Hey, The last few days, I've been wondering how I should get those #!@ locales working.
Using debconf, I selected en_US.ISO-8859-15 to be generated (the ISO-8859-15 while I like to be able to use the euro-sign). However, little problems started to pop up. First, there was gnome-terminal, which doesn't seem to handle UTF-8 quite correctly. That's why I chose ISO-8859-15 in the first place. Everything now seems to work properly (after being unable to do anything that had accents right, that's quite a relief). Still, gnome-terminal uses UTF-8 by default, because -- so it says -- that's my "current locale". I don't have UTF-8 mentioned anywhere in files I think might be relevant (/etc/environment, ~/.bashrc), so I don't understand why it takes UTF-8. I could manually change the charset of gnome-terminal every time I use it, but that's quite a hassle. So I thought I'd stick with xterm. However, when I open an xterm out of gnome-terminal, I notice that the "current locale is not supported by xlib", after which it reverts to C. After some Googling, I found this could mean problems with locale.alias in /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/locale. And indeed, the locale I use (en_US.ISO-8859-15) doesn't seem to exist in there. What gives? I use the experimental deb's of XFree 4.3; is this specific locale just something that's not yet supported in X? Greets, Tom -- "Mongolian drivers do not care much about pedestrians." -- np: Orphx - Layers of Dura (mp3) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]