Only just figured this out today… largely because one I didn’t notice until this afternoon, the other has bugged me for quite a while, but I didn’t notice the fix until this afternoon while fixing the first.
Both relate to the default configuration of gVim.
Annoyance 1: UTF-8 Encoding
On my system it defaulted to Latin1 encoding of text files. Earlier I had written a file in UTF-8 on my netbook, transferred it to my laptop at work to continue editing… only to discover that some UTF-8 chars had been altered.
The fix
As per the suggestions here, stick the following two lines into your $VIM_DIR\_vimrc file (by default; $VIM_DIR = C:\Program Files\Vim):
set fileencoding=utf8
set fileencodings=ucs-bom,utf8,prc
Annoyance 2: Win32 gVim visual mode doesn’t behave like Unix gVim visual mode.
While you’re in the _vimrc file, have a look up the top, you’ll see behave mswin.
The fix
Change this to behave xterm.
… Now if only I could change the crappy keybindings Microsoft assigned to be more like my KDE desktop… *sigh*
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