2009/9/10 Kit Johnson: > Thanks so much for taking the time to help. This is the first time I've > used a mailing list so I hope I've replied correctly.
Yep, except you replied to me instead of the list. ;) > I understand charactersets and locales better now. I followed your > recommendations plus those of the cygwin FAQ and internationalistation > pages. > > However I still get > "ls: cannot access ?????????.xls: no such file or directory" > instead of Thai characters when I type 'ls' in bash. > I've researched the ISO 639-1 and ISO 3166 codes for my location, and would > like to use UTF-8. > > Here are the contents of my cygwin.bat file: > @echo off > > C: > chdir C:\cygwin\bin > set LC_CTYPE=th_TH.UTF-8 > bash --login -i Hmm, that should do the job. Are you running the Cygwin 1.7 beta? 1.5 doesn't support locales. ('uname -r' will tell you.) > in my .bashrc file: > export LANG="th_TH.UTF-8" You could set LANG instead of LC_CTYPE in cygwin.bat. The difference is that setting LANG affects all locale-specific behaviours, e.g. it will enable Thai user interfaces and messages in programs that have translations for it. LC_CTYPE only sets the encoding and a couple of other things regarding character processing. If LANG is set, you don't need LC_CTYPE. > export OUTPUT_CHARSET="UTF-8" I don't know whether anything actually uses this. You'd probably be fine without it. Andy -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple