I am finding myself using the point d'irony (⸮) more and more. However, vim spelling does not recognise it as a valid punctuation character.
How can I add it to vim so that the spelling works?
I am finding myself using the point d'irony (⸮) more and more. However, vim spelling does not recognise it as a valid punctuation character.
How can I add it to vim so that the spelling works?
One way to solve this problem is to add the character directly to vim as a defined punctuation mark. The way you do this is modify the vim source file, mbyte.c, and then recompile vim. This file is located in the main /src trunk (see https://code.google.com/p/vim/source/browse/src/mbyte.c). The function you want to modify starts like this:
/*
* Get class of a Unicode character.
* 0: white space
* 1: punctuation
* 2 or bigger: some class of word character.
*/
int
utf_class(c)
int c;
{
/* sorted list of non-overlapping intervals */
static struct clinterval
{
unsigned int first;
unsigned int last;
unsigned int class;
} classes[] =
{
{0x037e, 0x037e, 1}, /* Greek question mark */
{0x0387, 0x0387, 1}, /* Greek ano teleia */
{0x055a, 0x055f, 1}, /* Armenian punctuation */
{0x0589, 0x0589, 1}, /* Armenian full stop */
... etc and so on
You add your character to this list and it will be treated as punctuation after you recompile.
As umläute suggested in a comment, to Tyler Durden's answer, I opened a feature request/bug report issue 258 in vim. The fix is in patch 7.4.444.