I only edited settings in the KDE configuration (attached) to get easy
to read dates. Web search shows quite a few result about the mysterious
en_SE.UTF-8.
Anyway, thanks for the hint, I changed to something else and after
log-out LibreOffice opened the file.
Why is LO it concerned with the locale when the bytes composing a file
address are the same no matter what? All other programs I tried had no
problem opening files from that directory, and for a long time even LO
was capable to open it (that Sweden setting has been there for long).
Alex
On 04/02/17 13:18, Rene Engelhard wrote:
On Sun, Apr 02, 2017 at 10:50:05AM +0300, Alex Dănilă wrote:
C.UTF-8 in the second screen (Default locale for the system environment)
log-out+log-in
Currently locale returns:
locale: Cannot set LC_CTYPE to default locale: No such file or directory
^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
locale: Cannot set LC_MESSAGES to default locale: No such file or directory
locale: Cannot set LC_ALL to default locale: No such file or directory
LANG=en_SE.UTF-8
[...]
Still that one (and more) is set, so it appparently didn't work?
And there factually is no en_SE.UTF-8 locale. Where did you invent it?
LibreOffice is still unable to open the file though.
I'd try with a actually existing (and honoured by the system) locale first.
locales is not a "random" xx_YY combination ;-)
Regards,
Rene