ruby `encode': "\xC3" from ASCII-8BIT to UTF-8 (Encoding::UndefinedConversionError) ruby `encode': "\xC3" from ASCII-8BIT to UTF-8 (Encoding::UndefinedConversionError) ruby ruby

ruby `encode': "\xC3" from ASCII-8BIT to UTF-8 (Encoding::UndefinedConversionError)


File.open(yml_file, 'w') should be change to File.open(yml_file, 'wb')


It seems you should use another encoding for the object. You should set the proper codepage to the variable @tree, for instance, using instead of by using @tree.force_encoding('ISO-8859-1'). Because ASCII-8BIT is used just for binary files.

To find the current external encoding for ruby, issue:

Encoding.default_external

If solves the problem, the problem was in default codepage (encoding), so to resolve it you have to set the proper default codepage (encoding), by either:

  1. In ruby to change encoding to or another proper one, do as follows:

    Encoding.default_external = Encoding::UTF_8
  2. In , grep current valid set up:

    $ sudo env|grep UTF-8LC_ALL=ru_RU.UTF-8LANG=ru_RU.UTF-8

    Then set them in .bashrc properly, in a similar way, but not exactly with ru_RU language, such as the following:

    export LC_ALL=ru_RU.UTF-8export LANG=ru_RU.UTF-8


I just suffered through a number of hours trying to fix a similar problem. I'd checked my locales, database encoding, everything I could think of and was still getting ASCII-8BIT encoded data from the database.

Well, it turns out that if you store text in a binary field, it will automatically be returned as ASCII-8BIT encoded text, which makes sense, however this can (obviously) cause problems in your application.

It can be fixed by changing the column encoding back to :text in your migrations.