I haven't been following this thread in its entirety, but there are the 
"Windows Alt Keycodes" that can solve your entry of the œ symbol, and many 
others. To enter œ "all" you need to do is HOLD Alt, and then enter 0156 on the 
keypad, and then release Alt.

Hardly a stylish solution, but easier than copy/pasting from Vim, I'm sure.

Max


> -----Original Message-----
> From: A.J.Mechelynck [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, July 24, 2006 3:58 PM
> To: vim@vim.org
> Subject: Re: Other European languages on a US keyboard
> 
> Christian Ebert wrote:
> > * A.J.Mechelynck on Saturday, July 22, 2006 at 22:40:45 +0200:
> >> The French oe (o, e-dans-l'o) is not defined in the Latin1 encoding,
> >> neither in capitals (as for titles or if the word "oeuf" [egg] is the
> >> first of a sentence), nor in lowercase. You need UTF-8 for it,
> >
> > No. Just latin9 or ISO8859-15 (Look at the header of this mail).
> >
> > Mon cœur.
> >
> > This is on a Mac with a German keyboard, but using actually an
> > American keyboard layout. I enter the "œ" with Alt-q (the "Alt"
> > key on Mac keyboard corresponds to the Modifier key on other
> > keyboards I believe).
> >
> > $ echo $LANG
> > en_US.ISO8859-15
> [...]
> 
> Good to know that the Euro sign wasn't the only "missing glyph" added in
> ISO 8859-15.
> 
> There is an Alt key left of the spacebar on i86 machine's keyboards, but
> I guess you mean the Alt-Gr which is right of the spacebar.
> (Alt-something is used for menu shortcuts here.) AltGr-q gives me æ
> (æ), with shift Æ (Æ).
> 
> I think I'm going to experiment with this AltGr key, apparently it gives
> a lot of new characters not always mentioned on the keys; and different
> ones depending on whether it is used alone or with Shift. [after trying]
> I can't find œ, I will have to continue pasting it from Vim when I
> want it in an email.
> 
> 
> Best regards,
> Tony.

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