1
102321:�
I'm on a Mac, so using PCRE's grep. With GNU grep you could use the -P option. Alternatively on a Mac, one could install coreutils (via Homebrew or other) in order to get GNU grep.
I haven't dug into the source-code of file, and the man page doesn't discuss the text encoding detection in detail, but I am guessing file doesn't look at the whole file before guessing encoding.
Whatever my file's encoding is, these non-7-bit-ASCII characters break stuff. My German CSV file is ;-separated and extracting a single column doesn't work.
$ cut -d";" -f1 source-file > tmp
cut: stdin: Illegal byte sequence
$ wc -l *
3081673 source-file
102320 tmp
3183993 total
Note the cut error and that my "tmp" file has only 102320 lines with the first special character on line 102321.
Let's take a look at how these non-ASCII characters are encoded. I dump the first non-7-bit-ascii into hexdump, do a little formatting, remove the newlines (0a) and take just the first few.
$ pcregrep -o '[^\x00-\x7F]' source-file | head -n1 | hexdump -v -e '1/1 "%02x\n"'
d6
0a
Another way. I know the first non-7-bit-ASCII char is at position 85 on line 102321. I grab that line and tell hexdump to take the two bytes starting at position 85. You can see the special (non-7-bit-ASCII) character represented by a ".", and the next byte is "M"... so this is a single-byte character encoding.
$ tail -n +102321 source-file | head -n1 | hexdump -C -s85 -n2
00000055 d6 4d |.M|
00000057
In both cases, we see the special character is represented by d6. Since this character is an Ö which is a German letter, I am guessing that ISO 8859-1 should include this. Sure enough, you can see "d6" is a match (ISO/IEC 8859-1).
Important question... how do I know this character is an Ö without being sure of the file encoding? The answer is context. I opened the file, read the text and then determined what character it is supposed to be. If I open it in Vim it displays as an Ö because Vim does a better job of guessing the character encoding (in this case) than file does.
So, my file seems to be ISO 8859-1. In theory I should check the rest of the non-7-bit-ASCII characters to make sure ISO 8859-1 is a good fit... There is nothing that forces a program to only use a single encoding when writing a file to disk (other than good manners).
I'll skip the check and move on to conversion step.
$ iconv -f iso-8859-1 -t utf8 source-file > output-file
$ file -b --mime-encoding output-file
us-ascii
Hmm. file still tells me this file is US ASCII even after conversion. Let's check with hexdump again.
$ tail -n +102321 output-file | head -n1 | hexdump -C -s85 -n2
00000055 c3 96 |..|
00000057
Definitely a change. Note that we have two bytes of non-7-bit-ASCII (represented by the "." on the right) and the hex code for the two bytes is now c3 96. If we take a look, seems we have UTF-8 now (c3 96 is the encoding of Ö in UTF-8) UTF-8 encoding table and Unicode characters
But file still reports our file as us-ascii? Well, I think this goes back to the point about file not looking at the whole file and the fact that the first non-7-bit-ASCII characters don't occur until late in the file.
I'll use sed to stick a Ö at the beginning of the file and see what happens.
$ sed '1s/^/Ö\'$'\n/' source-file > test-file
$ head -n1 test-file
Ö
$ head -n1 test-file | hexdump -C
00000000 c3 96 0a |...|
00000003
Cool, we have an umlaut. Note the encoding though is c3 96 (UTF-8). Hmm.
Checking our other umlauts in the same file again:
$ tail -n +102322 test-file | head -n1 | hexdump -C -s85 -n2
00000055 d6 4d |.M|
00000057
ISO 8859-1. Oops! It just goes to show how easy it is to get the encodings screwed up. To be clear, I've managed to create a mix of UTF-8 and ISO 8859-1 encodings in the same file.
Let's try converting our mangled (mixed encoding) test file with the umlaut (Ö) at the front and see what happens.
