arabic.txt For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2010 Nov 13LINK

VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Nadim Shaikli

Arabic Language support (options & mappings) for Vim ArabicLINK

{Vi does not have any of these commands}

E800LINK

In order to use right-to-left and Arabic mapping support, it is

necessary to compile VIM with the +arabic feature.

These functions have been created by Nadim Shaikli <nadim-at-arabeyes.org>

It is best to view this file with these settings within VIM's GUI:

:set encoding=utf-8

:set arabicshape

Introduction

------------

Arabic is a rather demanding language in which a number of special

features are required. Characters are right-to-left oriented and

ought to appear as such on the screen (i.e. from right to left).

Arabic also requires shaping of its characters, meaning the same

character has a different visual form based on its relative location

within a word (initial, medial, final or stand-alone). Arabic also

requires two different forms of combining and the ability, in

certain instances, to either superimpose up to two characters on top

of another (composing) or the actual substitution of two characters

into one (combining). Lastly, to display Arabic properly one will

require not only ISO-8859-6 (U+0600-U+06FF) fonts, but will also

require Presentation Form-B (U+FE70-U+FEFF) fonts both of which are

subsets within a so-called ISO-10646-1 font.

The commands, prompts and help files are not in Arabic, therefore

the user interface remains the standard Vi interface.

Highlights

----------

o Editing left-to-right files as in the original VIM hasn't changed.

o Viewing and editing files in right-to-left windows. File

orientation is per window, so it is possible to view the same

file in right-to-left and left-to-right modes, simultaneously.

o No special terminal with right-to-left capabilities is required.

The right-to-left changes are completely hardware independent.

Only Arabic fonts are necessary.

o Compatible with the original VIM. Almost all features work in

right-to-left mode (there are liable to be bugs).

o Changing keyboard mapping and reverse insert modes using a single

command.

o Toggling complete Arabic support via a single command.

o While in Arabic mode, numbers are entered from left to right. Upon

entering a none number character, that character will be inserted

just into the left of the last number.

o Arabic keymapping on the command line in reverse insert mode.

o Proper Bidirectional functionality is possible given VIM is

started within a Bidi capable terminal emulator.

Arabic Fonts arabicfontsLINK

------------

VIM requires monospaced fonts of which there are many out there.

Arabic requires ISO-8859-6 as well as Presentation Form-B fonts

(without Form-B, Arabic will _NOT_ be usable). It is highly

recommended that users search for so-called 'ISO-10646-1' fonts.

Do an Internet search or check www.arabeyes.org for further

info on where to attain the necessary Arabic fonts.

Font Installation

-----------------

o Installation of fonts for X Window systems (Unix/Linux)

Depending on your system, copy your_ARABIC_FONT file into a

directory of your choice. Change to the directory containing

the Arabic fonts and execute the following commands:

% mkfontdir

% xset +fp path_name_of_arabic_fonts_directory

Usage

-----

Prior to the actual usage of Arabic within VIM, a number of settings

need to be accounted for and invoked.

o Setting the Arabic fonts

+ For VIM GUI set the 'guifont' to your_ARABIC_FONT. This is done

by entering the following command in the VIM window.

:set guifont=your_ARABIC_FONT

NOTE: the string 'your_ARABIC_FONT' is used to denote a complete

font name akin to that used in Linux/Unix systems.

(e.g. -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--20-200-75-75-c-100-iso10646-1)

You can append the 'guifont' set command to your .vimrc file

in order to get the same above noted results. In other words,

you can include ':set guifont=your_ARABIC_FONT' to your .vimrc

file.

+ Under the X Window environment, you can also start VIM with

'-fn your_ARABIC_FONT' option.

o Setting the appropriate character Encoding

To enable the correct Arabic encoding the following command needs

to be appended,

:set encoding=utf-8

to your .vimrc file (entering the command manually into you VIM

window is highly discouraged). In short, include ':set

encoding=utf-8' to your .vimrc file.

Attempts to use Arabic without UTF-8 will result the following

warning message,

W17 LINK

Arabic requires UTF-8, do ':set encoding=utf-8'

o Enable Arabic settings [short-cut]

In order to simplify and streamline things, you can either invoke

VIM with the command-line option,

% vim -A my_utf8_arabic_file ...

or enable 'arabic' via the following command within VIM

:set arabic

The two above noted possible invocations are the preferred manner

in which users are instructed to proceed. Barring an enabled 'termbidi'

setting, both command options:

1. set the appropriate keymap

2. enable the deletion of a single combined pair character

3. enable rightleft mode

4. enable rightleftcmd mode (affecting the command-line)

5. enable arabicshape mode (do visual character alterations)

You may also append the command to your .vimrc file and simply

include ':set arabic' to it.

You are also capable of disabling Arabic support via

:set noarabic

which resets everything that the command had enabled without touching

the global settings as they could affect other possible open buffers.

In short the 'noarabic' command,

1. resets to the alternate keymap

2. disables the deletion of a single combined pair character

3. disables rightleft mode

NOTE: the 'arabic' command takes into consideration 'termbidi' for

possible external bi-directional (bidi) support from the

terminal ("mlterm" for instance offers such support).

'termbidi', if available, is superior to rightleft support

and its support is preferred due to its level of offerings.

