This definitely explains the problem (Thanks for contributing!), but I
don't think it's a real solution because changing the Gnome region like
described (although it does change LC_TIME) changes other variables (in
addition to LC_TIME) that make no sense for the United States (eg.,
LC_NUMERIC, LC_MONETARY, LC_PAPER).
Denmark does LC_NUMERIC wrong (using a comma where there should be a
decimal point). The United States does LC_TIME and LC_MEASUREMENT wrong.
I want to make everything proper and swapping to all en_DK variables
fixes some things but not others. The only proper solution is to:
1) be able to change individual variables within Gnome (which I don't
think is possible in current gnome)
2) create my own locale, which I do not know how to do. I've found two
guides (linked below) for doing it but neither of them worked for me (I
think the part about using localedef appears to not be working.)
https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/136920/set-custom-locales-in-gnome3-on-fedora-20
https://askubuntu.com/questions/653008/how-to-create-a-new-system-locale
On 2017-05-27 06:10, Curt wrote:
On 2017-05-26, Greg Wooledge <wool...@eeg.ccf.org> wrote:
On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 12:57:22PM -0400, gwmf...@openmailbox.org
wrote:
A virtual console (eg, Ctrl+Alt+F2) produces the correct result when
I
type ncal.
But if I type ncal in gnome-terminal, it starts the weeks with Sunday
(which is wrong). GNOME problem, right? That's why
/etc/default/locale
isn't working how I expected?
Yes, sounds like it.
This might be helpful to the OP.
https://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/users/2014-December/455809.html