scriptencoding utf-8 " Enable nocompatible if has('vim_starting') if &compatible set nocompatible endif endif " Fsep && Psep if has('win16') || has('win32') || has('win64') let s:Psep = ';' let s:Fsep = '\' else let s:Psep = ':' let s:Fsep = '/' endif "Use English for anything in vim try if WINDOWS() silent exec 'lan mes en_US.UTF-8' elseif OSX() silent exec 'language en_US' else let s:uname = system('uname -s') if s:uname ==# "Darwin\n" " in mac-terminal silent exec 'language en_US' elseif s:uname ==# "SunOS\n" " in Sun-OS terminal silent exec 'lan en_US.UTF-8' else " in linux-terminal silent exec 'lan en_US.utf8' endif endif catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:E197/ call SpaceVim#logger#error('Can not set language to en_US.utf8') endtry " try to set encoding to utf-8 if WINDOWS() " Be nice and check for multi_byte even if the config requires " multi_byte support most of the time if has('multi_byte') " Windows cmd.exe still uses cp850. If Windows ever moved to " Powershell as the primary terminal, this would be utf-8 set termencoding=cp850 " Let Vim use utf-8 internally, because many scripts require this set encoding=utf-8 setglobal fileencoding=utf-8 " Windows has traditionally used cp1252, so it's probably wise to " fallback into cp1252 instead of eg. iso-8859-15. " Newer Windows files might contain utf-8 or utf-16 LE so we might " want to try them first. set fileencodings=ucs-bom,utf-8,gbk,utf-16le,cp1252,iso-8859-15 endif else " set default encoding to utf-8 set encoding=utf-8 set termencoding=utf-8 endif " Enable 256 colors if $COLORTERM ==# 'gnome-terminal' set t_Co=256 endif