Mined Unicode Howto
Environment setup and Usage of mined for Unicode text
-
See the mined features page for
an overview of mined features for Unicode editing.
- See the next section below
for an overview of how to use these features.
- For general information on Unicode and its support on computers,
see also Markus Kuhn's
UTF-8 and Unicode FAQ for Unix/Linux.
- See the final section below for some setup hints
for a Unicode-enabled environment, even on legacy computers.
-
Handling Unicode text with mined
- Screen handling
-
Usually, mined will auto-detect a UTF-8 terminal and also
the detailed features it has (like double-width and
combining characters, Arabic ligature joining, different width
data sets).
- Character encoding
-
By default, mined detects automatically if the text in an edited
file is UTF-8 encoded (Unicode character set) or not (either
8 bit encoded or CJK encoded); it also detects and maintains UTF-16.
Mined handles illegal UTF-8 sequences transparently so
if you accidentally open an 8 bit or CJK encoded file in UTF-8
mode, or a file with mixed parts, you can edit the text without
problems and will not loose any information. Non-UTF-8 codes
are indicated by display background highlighting.
While editing, you can switch the character encoding assumed
for text interpretation with the encoding menu
(left-click to toggle current and previous encoding,
right-click to open menu).
- Unicode display on non-Unicode terminal
-
Characters that cannot be displayed in the encoding of the terminal
are indicated by some suitable replacement, indicated by
coloured background.
Indications are chosen as to suggest the text character as best
as possible, with special indications for combining characters
'
,
quotation marks "
,
dashes -
,
the Euro symbol E
etc., and
using a base character according to Unicode decomposition
for accented and other precomposed characters.
Please consult the manual page, section
Unicode display for details.
- Combining characters
-
Mined supports display and editing of combined characters
consisting of a base character and one or more combining
characters, in one of two modes:
- Combined display mode: combined characters are displayed as
they should appear, navigation within the combined character
is possible (Control-cursor-left/right), the character information
display (HOP ESC u, or from "?" Info menu) shows which part (base
or combining character) of the combined character you are
positioned on, Mark/Copy/Paste and Control-Del acts on the
respective position.
- Separated display mode: base character and combining characters
are separated for explicit handling.
These modes can be selected and are indicated in the
Combining display flag: ç
: combined mode,
`
: separated mode.
See the manual page, section
Combining characters for details.
- Bidirectional display
-
Mined auto-detects if it is running in a terminal supporting
Arabic (by checking LAM/ALEF ligature joining) and other
right-to-left scripts (e.g. mlterm), or it can be told so with
the command line parameter
+UU
.
The mined runtime support library contains a script
mterm
to invoke the mlterm
terminal
emulator with suitable parameters to set up bidi mode and a
suitable font.
- CJK and 8 bit character set support on Unicode terminal
-
Mined support for major CJK encodings is also best used in a
UTF-8 terminal (unless you need specific CJK input features of
dedicated terminals); this setup is also well suited for editing
text encoded in various 8 bit character sets.
See the mined features page for an
overview of CJK support features.
See the manual page, sections
Character encoding support and
CJK support for details.
-
Unicode environment setup
Quick and easy
-
Use the command
uterm
to
invoke a UTF-8 enabled terminal with automatic selection of a
suitable font for best coverage of Unicode characters.
- The
uterm
script comes with the mined
package; it is included in the mined runtime support library
and may be installed in the path with the mined application.
- Note: The
uterm
script assumes that a UTF-8 enabled
version of xterm or rxvt-unicode is already installed on your
system, as well as fonts suitable for your needs.
If this is not the case on your system, follow the advice below.
- Install suitable terminal
-
Mined is a text mode editor. Its UTF-8 display and input support
is available with terminal emulators supporting UTF-8 and running
in UTF-8 mode, like
xterm (version >= 145),
rxvt-unicode,
mlterm, KDE konsole, gnome-terminal, Linux console,
cygwin console, MinTTY, PuTTY.
- If you don't have a recent version of xterm on your
system, compile it yourself;
invoke
configure --enable-wide-chars
or use the script
configure-xterm
from the mined runtime support
library. Then invoke make
. You may want to compact
the resulting executable with strip xterm
; then
install it into your path, e.g. in $HOME/bin
.
Note: xterm, like
mined, can be used to enable UTF-8 and Unicode support on
legacy systems, even if they do not offer any "locale" support,
and without needing root priviledge.
- Install suitable fonts
-
Install Unicode fonts for your X server.
- To check if your X installation already provides Unicode fonts,
you may invoke the command
xlsfonts | grep iso10646
.
If this doesn't list anything, or if you cannot find a suitable font
setup, do one of the following:
-
- Automatic installation:
- The Mined runtime support library contains a script
installfonts
that downloads these fonts and installs them
with your X server. It finally gives some hints how to add them to
your permanent font configuration.
