on Wed, 30 Oct 2002 07:30:10PM +0100, martin f krafft insinuated: > also sprach nori heikkinen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.10.30.1920 +0100]: > > wait, did i just hear you admit that there is something linux > > can't do with a little careful reading of manpages, random > > experimentation, and and a few minutes of scripting? ;) > > you heard me say that i don't have the time to dive into it. i am > sure linux can do it, at the very moment i am a little sad that it > can't be as easy as 1-2-3...
once i teach my robots to play soccer and my computer to play hawaiian checkers, i will do it for you ;) > > and i don't know anything about the paper format or why phone > > numbers have anything to do with locales. > > do you know what locales are? obviously not well ... that's partially why i'm asking these questions! > they control all forms of localization. you mean, like, telling robots where they are? :-P i don't know what that covers in terms of > and while (xxx) xxx-xxxx may seem standard to people in the US, and > the Letter-sized paper may be the default for 260 Mio. people, other > countries tend to do things differently ;^>. i was not trying to question why these things are formatted differently in different countries, but rather understand how locales governed them. > in fact, run `locale` i have, about eighty times in the past week ... > and look at the variable names to get some > idea of what can be controlled with locales... jaja. so, i see now some of the things i'd been ignoring, like LC_PAPER, LC_TELEPHONE, and LC_ADDRESS. my implicit question was unclear: in what circumstances / applications / whatever are these seemingly obscure locales actually used? the bash man page only describes a few, not including the ones above, and the locale man page only says really useless things like "LC_TELEPHONE: Telephone number formats." so, now i'm curious. </nori> -- .~. nori @ sccs.swarthmore.edu /V\ http://www.sccs.swarthmore.edu/~nori/jnl/ // \\ @ maenad.net /( )\ www.maenad.net ^`~'^
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