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19:45
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Q: What do I check when Vim digraphs are not working

flobaccaWhat can I do to make my vim digraphs work? In insert mode, I type in ctr-k a' and I get an underscore. :help digraph-table gives a table with the first 160 chars in the first column. The rest of the chars are underscores. ^@ ^A ^B ^C... ~Z ~[ ...

After typing Ctrl-K a', when you leave insert mode, move the cursor over the underscore you just inserted and type ga, what output do you get?
<_> 225, Hex 00e1, Octal 341
That's the right character. So the only problem is that it's rendered wrong. How are you running vim? In some terminal emulator?
in tmux. But I've tried it in the normal mac terminal, and I get question marks instead of underscores.
In normal mac terminal I get <?> <|a> <M-a> 225, Hex e1, Octal 341 . About the same as in tmux.
What do you get when you run perl -wE 'binmode STDOUT; say "\xE1"' in your terminal (outside of tmux)?
19:45
I get a question mark, '?'.
hello!
and with perl -wE 'binmode STDOUT, ":encoding(UTF-8)"; say "\xE1"' ?
... hello?
Outside of tmux, in normal mac terminal, in command mode :set encoding=utf-8 works. Typing in insert mode ctr-k a', results in the a with acute accent.
in mac terminal: perl -wE 'binmode STDOUT, ":encoding(UTF-8)"; say "\xE1"' ? results in á.
ok, good
that means your terminal expects text to be encoded in UTF-8
what does echo $LANG say?
in mac terminal echo $LANG results in en_US
the plot thickens
19:55
in tmux terminal echo $LANG results in en_US
in that environment, what does :set encoding? report in vim?
in tmux terminal perl -wE 'binmode STDOUT; say "\xE1"' results in nothing. Just a new line. Did I say it was ? mark before? Let me check.
in tmux pane, with a vim window, :set encoding? results in encoding=utf-8
ok, and outside tmux?
in mac terminal I type vim
then :set encoding? results in encoding=latin1
got 'em
try running LANG=en_US.UTF-8 vim
19:59
Also when I open a test.txt in vim in mac terminal, :set encoding? results in encoding=latin1
does :set encoding? report something different then?
At my mac terminal. I type LANG=en_US.UTF-8 vim
vim starts
I type :set encoding? results in encoding=latin1
well, that's not good
I did it twice, so I don't think there is a mistake.
basically, vim thinks your terminal wants text encoded as latin1, but it actually wants utf-8
that's why all non-ascii characters come out as ?
20:02
I think the latin1, is the one that gives the special characters (á). I think latin1 is what I want.
no, your terminal speaks utf-8
that's what you want in vim
my mac terminal that reports latin1 is showing the special characters. I don't follow.
the encoding option is documented as being initialized from the value of the LANG environment variable, but that doesn't seem to work like I want it to
huh? you said "I've tried it in the normal mac terminal, and I get question marks instead of underscores."
Sorry. I just typed this.perl -wE 'binmode STDOUT; say "\xE1"' this results in a question mark.
yeah, that's effectively latin1
your terminal doesn't understand latin1, so it just shows a question mark
(specifically an a with accent in latin1)
another fun one to try: perl -wE 'binmode STDOUT, ":encoding(UTF-8)"; say "\x{20AC}"'
if you see a euro sign (€), 1) your terminal understands utf-8 and 2) your font supports (at least some) non-latin1 characters
I'm pretty sure you could just force vim to use utf-8 by putting set encoding=utf-8 in your ~/.vimrc, but presumably tmux has the same problem of thinking that the outer terminal wants latin1
20:15
in the mac terminal, outside of tmux. When in vim :set encoding=utf-8 makes the symbols work, á shows.
and I'm not sure how to force tmux to assume a utf-8 environment
theoretically they should all take their encoding from LANG, but your LANG doesn't contain an encoding and I'm not familiar with mac stuff
In tmux in vim when I :set encoding=utf-8, the symbols don't work.
Okay, I don't know how to set it in tmux either, but at least I know it's a tmux issue. Which is a good thing to know.
most likely because tmux understands utf-8, but thinks the terminal it's running in wants latin1, so it ... hmm, no
that doesn't explain the symptoms
oh, it could!
if tmux understands utf-8, but doesn't know what encoding the terminal it's running in expects, it would probably replace all non-ASCII characters by something "safe", such as an underscore
20:34
looks like tmux stopped supporting characters other than utf-8 in 2016. Weird.
Thank you for your help.
Well, although inside of vim inside of tmux, it only shows underscores, the browser shows the correct symbol. I'll leave you alone, now.

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