Lennart Andersen wrote: > if [ -r /etc/default/locale ]; then > . /etc/default/locale > export LANG LANGUAGE > fi > > I commented it out and I get my locales that I want in xterm
Instead of commenting that out I think it would be better to set the desired locale in /etc/default/locale. You can do that either manually with a text editor or you can use the package manager. In another message on this thread I had suggested this action: $ sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales Of course it will result in the same thing. But this seems much more supportable to me in the long run since it is configuring something that is designed to be configured in this way instead of the init.d script which will require merges later. The init.d script is a conffile and so your changes will be preserved but more painful to merge upon later upgrades. For the default locale file you shouldn't need to make any changes upon an upgrade. Glad to hear that you have resolved your problem regardless. :-) Bob
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