On Wednesday, April 25, 2012 8:42:50 AM UTC-5, esquifit wrote:
> I downloaded the Japanese dictionary file "SKK-JISYO.M" [1] which is
> required for the skk vim plugin [2].
> 
> [1] http://openlab.jp/skk/wiki/wiki.cgi?page=SKK%BC%AD%BD%F1#p5, first
> link "download"
> [2] http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=3118
> 
> The first line in the file states that it is encoded in euc-jp. This
> is also the encoding detected by Firefox when the file is loaded in
> the browser.  The ascii, kana and kanji characters are correctly
> displayed in Firefox.  However I cannot get vim to display the
> non-ascii characters.  Note that I have Japanese fonts installed that
> work just fine with other files with Japanese text.
> 
> I played around with enc, fenc & Co. in all possible combinations and
> tried all supported Japanese encoding systems to no avail.  Any idea?
> 

What is the exact command you used to "play around" with enc, fenc, etc.? What 
is the exact command you used to open the file?

If this is a valid euc-jp file, this command should open it just fine:

:e ++enc=euc-jp SKK-JISYO.M

However, executing this command, I get the message,

"SKK-JISYO.M" [NOT converted][ILLEGAL BYTE in line 33][unix]

I note in :help encoding-names that euc-jp is only supported on Unix, so I 
tried using cp932 instead, as well as the "japan" alias. I get conversion 
errors for these as well in the same line.

I suspect your issue may be that you are on Windows and Vim cannot use euc-jp 
on Windows, at least according to the help. I'm not sure if there's a way 
around this. Perhaps there is an external utility you could use to convert the 
euc-jp document into a different encoding which Vim can understand, like cp932 
or utf-8.

Otherwise, the issue may be that the file is not actually encoded as expected.

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