The string contains specific clues that reveal its likely origin:
: If a file is saved in Chinese (GBK or UTF-8) but opened by a browser or software expecting Western characters (Windows-1252), it interprets the bytes as random accented letters and symbols. The string contains specific clues that reveal its
: These characters often appear when UTF-8 encoded text is misread as Cyrillic. : When partially restored, the text appears to
This issue usually stems from a mismatch between the and the display decoding : Decoding the Snippet
: This is a height measurement commonly found in profile descriptions.
: When partially restored, the text appears to describe a person's physical attributes, including height (168cm), breast size, hips, and mentions of tattoos ("иє«" often relates to "body" or "tattoos" in Chinese contexts). Why Text Gets Garbled
The garbled text you provided is a classic example of . This occurs when text—likely originally Chinese—was encoded in one format (like UTF-8) but mistakenly read using another (such as Western or Cyrillic encodings like Windows-1251/1252). Decoding the Snippet