Zarko Cucej | 25 Apr 14:26
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CE character

Hi!
I have for me serious troubles with use of CE character set.

I don't know, how to permanently convince WinEdt to use CE. Now every 
time when start WinEdt, regardless that i select in Preferences for 
fonts Curier New with CE scripts, it show document in Default windows 
character sets (i see \`{c} insead of \v{c}, presented in LaTeX 
notation). This I can every time fix manuely by selection in 
options/fonts CE character set. This is only annoying, but when i try to 
use find--replace function, WinEdt some character which i like to 
replace with \v{c} replace with just c ...

Described problem I didn't observe at \v{s} and \v{z} character.

Please help mi fix this problem.

Regards, Zarko

WinEdt Team | 25 Apr 19:15
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Re: CE character

> I have for me serious troubles with use of CE character set.
>
> I don't know, how to permanently convince WinEdt to use CE. Now
> every time when start WinEdt, regardless that i select in
> Preferences for fonts Curier New with CE scripts, it show
> document in Default windows character sets (i see \`{c} insead
> of \v{c}, presented in LaTeX notation). This I can every time
> fix manuely by selection in options/fonts CE character set.
> This is only annoying, but when i try to use find--replace
> function, WinEdt some character which i like to replace with
> \v{c} replace with just c ...
>
> Described problem I didn't observe at \v{s} and \v{z}
> character.
>
> Please help mi fix this problem.

Part 1 is probably easy: Options -> Settings. In the first page
disable the option "Language Sensitive Script".

    When enabled WinEdt starts with the the Default Character
    Set (whatever that may be on your machine - probably not
    CE) and then it switches to another one when you change the
    keyboard layout...

Replacement can be more problematic. It is possible that the
edit control in the Replace dialog displays \v{c} in unicode
but Windows cannot translate this character back to ANSI with
language settings in your computer. You may observe that \v{S}
and \v{Z} are included in Windows Western Code Page (with the
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Gmane