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I'm trying to get Vim to highlight non-ASCII characters. Is there an available setting, regex search pattern, or plugin to do so?

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8 Answers 8

348

Using range in a [] character class in your search, you ought to be able to exclude the ASCII hexadecimal character range, therefore highlighting (assuming you have hlsearch enabled) all other characters lying outside the ASCII range:

/[^\x00-\x7F]

This will do a negative match (via [^]) for characters between ASCII 0x00 and ASCII 0x7F (0-127), and appears to work in my simple test. For extended ASCII, of course, extend the range up to \xFF instead of \x7F using /[^\x00-\xFF].

You may also express it in decimal via \d:

/[^\d0-\d127]

If you need something more specific, like exclusion of non-printable characters, you will need to add those ranges into the character class [].

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  • 20
    In decimal: /[^\d0-\d127]
    – Bohr
    May 15, 2015 at 5:13
  • @Bohr That's a nice addition. I'll edit it in above. May 15, 2015 at 12:52
  • great! saved the day! one of the indentation character got pasted into my python code and the unicode error start killing me. was hard to detect among the same character used by vim plugin!
    – kollery
    Apr 6, 2017 at 13:08
41

Yes, there is a native feature to do highlighting for any matched strings. Inside Vim, do:

:help highlight
:help syn-match

syn-match defines a string that matches fall into a group. highlight defines the color used by the group. Just think about syntax highlighting for your vimrc files.

So you can use below commands in your .vimrc file:

syntax match nonascii "[^\x00-\x7F]"
highlight nonascii guibg=Red ctermbg=2
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  • you don't need to put the : in front of commands in your vimrc.
    – FDinoff
    Jun 7, 2013 at 23:24
  • termbg doesn't seem to be a legal command in VIM 7.3 as installed on Ubuntu Server 12.10.
    – dotancohen
    Jun 13, 2013 at 5:46
  • 4
    Then termbg doesn't seem to be a legal parameter in VIM 7.3 as installed on Ubuntu Server 12.10.
    – dotancohen
    Nov 19, 2013 at 16:43
  • Indeed, regular terminal term cannot have background color, while color terminal cterm can. Feb 19, 2015 at 8:45
  • removed termbg but you could add ctermfg, guifg, etc to also control the foreground. Nov 15, 2017 at 0:25
19

For other (from now on less unlucky) folks ending up here via a search engine and can't accomplish highlighting of non-ASCII characters, try this (put this into your .vimrc):

highlight nonascii guibg=Red ctermbg=1 term=standout
au BufReadPost * syntax match nonascii "[^\u0000-\u007F]"

This has the added benefit of not colliding with regular (filetype [file extension] based) syntax definitions.

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  • I get E319: Sorry, the command is not available in this version: au BufReadPost * syntax match nonascii "[^\u0000-\u007F]" Press ENTER or type command to continue Linux mint 17.3
    – Nasser
    Jun 30, 2016 at 5:48
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    Though the goal is stated of not conflicting with already defined syntax definitions, if you want it to you can add containedin=ALL to the end of the last line, making it au BufReadPost * syntax match nonascii "[^\u0000-\u007F]" containedin=ALL. I find the distraction worth it (when unicode is allowed), the original answer here does not catch things such as non-ascii code inside of an if statement...
    – svenevs
    Jun 5, 2017 at 23:35
  • 1
    It is always safer to enclose your autocmd BufRead .... in an autogroup in vim, unless you have a very good reason not to...
    – Cbhihe
    Oct 27, 2018 at 18:33
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This regex works to highlight as well. It was the first google hit for "vim remove non-ascii characters" from briceolion.com and with :set hlsearch will highlight:

