On Sep 10, 9:22 pm, Tony Mechelynck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> On 10/09/08 21:00, Szabolcs wrote:
>
>
>
> > I do have
>
> > set enc=utf-8
>
> > in my vimrc, but Windows gVim (on English WinXP) still cannot open
> > files with non-latin1 characters in the name.  For example, opening
> > őű.txt will try to open ou.txt.  I use version 7.2 downloaded from
> >www.vim.org.  What might be the difference between my and Vadim
> > Zeitlin's setup?
>
> I don't know. Vadim is using Cyrillic characters in his filenames and
> you're using accented Latin, but should that make a difference?
>
> Can you browse a directory containing that kind of files, and are the
> filenames displayed correctly?
>
> Let's say you try
>
>         :cd magyar
>         :view ./
>
> (or similar) how are the filenames displayed? If you put the cursor on a
> Hungarian double-acute-accented vowel and hit ga -- what does Vim answer?
>

Hello Tony,

It turns out that I was wrong.  Vim *can* open these files if I use
the :e command, or I browse to the file with Vim as you suggested, or
I just drag it onto the Vim window.  The problem is only present when
I use the "Edit with Vim" entry of the right click menu.  So I suppose
that the gvimext shell extension is the culprit.

There are easy workarounds, so this is not a serious problem.  I just
got so used to using the right-click menu for opening files with Vim
that I didn't even try other methods ...

Szabolcs
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