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Added "︙" as another UTF-8 character in README.md
This character makes the indent line more appealing to the eye. The description of the Unicode character follows: U+FE19 ︙ ef b8 99 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS
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@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ for GVim, set `g:indentLine_color_gui` in your `.vimrc`, e.g. `let g:indentLine_
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for none X terminal, set `g:indentLine_color_tty_light` and `g:indentLine_color_tty_dark` in your `.vimrc`. e.g. `let g:indentLine_color_tty_light = 7`(default: 4), `let g:indentLine_color_dark = 1`(default: 2).
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You can also change the indentLine char:
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for both Vim and GVim, set `let g:indentLine_char = 'c'` where `'c'` can be any ASCII character. You can also use one of `¦`, `┆` or `│` to display more beautiful lines. However, these characters will only work with files whose encoding is UTF-8.
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for both Vim and GVim, set `let g:indentLine_char = 'c'` where `'c'` can be any ASCII character. You can also use one of `¦`, `┆`, `︙` or `│` to display more beautiful lines. However, these characters will only work with files whose encoding is UTF-8.
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### Font patching
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If you find all the standard unicode and ASCII characters too obtrusive, you might consider patching your font with the [indentLine-dotted-guide.eps][glyph] glyph provided. [FontForge][fontforge] makes the process amazingly simple:
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