$ iconv -f iso-8859-1 -t utf8 test-file > test-file-converted
$ head -n1 test-file-converted | hexdump -C
00000000 c3 83 c2 96 0a |.....|
00000005
$ tail -n +102322 test-file-converted | head -n1 | hexdump -C -s85 -n2
00000055 c3 96 |..|
00000057
The first umlaut that was UTF-8 was interpreted as ISO 8859-1 since that is what we told iconv...not what we want, but that is what we told iconf to do. The second umlaut is correctly converted from d6 (ISO 8859-1) to c3 96 (UTF-8).
I'll try again, but this time I will use Vim to do the Ö insertion instead of sed. Vim seemed to detect the encoding better before (as "latin1" aka ISO 8859-1) so perhaps it will insert the new Ö with a consistent encoding.
$ vim source-file
$ head -n1 test-file-2
�
$ head -n1 test-file-2 | hexdump -C
00000000 d6 0d 0a |...|
00000003
$ tail -n +102322 test-file-2 | head -n1 | hexdump -C -s85 -n2
00000055 d6 4d |.M|
00000057
Indeed vim used the correct/consistent ISO encoding when inserting the character at the beginning of the file.
Now the test: Does file do a better job of recognizing the encoding with special characters at the beginning of the file?
$ file -b --mime-encoding test-file-2
iso-8859-1
$ iconv -f iso-8859-1 -t utf8 test-file-2 > test-file-2-converted
$ file -b --mime-encoding test-file-2-converted
utf-8
Yes it does! Moral of the story. Don't trust file to always guess your encoding right. It is easy to mix encodings within the same file. When in doubt, look at the hex.
A hack that would address this specific limitation of file when dealing with large files would be to shorten the file to make sure that special (non-ascii) characters appear early in the file so file is more likely to find them.
$ first_special=$(pcregrep -o1 -n '()[^\x00-\x7F]' source-file | head -n1 | cut -d":" -f1)
$ tail -n +$first_special source-file > /tmp/source-file-shorter
$ file -b --mime-encoding /tmp/source-file-shorter
iso-8859-1
You could then use (presumably correct) detected encoding to feed as input to iconv to ensure you are converting correctly.
Update
Christos Zoulas updated file to make the amount of bytes looked at configurable. One day turn-around on the feature request, awesome!
http://bugs.gw.com/view.php?id=533
Allow altering how many bytes to read from analyzed files from the command line
The feature was released in file version 5.26.
Looking at more of a large file before making a guess about encoding takes time. However, it is nice to have the option for specific use-cases where a better guess may outweigh additional time and I/O.
Use the following option:
−P, −−parameter name=value
Set various parameter limits.
Name Default Explanation
bytes 1048576 max number of bytes to read from file
Something like...
file_to_check="myfile"
bytes_to_scan=$(wc -c < $file_to_check)
file -b --mime-encoding -P bytes=$bytes_to_scan $file_to_check
... it should do the trick if you want to force file to look at the whole file before making a guess. Of course, this only works if you have file 5.26 or newer.
Update 2023-02-06
Thanks #theprivileges for pointing out the parameter behaviour has changed as of file 5.44. There is now an additional encoding parameter that specifies how many bytes of the bytes read by file should be used for encoding determination.
e.g.
file_to_check="myfile"
bytes_to_scan=$(wc -c < $file_to_check)
file -b --mime-encoding -P bytes=$bytes_to_scan -P encoding=$bytes_to_scan file_to_check="myfile"
Note! It appears with this change, that the bytes of the file used for determining encoding is now capped to a max of 64k. So for very large files where special characters only occur late in the file, you may need to resort to a different workaround (e.g. moving special characters up in the file for proper detection).
Forcing file to display UTF-8 instead of US-ASCII
Some of the other answers seem to focus on trying to make file display UTF-8 even if the file only contains plain 7-bit ascii. If you think this through you should probably never want to do this.
If a file contains only 7-bit ascii but the file command is saying the file is UTF-8, that implies that the file contains some characters with UTF-8 specific encoding. If that isn't really true, it could cause confusion or problems down the line. If file displayed UTF-8 when the file only contained 7-bit ascii characters, this would be a bug in the file program.
