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Vim thai
Vim thai











  1. VIM THAI INSTALL
  2. VIM THAI WINDOWS 7
  3. VIM THAI DOWNLOAD

This might overwrite a file that is already there. Copy that in the same directory as gvim.exe, renaming it as libintl.dll. This zipfile contains the file intl.dll in the bin subdirectory.

VIM THAI DOWNLOAD

Click on the latest version ( 0.13.1 as of the date of this answer) and download the runtime zipfile (currently gettext-runtime-0.13.1.). Next follow the gettext-win32 link on Sourceforge page linked above. Put iconv.dll in the same directory as gvim.exe. The zipfile contains the file iconv.dll in the bin subdirectory.

vim thai

Click on the latest version 1.9.1 as of the date of this answer. You can access the files for both from SourceForge.įirst, follow the libiconv-win32 on the SourceForge page. and intl.dll from the win32 build of gettext. You will need to get iconv.dll from the win32 build of iconv.

VIM THAI INSTALL

Unpack iconv.dll and libintl.dll from the links provided on the vim download page, under iconv library and newer intl library and install them as directed on the aforementioned vim download page. I've gone 'round and 'round and 'round reading different forums and experimenting with various options that purport to enable gVim 7.4 for Windows to display the Thai characters.

vim thai

This differs from the gVim 7.4 instance running in Linux where :version DOES list multi_byte but does NOT include multi_byte_ime/dyn.Įvidently multi_byte_ime is about input method whereas multi_byte seems to be about supporting multi-byte characters(?) Whatever the significance of the two different ":version" outputs, I simply can't get gVim 7.4 for Windows to display the Thai characters whereas gVim 7.4 in Mint Linux does it straightaway.Īt this point I'm trying to figure out a way forward. I also duplicated the Linux instance's termencoding=utf-8.Īll that accomplished was that the Thai characters were displayed as a random string of "line noise" rather than, say, one empty box per Thai character.Īs confirmed by posts by several gVim 7.4 for Windows users, in gVim 7.4 the :version command lists multi_byte_ime/dyn but NOT multi_byte. My first thought was that in my Windows gVim instance, I merely need to duplicate the fileencodings settings from my Linux gVim instance, ala fileencodings=ucs-bom,utf-8,default,latin1. If in gVim 7.4 running under Mint Linux, I open the file the Thai characters are correctly displayed. If in Windows, I open the file in Geany 1.23.1 or Bluefish 2.2.5 for Windows, I get some nifty boxes, one per Thai character, all of which begin with x0E then a one-byte hex character code. 435 reviews 1,809 of 6,257 Restaurants in Milan - Seafood Asian Thai. If in Windows, I open the file in Notepad++ or jEdit or the Eclipse PyDev editor, the Thai characters are correctly presented.

VIM THAI WINDOWS 7

If in Windows 7 64-bit, I open the file in gVim 7.4, depending on which options I'm experimenting with, I get either rectangles or "line noise". Like at least one other Vim / gVim 7.4 for Windows user, I'm going 'round and 'round in circles trying to get gVim to properly display Unicode.













Vim thai