On 06/11/2010 11:10 AM, Brett Stahlman wrote:
>
> Yes. It would actually be quite simple. Far be it from me, however, to
> discourage someone from writing his own Vim script. Still, if you did
> want the added flexibility of Txtfmt in your files (e.g., being able
> to highlight a piece of text with bold, italic, blue fg, and red bg
> all at the same time), there are at least two simple ways to convert
> your existing files...

Since txtfmt came up.. I like the idea but I was running into a problem
with it: in gvim, when you highlight some text and when cursor is before
the highlighted area, you can sometimes (i.e. very often) see the
unicode character used to start the highlight, which is supposed to be
invisible. You can sort of see a part of it overlaying the next
character, or something like that (it was a few months since I tried
it.) Is this a known issue with txtfmt and gvim or is there a fix or I
need to use some specific fonts in gui?

Thanks! -ak

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