Any software that requires UTF-8 formatted input files should not have any problem consuming plain 7-bit ascii since this is the same on a byte level as UTF-8. If there is software that is using the file command output before accepting a file as input and it won't process the file unless it "sees" UTF-8...well that is pretty bad design. I would argue this is a bug in that program.
If you absolutely must take a plain 7-bit ascii file and convert it to UTF-8, simply insert a single non-7-bit-ascii character into the file with UTF-8 encoding for that character and you are done. But I can't imagine a use-case where you would need to do this. The easiest UTF-8 character to use for this is the Byte Order Mark (BOM) which is a special non-printing character that hints that the file is non-ascii. This is probably the best choice because it should not visually impact the file contents as it will generally be ignored.
Microsoft compilers and interpreters, and many pieces of software on
Microsoft Windows such as Notepad treat the BOM as a required magic
number rather than use heuristics. These tools add a BOM when saving
text as UTF-8, and cannot interpret UTF-8 unless the BOM is present
or the file contains only ASCII.
This is key:
or the file contains only ASCII
So some tools on windows have trouble reading UTF-8 files unless the BOM character is present. However this does not affect plain 7-bit ascii only files. I.e. this is not a reason for forcing plain 7-bit ascii files to be UTF-8 by adding a BOM character.
Here is more discussion about potential pitfalls of using the BOM when not needed (it IS needed for actual UTF-8 files that are consumed by some Microsoft apps). https://stackoverflow.com/a/13398447/3616686
Nevertheless if you still want to do it, I would be interested in hearing your use case. Here is how. In UTF-8 the BOM is represented by hex sequence 0xEF,0xBB,0xBF and so we can easily add this character to the front of our plain 7-bit ascii file. By adding a non-7-bit ascii character to the file, the file is no longer only 7-bit ascii. Note that we have not modified or converted the original 7-bit-ascii content at all. We have added a single non-7-bit-ascii character to the beginning of the file and so the file is no longer entirely composed of 7-bit-ascii characters.
$ printf '\xEF\xBB\xBF' > bom.txt # put a UTF-8 BOM char in new file
$ file bom.txt
bom.txt: UTF-8 Unicode text, with no line terminators
$ file plain-ascii.txt # our pure 7-bit ascii file
plain-ascii.txt: ASCII text
$ cat bom.txt plain-ascii.txt > plain-ascii-with-utf8-bom.txt # put them together into one new file with the BOM first
$ file plain-ascii-with-utf8-bom.txt
plain-ascii-with-utf8-bom.txt: UTF-8 Unicode (with BOM) text
People say you can't and I understand you may be frustrated when asking a question and getting such an answer.
If you really want it to show in UTF-8 instead of US ASCII then you need to do it in two steps.
First:
iconv -f us-ascii -t utf-16 yourfile > youfileinutf16.*
Second:
iconv -f utf-16le -t utf-8 yourfileinutf16 > yourfileinutf8.*
Then if you do a file -i, you'll see the new character set is UTF-8.
I think Ned's got the core of the problem -- your files are not actually ASCII. Try
iconv -f ISO-8859-1 -t UTF-8 file.php > file-utf8.php
I'm just guessing that you're actually using ISO 8859-1. It is popular with most European languages.
There is no difference between US ASCII and UTF-8, so there isn't any need to reconvert it.
But here a little hint, if you have trouble with special-chars while recoding.
Add //TRANSLIT after the source-charset-Parameter.
Example:
iconv -f ISO-8859-1//TRANSLIT -t UTF-8 filename.sql > utf8-filename.sql
This helps me with strange types of quotes, which are always breaking the character set reencode process.
Here's a script that will find all files matching a pattern you pass it, and then converting them from their current file encoding to UTF-8. If the encoding is US ASCII, then it will still show as US ASCII, since that is a subset of UTF-8.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
find . -name "${1}" |
while read line;
do
echo "***************************"
echo "Converting ${line}"
encoding=$(file -b --mime-encoding ${line})
echo "Found Encoding: ${encoding}"
iconv -f "${encoding}" -t "utf-8" ${line} -o ${line}.tmp
mv ${line}.tmp ${line}
done
vim -es '+set fileencoding=utf-8' '+wq!' file
-es runs vim in ex and script mode, thus nothing is rendered. Then it executes the command where the file encoding is set (vim takes care of the details) and then the file is closed '+wq!'.
