On Thu, Aug 2, 2012 at 12:06 AM, Heiko Baums wrote:
>> Of course, that's the point of LC_MESSAGES. What else would it do?
>
> Well, actually I would expect that the language is set by LANG and not
> by LC_MESSAGES. I would expect, and I guess this is what it's meant for,
> that just the output on
On Thu, Aug 2, 2012 at 1:06 AM, Heiko Baums wrote:
> Well, actually I would expect that the language is set by LANG and not
> by LC_MESSAGES. I would expect, and I guess this is what it's meant for,
> that just the output on stdout or stderr is affected by LC_MESSAGES.
> That is, that LC_MESSAGES
Am Wed, 01 Aug 2012 14:48:02 +0200
schrieb Thomas Bächler :
> > You should be careful with LC_MESSAGES if you use desktop
> > environments which don't have their own language setting like Xfce.
>
> ?
I know that you're using KDE, if you haven't switched in the
meantime. ;-)
So, KDE uses its
On 01/08/12||14:11, Mauro Santos wrote:
> On 01-08-2012 13:09, Arno Gaboury wrote:
> > On 01/08/12||14:46, Mantas Mikulėnas wrote:
> >> On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 2:17 PM, Jesse Juhani Jaara
> >> wrote:
> >>> Also you can probably disable en_US completely. Most applications use
> >>> english as the bu
On 01-08-2012 13:09, Arno Gaboury wrote:
> On 01/08/12||14:46, Mantas Mikulėnas wrote:
>> On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 2:17 PM, Jesse Juhani Jaara
>> wrote:
>>> Also you can probably disable en_US completely. Most applications use
>>> english as the build in locale (locale C), so there is no need to ena
Am 01.08.2012 14:35, schrieb Heiko Baums:
> Am Wed, 01 Aug 2012 14:10:14 +0200
> schrieb Thomas Bächler :
>
>> I don't know why you set it, but I find LC_COLLATE=C extremely
>> annoying.
>>
>> If you want an English speaking system, but live in Switzerland, I
>> recommend this:
>>
>> LANG=fr_CH.UT
Am Wed, 01 Aug 2012 14:10:14 +0200
schrieb Thomas Bächler :
> I don't know why you set it, but I find LC_COLLATE=C extremely
> annoying.
>
> If you want an English speaking system, but live in Switzerland, I
> recommend this:
>
> LANG=fr_CH.UTF-8
> LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8
You should be careful
On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 3:10 PM, Thomas Bächler wrote:
>> LANG= en_US.UTF-8
>> LC_COLLATE=C
>
> I don't know why you set it, but I find LC_COLLATE=C extremely annoying.
One possible reason is that asciibetical sorting causes e.g. files
named "_foo" or "[foo]" to be sorted before all other items, w
Am 01.08.2012 13:16, schrieb fredbezies:
> LANG=fr_CH.UTF-8
> LC_COLLATE=C
>
> An english speaking system ?
>
> LANG= en_US.UTF-8
> LC_COLLATE=C
I don't know why you set it, but I find LC_COLLATE=C extremely annoying.
If you want an English speaking system, but live in Switzerland, I
recommend
On 01/08/12||14:46, Mantas Mikulėnas wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 2:17 PM, Jesse Juhani Jaara
> wrote:
> > Also you can probably disable en_US completely. Most applications use
> > english as the build in locale (locale C), so there is no need to enable
> > it, as faar as I have understood.
>
On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 2:17 PM, Jesse Juhani Jaara
wrote:
> Also you can probably disable en_US completely. Most applications use
> english as the build in locale (locale C), so there is no need to enable
> it, as faar as I have understood.
This is right, but the "C" locale uses US-ASCII, not UTF
ke, 2012-08-01 kello 13:12 +0200, Arno Gaboury kirjoitti:
> My Arch is in english, and I live in Switzerland and read documents in
> english, french and "swiss" french. Still, I am not sure if I need to
> enable all these locales.
You do not need any of the ISO-8859-X locales, UTF-8 ons are enough
2012/8/1 Arno Gaboury :
> Dear list,
>
> even after reading all wiki and man, I am still confused about how to
> write locale.conf after recent upgrades.
> Here are the 6 locales enabled in locale.gen:
> fr_CH.UTF-8 UTF-8
> fr_CH ISO-8859-1
> fr_FR.UTF-8 UTF-8
> fr_FR ISO-8859-1
> fr_FR@euro ISO-88
Dear list,
even after reading all wiki and man, I am still confused about how to
write locale.conf after recent upgrades.
Here are the 6 locales enabled in locale.gen:
fr_CH.UTF-8 UTF-8
fr_CH ISO-8859-1
fr_FR.UTF-8 UTF-8
fr_FR ISO-8859-1
fr_FR@euro ISO-8859-15
en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8
en_US ISO-8859-1
M
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