/[^[:alnum:][:punct:][:space:]]/
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  • 2
    The question is asking to highlight non-ascii characters, not removing them.
    – chutsu
    Dec 30, 2015 at 1:48
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    Thanks for pointing that out, I've edited my answer. It wasn't much of a stretch to see that this regex also answers the question in a way that is different from other answers. My original answer was :%s/[^[:alnum:][:punct:][:space:]]//gc which highlights first, then replaces. Dec 30, 2015 at 16:49
  • [:alnum:][:punct:][:space:] are character classes which do include non-ascii characters on UTF-8 locales.
    – KamilCuk
    May 8, 2022 at 18:21
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If you are interested also in the non printable characters use this one: /[^\x00-\xff]/

I use it in a function:

 function! NonPrintable()
   setlocal enc=utf8
   if search('[^\x00-\xff]') != 0
     call matchadd('Error', '[^\x00-\xff]')
     echo 'Non printable characters in text'
   else
     setlocal enc=latin1
     echo 'All characters are printable'
   endif
 endfunction
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  • Your function does not work in here, it does not highlight and it also mess the encoding. Why are you changing the local encoding?
    – Werner
    Dec 29, 2014 at 14:40
  • Try to change enc to fenc. I changed the encoding because my default encoding is (was in 2013) latin1. The function doesn't highlight the non printable characters if the characterset is latin1. Too see the highlighting you must have the key ERROR in your color syntax file. This is mine: hi Error guifg=Black guibg=Orange
    – Reman
    Jan 29, 2015 at 15:18
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Based on the other answers on this topic and the answer I got here I've added this to my .vimrc, so that I can control the non-ascii highlighting by typing <C-w>1. It also shows inside comments, although you will need to add the comment group for each file syntax you will use. That is, if you will edit a zsh file, you will need to add zshComment to the line

au BufReadPost * syntax match nonascii "[^\x00-\x7F]" containedin=cComment,vimLineComment,pythonComment

otherwise it won't show the non-ascii character (you can also set containedin=ALL if you want to be sure to show non-ascii characters in all groups). To check how the comment is called on a different file type, open a file of the desired type and enter :sy on vim, then search on the syntax items for the comment.

function HighlightNonAsciiOff()
  echom "Setting non-ascii highlight off"
  syn clear nonascii
  let g:is_non_ascii_on=0
  augroup HighlightUnicode
  autocmd!
  augroup end
endfunction

function HighlightNonAsciiOn()
  echom "Setting non-ascii highlight on"
  augroup HighlightUnicode
  autocmd!
  autocmd ColorScheme *
        \ syntax match nonascii "[^\x00-\x7F]" containedin=cComment,vimLineComment,pythonComment |
        \ highlight nonascii cterm=underline ctermfg=red ctermbg=none term=underline
  augroup end
  silent doautocmd HighlightUnicode ColorScheme
  let g:is_non_ascii_on=1
endfunction

function ToggleHighlightNonascii()
  if g:is_non_ascii_on == 1
    call HighlightNonAsciiOff()
  else
    call HighlightNonAsciiOn()
  endif
endfunction

silent! call HighlightNonAsciiOn()
nnoremap <C-w>1 :call ToggleHighlightNonascii()<CR>
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Somehow none of the above answers worked for me.

So I used :1,$ s/[^0-9a-zA-Z,-_\.]//g

It keeps most of the characters I am interested in.

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    This deletes the characters, where the op asked for highlighting. May 5, 2018 at 7:01
  • don't you mean [^0-9a-zA-Z,\-_\.], i.e. \-?
    – ben26941
    Jul 11, 2018 at 12:59
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Someone already have answered the question. However, for others that are still having problems, here is another solution to highlight non-ascii characters in comments (or any syntax group in the matter). It's not the best, but it's a temporary fix.

One may try:

:syntax match nonascii "[^\u0000-\u007F]" containedin=ALL contained |
            \ highlight nonascii ctermfg=yellow guifg=yellow

This has mix parts from other solutions. You may remove contained, but, from documentation, there may be potential problem of recursing itself (as I understand). To view other defined patterns, syn-contains section would contain it.

:help syn-containedin
:help syn-contains 

Replicated issue from: Set item to higher highlight priority on vim

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