On Wed, Nov 18, 2009 at 10:22:55AM -0800, Don Armstrong wrote: > On Wed, 18 Nov 2009, Aurelien Jarno wrote: > > week 7;19971130;4 / first_weekday 7 and week 7;19971201;4 / > > first_weekday 1 are both meaning that the week starts on sunday. > > That's incorrect. 19971130 means the first day of the week is a > Sunday, 19971201 means the first day of the week is a Monday. The > first_weekday is then indexed according to this value, so if it was 1 > with 19971130, then the first day displayed on a calendar is Sunday; > if it was 2, it'd be Monday. If it was 1 with 19971201, then the first > day displayed on a calendar would be Monday, if it was 7, then it'd be > saturday.
I was wrong in was I wrote and mixed the two. The old version is actually week 7;19971201;4 first_weekday 7. It means the first day displayed on the calendar is a sunday. The new version is week 7;19971130;4 first_week_day 1. It mean the first day displayed on the calendar is a sunday. Both version should display exactly the same value. -- Aurelien Jarno GPG: 1024D/F1BCDB73 aurel...@aurel32.net http://www.aurel32.net -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org