On 21 May 2005 at 16:05, Peter Dalgaard wrote: | Dirk Eddelbuettel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: | | > | INTERNATIONALIZATION | > | | > | o Unix-alike versions of R can now be used in UTF-8 and other | > | multi-byte locales on suitably equipped OSes if configured | > | with option --enable-mbcs (which is the default). [The | > | changes to font handling in the X11 module are based on the | > | Japanization patches of Eiji Nakama.] | > | | > | so I build debs with this option explicitly enabled, but it made no | > | difference. | > | > Did you find anything out when talking to the amd64 folks? I am CCing this | > to Peter who is very knowledgeable about amd64 as well -- Peter, the amd64 | > package should be built with exactly the same parameters as the other ten or | > eleven arches, in particular as the 64 bit hppa and ia64. | > | > Any idea what may go astray here? Is there a relation to the r-bugs post of | > png() failing under amd64 ? | | I think I've seen this work OK on amd64 (certainly with R running on | amd64, but my X server is usually on a 32 bit system). My guess would | be that something in the FontSet setup is messsed up on the system in | question, but I can't remember how this all fits together. Debugging | with a breakpoint in R_XLoadQueryFontSet() could be informative. The | XLC_LOCALE file for the locale factors in somewhere.
Fair point -- Ryan could you check if your fontconfig differs from what, say, the Ubuntu amd64 livecd sets up? Maybe it is your font configuration rather than R? Comments? Dirk -- Statistics: The (futile) attempt to offer certainty about uncertainty. -- Roger Koenker, 'Dictionary of Received Ideas of Statistics' -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]