- Manual installation:
-
- Retrieve some of the following fonts:
-
UCS fonts for X
with their
CJK supplement
from Markus Kuhn's page
Unicode fonts and tools for X11
-
Adobe and B&H bitmap fonts
from the same site which contain fixed width Courier and
Lucida Typewriter fonts
-
Unicode VGA font
from
Dmitry Bolkhovityanov's site
-
Monospace Roman BDF fonts
and their Oblique / Bold / Bold Oblique supplements from
George Williams Unicode fonts page
- The nicest looking font in the UCS fonts archive mentioned above
is the 10x20 size font, it is suitable for higher screen resolutions.
Unfortunately, the CJK double-width fonts are not distributed in
the corresponding 20x20 size, but only in the 18x18 size. The
corresponding single-width font in 9x18 size, however, looks quite
spindly and for my taste rather awkward.
For this reason, I am providing a script to generate 20x20 CJK fonts
automatically from the 18x18 UCS fonts distributed for X servers.
It is bdf18to20
and you find it in the mined runtime
support library. Go into the directory where you unpacked the fonts
and invoke the script.
- Install the fonts with your X server: unpack them into a directory
(e.g.
$HOME/xfonts
), go into that directory, invoke the
mkfontdir
command. Then make sure that the fonts are
loaded into your X server, using the command
xset +fp $HOME/xfonts
; a suitable place to include this
automatically would be your $HOME/.xinitrc
X
initialisation file if you have one.
- Note: If you are working in a network, make sure the xset
command is invoked such that the X server has access to the given
directory on the machine it is running on.
- Some X servers (e.g. Exceed on Windows) do not accept BDF fonts;
use the "Compile Fonts" function of the configuration menu to install
the fonts.
- Start terminal in UTF-8 mode
-
Invoke a terminal window in UTF-8 mode and configure it to use
fonts sufficient to display the text you want to edit.
- Invoke xterm with suitable resource configuration or command line
parameters.
- I recommend to invoke xterm with the script
uterm
from the mined runtime
support library.
- Alternatively, invoke
xterm -u8
or
xterm -en UTF-8
to enforce UTF-8 mode, depending on system
configuration; also the option +lc
may be needed in addition.
Mined detects UTF-8 terminal
mode automatically (exception: cygwin 1.7 UTF-8 console after rlogin
or telnet).
So it will work even if your locale environment is not configured properly.
- Note: xterm is quite touchy about configuring suitable
matching fonts for single-width and double-width glyphs. If you are
unlucky, CJK character display will result in garbage on the screen.
My recommendation is to generate the 20x20 UCS fonts with my
bdf18to20
script as mentioned above and configure xterm
to use 10x20 – it will then automatically select one of the 20x20
fonts for double-width characters; if you have a preference among
them, use the -fw command line option or the wideFont X resource (in
your $HOME/.Xdefaults
file).
See the pattern file Xdefaults.mined
in the mined runtime
support library for suggestions of suitable entries.
(Double-width font matching works much better with rxvt which even seems
to scale double-width fonts in an acceptable way if needed.)
- If you prefer rxvt, use rxvt-unicode and make sure to indicate
using UTF-8 by setting a locale in your environment that is installed
on your system, for example
LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 urxvt
on cygwin.
- Note: rxvt is quite touchy about configuring a known locale
setting; it does not have a strict UTF-8 option that would reliably
work on all systems.
-
Note: For hints how to configure the environment explicitly so
that rxvt, konsole and other applications work with UTF-8, see the
mined manual page (about LC_CTYPE and other environment variables).
Accurate locale setting is not needed by xterm and mined.
For other terminals (e.g. mlterm), see their manual for how to
configure UTF-8 mode.
- Alternatively, you can start mined directly together with its own
terminal window. For this purpose, the mined runtime support library
contains the script
umined
.
This script also quickly enables you
to use the most recent version of Unicode width data (specifying wide
and combining characters) as built-in to xterm in contrast to
system-provided locale data which may refer to an older version of Unicode.
- On a Windows system, you can also use the script
wmined
or wmined.bat
which will invoke mined
in a MinTTY terminal window (not needing an X server). If MinTTY is not
installed, wmined
will try rxvt instead (the old version of
rxvt which can also run stand-alone without X server but is not
Unicode-enabled; the new rxvt-unicode however (called urxvt on cygwin)
cannot run stand-alone).
The terminal is configured to use UTF-8 (for MinTTY; ignored by rxvt)
and to apply Windows look-and-feel colour settings (by inspecting the
Windows registry; with rxvt, wmined also tries to match your font size
preferences).
Mined homepage and download.
Thomas Wolff