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- *hebrew.txt* Nvim
- VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Ron Aaron (and Avner Lottem)
- Hebrew Language support (options & mapping) for Vim *hebrew*
- The supporting 'rightleft' functionality was originally created by Avner
- Lottem. <alottem at gmail dot com> Ron Aaron <ron at ronware dot org> is
- currently helping support these features.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Introduction
- Hebrew-specific 'keymap' values are "hebrew" and "hebrewp".
- Hebrew-useful options are 'delcombine', 'allowrevins', 'revins', 'rightleft'
- and 'rightleftcmd'.
- The 'rightleft' mode reverses the display order, so characters are displayed
- from right to left instead of the usual left to right. This is useful
- primarily when editing Hebrew or other Middle-Eastern languages.
- See |rileft.txt| for further details.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Details
- + Options:
- + 'rightleft' ('rl') sets window orientation to right-to-left. This means
- that the logical text 'ABC' will be displayed as 'CBA', and will start
- drawing at the right edge of the window, not the left edge.
- + 'keymap' ('kmp') sets keyboard mapping. use values "hebrew" or "hebrewp"
- (the latter option enables phonetic mapping)
- + 'delcombine' ('deco'), boolean, allows one to remove the niqud or
- te`amim by pressing 'x' on a character (with associated niqud).
- + 'rightleftcmd' ('rlc') makes the command-prompt for searches show up on
- the right side. It only takes effect if the window is 'rightleft'.
- + Encoding:
- + Under Unix, ISO 8859-8 encoding (Hebrew letters codes: 224-250).
- + Under MS DOS, PC encoding (Hebrew letters codes: 128-154).
- + You should prefer using UTF8, as it supports the combining-characters
- ('deco' does nothing if UTF8 encoding is not active).
- + Vim arguments:
- + `vim -H file` starts editing a Hebrew file, i.e. 'rightleft' is set and
- 'keymap' is set to "hebrew".
- + Keyboard:
- + The 'allowrevins' option enables the CTRL-_ command in Insert mode.
- + CTRL-_ in Insert mode toggles 'revins'.
- CTRL-_ moves the cursor to the end of the typed text.
- Note: On some keyboards, CTRL-_ is mapped to CTRL-?.
- + Keyboard mapping while 'keymap' is "hebrew" (standard Israeli keyboard):
- q w e r t y u i o p
- / ' ק ר א ט ו ן ם פ
- a s d f g h j k l ; '
- ש ד ג כ ע י ח ל ך ף ,
- z x c v b n m , . /
- ז ס ב ה נ מ צ ת ץ .
- The 'keymap' keyboard can also insert niqud and te`amim. To see what
- those mappings are, look at the keymap file hebrew.vim etc.
- Typing backwards
- If the 'revins' (reverse insert) option is set, inserting happens backwards.
- This can be used to type Hebrew. When inserting characters the cursor is not
- moved and the text moves rightwards. A <BS> deletes the character under the
- cursor. CTRL-W and CTRL-U also work in the opposite direction. <BS>, CTRL-W
- and CTRL-U do not stop at the start of insert or end of line, no matter how
- the 'backspace' option is set.
- There is no reverse replace mode (yet).
- If the 'showmode' option is set, "-- REVERSE INSERT --" will be shown in the
- status line when reverse Insert mode is active.
- When the 'allowrevins' option is set, reverse Insert mode can be also entered
- and exited via CTRL-_.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Pasting when in a rightleft window
- When cutting text with the mouse and pasting it in a rightleft window
- the text will be reversed, because the characters come from the cut buffer
- from the left to the right, while inserted in the file from the right to
- the left. In order to avoid it, toggle 'revins' (by typing CTRL-? or CTRL-_)
- before pasting.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Hebrew characters and the 'isprint' variable
- Sometimes Hebrew character codes are in the non-printable range defined by
- the 'isprint' variable. For example in the Linux console, the Hebrew font
- encoding starts from 128, while the default 'isprint' variable is @,161-255.
- The result is that all Hebrew characters are displayed as ~x. To solve this
- problem, set isprint=@,128-255.
- vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
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