Thank you all! The problem was with the default GDM settings. They were set to ANSI_something. Switching to English solved my problem. I am pretty sure, however, that I did not touch the GDM settings. So if this is a bug, it is minor. Sorry for making so much noise about this.
Again thanks to all of you! On 10/02/2011 08:15 PM, Raf Czlonka wrote: > On Sun, Oct 02, 2011 at 01:47:30PM BST, Jörg-Volker Peetz wrote: >> Panayiotis Karabassis wrote, on 10/02/11 13:59: >> <snip> >>> I will check in a minute. Also I am pretty sure I didn't set the locale >>> to "C". I copied .profile, .bashrc from another computer, where locales >>> work. >>> >> Could there have been a .bash_profile on the problematic computer which takes >> precedence over the .profile you copied from the working environment? > > Panayiotis, > > What if you try to set locale to "el_GR.utf8" instead of "en_US.UTF-8"? > Could you include the content of /etc/default/locale? > Also, what does "locale" say? -- Best regards, Panayiotis Karabassis -- 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/4e8921ff.4000...@gmail.com