'arabic' when 'termbidi' is enabled only sets the keymap.

If, on the other hand, you'd like to be verbose and explicit and

are opting not to use the 'arabic' short-cut command, here's what

is needed (i.e. if you use ':set arabic' you can skip this section) -

+ Arabic Keymapping Activation

To activate the Arabic keymap (i.e. to remap your English/Latin

keyboard to look-n-feel like a standard Arabic one), set the

'keymap' command to "arabic". This is done by entering

:set keymap=arabic

in your VIM window. You can also append the 'keymap' set command to

your .vimrc file. In other words, you can include ':set keymap=arabic'

to your .vimrc file.

To turn toggle (or switch) your keymapping between Arabic and the

default mapping (English), it is advised that users use the 'CTRL-^'

key press while in insert (or add/replace) mode. The command-line

will display your current mapping by displaying an "Arabic" string

next to your insertion mode (e.g. -- INSERT Arabic --) indicating

your current keymap.

+ Arabic deletion of a combined pair character

By default VIM has the 'delcombine' option disabled. This option

allows the deletion of ALEF in a LAM_ALEF (LAA) combined character

and still retain the LAM (i.e. it reverts to treating the combined

character as its natural two characters form -- this also pertains

to harakat and their combined forms). You can enable this option

by entering

:set delcombine

in our VIM window. You can also append the 'delcombine' set command

to your .vimrc file. In other words, you can include ':set delcombine'

to your .vimrc file.

+ Arabic right-to-left Mode

By default VIM starts in Left-to-right mode. 'rightleft' is the

command that allows one to alter a window's orientation - that can

be accomplished via,

- Toggling between left-to-right and right-to-left modes is

accomplished through ':set rightleft' and ':set norightleft'.

- While in Left-to-right mode, enter ':set rl' in the command line

('rl' is the abbreviation for rightleft).

- Put the ':set rl' line in your '.vimrc' file to start Vim in

right-to-left mode permanently.

+ Arabic right-to-left command-line Mode

For certain commands the editing can be done in right-to-left mode.

Currently this is only applicable to search commands.

This is controlled with the 'rightleftcmd' option. The default is

"search", which means that windows in which 'rightleft' is set will

edit search commands in right-left mode. To disable this behavior,

:set rightleftcmd=

To enable right-left editing of search commands again,

:set rightleftcmd&

+ Arabic Shaping Mode

To activate the required visual characters alterations (shaping,

composing, combining) which the Arabic language requires, enable

the 'arabicshape' command. This is done by entering

:set arabicshape

in our VIM window. You can also append the 'arabicshape' set

command to your .vimrc file. In other words, you can include

':set arabicshape' to your .vimrc file.

Keymap/Keyboard arabickeymapLINK

---------------

The character/letter encoding used in VIM is the standard UTF-8.

It is widely discouraged that any other encoding be used or even

attempted.

Note: UTF-8 is an all encompassing encoding and as such is

the only supported (and encouraged) encoding with

regard to Arabic (all other proprietary encodings

should be discouraged and frowned upon).

o Keyboard

+ CTRL-^ in insert/replace mode toggles between Arabic/Latin mode

+ Keyboard mapping is based on the Microsoft's Arabic keymap (the

de facto standard in the Arab world):

+---------------------------------------------------------------------+

|! |@ |# |$ |% |^ |& |* |( |) |_ |+ || |~ ّ |

|1 ١ |2 ٢ |3 ٣ |4 ٤ |5 ٥ |6 ٦ |7 ٧ |8 ٨ |9 ٩ |0 ٠ |- |= |\ |` ذ |

+---------------------------------------------------------------------+

|Q َ |W ً |E ُ |R ٌ |T لإ |Y إ |U ` |I ÷ |O x |P ؛ |{ < |} > |

|q ض |w ص |e ث |r ق |t ف |y غ |u ع |i ه |o خ |p ح |[ ج |] د |

+-----------------------------------------------------------+

|A ِ |S ٍ |D [ |F ] |G لأ |H أ |J ـ |K ، |L / |: |" |

|a ش |s س |d ي |f ب |g ل |h ا |j ت |k ن |l م |; ك |' ط |

+------------------------------------------------------+

|Z ~ |X ْ |C { |V } |B لآ |N آ |M ' |< , |> . |? ؟ |

|z ئ |x ء |c ؤ |v ر |b لا |n ى |m ة |, و |. ز |/ ظ |

+-------------------------------------------------+

Restrictions

------------

o VIM in its GUI form does not currently support Bi-directionality

(i.e. the ability to see both Arabic and Latin intermixed within

the same line).

Known Bugs

----------

There is one known minor bug,

1. If you insert a haraka (e.g. Fatha (U+064E)) after a LAM (U+0644)

and then insert an ALEF (U+0627), the appropriate combining will

not happen due to the sandwiched haraka resulting in something

that will NOT be displayed correctly.

WORK-AROUND: Don't include harakats between LAM and ALEF combos.

In general, don't anticipate to see correct visual

representation with regard to harakats and LAM+ALEF

combined characters (even those entered after both

characters). The problem noted is strictly a visual

one, meaning saving such a file will contain all the

appropriate info/encodings - nothing is lost.

No other bugs are known to exist.

vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: