Hi Ramses,

Thanks for the bug report.

> I think the manpage is out-to-date about the --locale option.

I assume that you object to this sentence:

  The locale used for the server should be the same as that used for
  dictfmt when the database was built (specifically, the locale under
  which the index was sorted).

I will correct this in the next upload, stating that the locales need
to be compatible, not identical, and add what compatibility means, but
keep it shorter than what /usr/share/doc/dictd/README.Dictd-locales.gz
says on the subject:

       dictd(8)says "The locale used for the server should be the same
  as that used for dictfmt when the database was built."  In practice,
  any utf-8 or 7-bit ASCII dictionary may be used with any locale that
  includes .utf-8.  In general, if the character set and collating order
  of a dictionary's locale is the same as that of dictd's locale, there
  should be no compatibility problem.  If a dictionary's locale uses the
  latin1 character set, any latin1 locale may be used for dictd.  Since
  7-bit ASCII is a subset of both ISO-8859-1 (latin1) and utf-8 , an
  ASCII dictionary may be used with any ISO-8859 or utf-8 locale.


You also mentioned:

> And dict-freedict-eng-ger should not ask me to change /etc/default/dictd
> to de_DE.UTF-8 if my locale has the string ".UTF-8" already.

What package is this?  Did you mean the dict-freedict-eng-deu package?


Kirk


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