On 12/04/12 04:27, Chris Jones wrote:
[...]
Well.. if you don't know the digraph, it's not going to be possible to
search for it anyway.. It makes more sense to do a search on the ISO
10646 long descriptive name (3rd column of rfc1345). e.g. you need an
arrow and you do a ‘/arrow’.. a star symbol.. ‘/star’ etc.
[...]
In addition:

If you know the Unicode codepoint number in decimal, that is listed in the output of the :digraphs command (not very searchable other than by eyeball).

If you know the Unicode codepoint in decimal *or* in hex (the hex value is how it is usually given), you can search for it in digraph.txt. It helps to use the \< and \> word boundaries in your search pattern.

If you don't know the Unicode codepoint number, you can find it by means of the following:
http://www.unicode.org/charts/ (charts by language or category)
http://www.unicode.org/charts/charindex.html (codepoints by name)

If you know the Unicode codepoint and there is no digraph for that particular codepoint, see :help i_CTRL-V_digit


Best regards,
Tony.
--
Arnold's Laws of Documentation:
        (1) If it should exist, it doesn't.
        (2) If it does exist, it's out of date.
        (3) Only documentation for useless programs transcends the
            first two laws.

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