Hello Chris,
I've tried to print in Linux (I use Linux Mint version 8, the printer is the Print To PDF) and the result is the same as in Windows.
I think this is a bug.
On Wed, Dec 23, 2009 at 3:31 AM, Chris Jones <cjns1989@gmail.com> wrote:
On Sun, Dec 20, 2009 at 11:36:27AM EST, Đức Minh Thái wrote:U+1ED9 ộ LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX AND DOT BELOW
> Hello,
> I cannot get utf-8 characters printed correctly. For example:
>
> bột
>
> becomes
>
> bá»™t
See:
:help ga
In utf-8, this character is encoded by the following sequence of three
bytes:
0xe1, 0xbb, 0x99
See:
:help g8
This is what a utf-8 encoded file with the three characters 'bột'
actually contains:
00000000 62 e1 bb 99 74 0a |b...t.|
00000006
0x62 b LATIN SMALL LETTER B
0xe1,0xbb,0x99 ộ LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX AND DOT BELOW
0x74 t LATIN SMALL LETTER T
The final 0x0a is a line feed control character.
In Microsoft Windows' cp1252:
0xe1 á
0xbb »
0x99 ™
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows-1252
You do not give much detail as to where you see what, but I am probably
not far off the mark assuming that 'bột' is what you see when editing a
utf-8 encoded file in vim, and that 'bá»™t' is what you see on your
printout.
Being unfamiliar with Microsoft Windows, I'm speculating a bit, but it
does look like your printing software is processing the file as if it
were cp1252 rather than utf-8.
If your file is utf-8 encoded, why do you tell vim that it is ucs2..?
> My printing options are:
>
> set printfont=LMMono10:h10 " This is the LMMono from LaTeX Latin Modern
> set printoptions=number:y
> set printencoding=ucs-2le bomb
:h penc-option
In particular, this help file states that:
Code page 1252 print character encoding is used by default on Windows
and OS/2 platforms.
> Please help. Thank you!
I am not familiar with Microsoft Windows, so I don't really have an
answer to your question but you could try:
:set penc=
or..
:set penc=utf-8
and see if the 'bột' string prints correctly.
My understanding is that compiled with the adhoc +options, Vim should be
able to process utf-8 encoded files transparently on any platform but
you may also want to ask Vim to convert the file.
Take a look at:
:h ++enc
:h ++ff
If that doesn't help, please attach a small sample file, see if someone
on the list can come up with something more conclusive.
CJ
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