On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 8:31 AM, Tony Mechelynck
<antoine.mechelynck@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> If a file in UTF-16le has a BOM (the codepoint U+FEFF at the very beginning
> of the file, which for UTF-16le means the bytes 0xFF 0xFE), then if you have
> set Vim to use UTF-8 'encoding' in your vimrc that file will usually be
> opened correctly (because the default 'fileencodings' -plural- starts with
> "ucs-bom"). See http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Working_with_Unicode about how to
> set Vim up like that.
>
Hi Antoine,
I'm not really that familiar with the different encoding types (UTF-8,
UTF-16, etc), but when I came across a strange <feff> character which
I think is related to what you're describing.
I open up two files in gedit and they seem to contain the same exact
line. But in vim, there's a strange character at the beginning
"<feff>". It's not a string, because if I go to the beginning of the
line and hit 'x', it deletes the entire <feff>, indicating it's some
sort of special hidden character.
What is this strange character? In Vi's hex mode (%!xxd), I can see
there is a sequence of bits "efbbbf", and the rest of the file seems
to somehow be offset
Thanks,
Ven
>
> Best regards,
> Tony.
> --
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