On Wed, 04 May 2011 16:28:15 -0400, Perry Thompson wrote: > On 05/04/2011 02:56 PM, Camaleón wrote:
>> How about your "/etc/default/locale" and "~/.dmrc" files? Also, check >> if another user is affected by this. >> >> As a last resort, you can make a full search for that locale's name >> over all of the system files (just in case): >> >> grep -H "ANSI_X3" /* >> >> >> > I tried it using a different user, same result. Then it has to be some global file/setting the one making noise. > rypervenche@debian:~$ cat /etc/default/locale > # File generated by update-locale > #LANG="en_US.UTF-8" Is that comment (#) right? Mine is not :-? sm01@stt008:~$ cat /etc/default/locale LANG="es_ES.UTF-8" > rypervenche@debian:~$ cat .dmrc > > [Desktop] > Language=en_US.utf8 > Layout=us > Session=default Here's mine: sm01@stt008:~$ cat .dmrc [Desktop] Session=default (I only have one locale configured, though, "es_ES.UTF-8") > I have searched for the ANSI name in /etc and a few other folders, such > as /var and /usr, but doing the entire system was taking too long and I > was unable to do a complete search. I will try it again when I have a > large amount of time that I can set to the task. > > Any other ideas? Not really :-( Maybe you can try to re-run "dpkg-reconfigure locales" and see how that goes. Also, when you have the time, search for the "offending" locale string in the whole system. If it's displayed under the GDM 3 greeter it has to be set somewhere... Greetings, -- Camaleón -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/pan.2011.05.05.11.50...@gmail.com