I am late to the question but the previous answers using iconv did simply not do the job and left the file in a state with non utf-8 characters even when adding -c to drop those.
You can use file -i file_name to check what exactly your original file format is.
Once you get that, you can do the following:
iconv -f old_format -t utf-8 input_file -o output_file
I accidentally encoded a file in UTF-7 and had a similar issue. When I typed file -i name.file I would get charset=us-ascii.
iconv -f us-ascii -t utf-9//translit name.file would not work since I've gathered UTF-7 is a subset of US ASCII, as is UTF-8.
To solve this, I entered
iconv -f UTF-7 -t UTF-8//TRANSLIT name.file -o output.file
I'm not sure how to determine the encoding other than what others have suggested here.
The following converts all files in a folder.
Create backup folder of original files.
mkdir backup
Convert all files in US ASCII encoding to UTF-8 (single line command)
for f in $(file -i * .sql | grep us-ascii | cut -d ':' -f 1); do iconv -f us-ascii -t utf-8 $f -o $ f.utf-8 && mv $f backup / && mv "$f.utf-8" $f; done
Convert all files in encoding ISO 8859-1 to UTF-8 (single line command)
for f $(file -i * .sql | grep iso-8859-1 | cut -d ':' -f 1); do iconv -f iso-8859-1 -t utf-8 $f -o $f.utf-8 && mv $f backup / && mv "$f.utf-8" $f; done
Inspired a lot by Mathieu's answer and Marcelo's answer:
I face the need to see file -i myfile.htm to show UTF-8 instead of US ASCII (yes, I know it is a subset of UTF-8).
So here is a one liner inspired from previous answers that will convert on Linux all *.htm file from US ASCII to UTF-8 so file -i will show you UTF-8. You can change *.htm (two places in the command below) to fit your need.
mkdir backup 2>/dev/null; for f in $(file -i *.htm | grep -i us-ascii | cut -d ':' -f 1); do iconv -f "us-ascii" -t "utf-16" $f > $f.tmp; iconv -f "utf-16le" -t "utf-8" $f.tmp > $f.utf8; cp $fic backup/; mv $f.utf8 $f; rm $f.tmp; done; file -i *.htm
Just FYI, file doesn't check whole content (as already mentioned in the long answer from mattpr) to detect encoding of a file by default. To force the whole content to be scanned for charset detection, this code can be used...
file_to_check="myfile"
bytes_to_scan=$(wc -c < $file_to_check)
file -b --mime-encoding --parameter encoding=$bytes_to_scan $file_to_check
See also corresponding manual https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/file.1.html
I am trying to convert a php file (client.php) from utf-8 to iso-8859-1 and the following command does nothing on the file:
iconv -f UTF-8 -t ISO-8859-1 client.php
Upon execution the original file contents are displayed.
In fact, when I check for the file's encoding after executing iconv with:
file -I client.php
The same old utf-8 is shown:
client.php: text/x-php; charset=utf-8
The iconv utility shall convert the encoding of characters in file from one codeset to another and write the results to standard output.
Here's a solution :
Write stdout to a temporary file and rename the temporary file
iconv -f UTF-8 -t ISO_8859-1 client.php > client_temp.php && mv -f client_temp.php client.php
ASCII, UTF-8 and ISO-8859 are 100% identical encodings for the lowest 128 characters. If your file only contains characters in that range (which is basically the set of characters you find on a common US English keyboard), there's no difference between these encodings.
My guess what's happening: A plain text file has no associated encoding meta data. You cannot know the encoding of a plain text file just by looking at it. What the file utility is doing is simply giving its best guess, and since there's no difference it prefers to tell you the file is UTF-8 encoded, which technically it may well be.
In addition to jackjr300 with the following One-Liner you can do it for all php files in the current folder:
for filename in *.php; do iconv -f ISO_8859-1 -t UTF-8 $filename > temp_$filename && mv -f ./temp_$filename ./$filename; done