Thread: default file encoding
Cream is a free, easy-to-use configuration of the Vim text editor
Brought to you by:
digitect
From: alex <apo...@fa...> - 2006-03-12 16:39:22
|
Hello, I want to set a default file encoding in cream, but I can not find the way to do it. In my $HOME/.vimrc I have set encoding=utf-8 set fileencoding=utf-8 And this works fine for vim-gtk && vim (in console) but cream always start as unix_latin1 by default, and I need to change manually in file menu from Format -> File Encoding -> Unicode ... Could anybody help me ? :-) |
From: Steve H. <dig...@mi...> - 2006-03-12 21:49:50
|
[I've opted this message onto the list, it is subscription only to cut down on spam. CC: response authors if you are unable/unwilling to join.] On Sun, 2006-03-12 at 17:39 +0100, alex wrote: > Hello, > > I want to set a default file encoding in cream, but I can not find > the way to do it. > > In my $HOME/.vimrc I have > > set encoding=utf-8 > set fileencoding=utf-8 > > And this works fine for vim-gtk && vim (in console) but cream > always start as unix_latin1 by default, and I need to change > manually in file menu from Format -> File Encoding -> Unicode ... > > Could anybody help me ? :-) What distribution? The default for me on Fedora Core is utf-8. (On Windows, the system default is latin1.) The correct cream starting procedure bypasses both vimrc and gvimrc, this must be in your binary somehow. (I know Gentoo likes to tweak things. :) Since Cream does not use the .vimrc, you can force settings like your two encoding lines above within ~/.cream/cream-conf.vim. -- Steve Hall [ digitect mindspring com ] :: Cream... something good to put in your Vim! :: http://cream.sourceforge.net |