If you use linux, then there are chances that you have font like Lohit
Hindi or Lohit Devanagari, if not here is the GPL'ed Lohit Devanagari:
http://drop.io/3d0o6m5

On Sep 24, 7:51 pm, "Benjamin R. Haskell" <v...@benizi.com> wrote:
> On Fri, 24 Sep 2010, Ujjwol (उज्जवल लामिछाने) wrote:
> > On Sep 24, 3:27 pm, Marc Weber <marco-owe...@gmx.de> wrote:
> >> Excerpts from Ujjwol (उज्जवल लामिछाने)'s message of Fri Sep 24 08:56:46 
> >> +0200 2010:
>
> >>> Guys, I am learning vim and it is great. But the problem with
> >>> vim/gvim is that it doesn't support any complex scripts like
> >>> Devanāgarī. It is not rendered properly. See the screenshots below:
>
> >>> Rendering in Vim
> >>>http://i.imgur.com/wqNh5.png
>
> >>> Correct Rendering which is displayed gEdit/emacs/KWrite
> >>>http://i.imgur.com/Zui3y.png
>
> >>> Is there any way to make vim/gvim support complex scripts? This
> >>> affects to all Indic scripts. Yes! I tried changing font just in
> >>> case, but it didn't work.
>
> >> I don't know that topic very well. You may want to try an utf-8 aware
> >> terminal instead to find out whether the gvim terminal causes the
> >> trouble.  I'm not sure whether knowing this would help much. But
> >> that's what I would try next.
>
> >> Marc Weber
>
> > Problem is I don't know any terminal that supports unicode. I tried
> > gnome-terminal, konsole, xterm and rxvt. They all don't render
> > properly.
>
> rxvt-unicode is my terminal emulator of choice.
>
> mlterm renders text better when shaping is required, IME.
>
> I don't have any Devanāgarī-capable fonts installed here at work.  Will
> test tonight when I get home or tomorrow.
>
> --
> Best,
> Ben

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