Re: Question marks in localized man pages

2010-09-13 Thread Thomas Wolff
On 12.09.2010 08:51, Ilya Basin wrote: AK> On 11 September 2010 18:48, Ilya Basin wrote: AK> On Saturday, September 11, 2010, Ilya Basin wrote: Hi. My default LANG is C.UTF-8. If I change it to ru.UTF-8, all non-ascii characters in man pages are displayed as question marks.

Re[4]: Question marks in localized man pages

2010-09-11 Thread Ilya Basin
AK> On 11 September 2010 18:48, Ilya Basin wrote: >> AK> On Saturday, September 11, 2010, Ilya Basin wrote: Hi. My default LANG is C.UTF-8. If I change it to ru.UTF-8, all non-ascii characters in man pages are displayed as question marks. >> >> AK> ru.UTF-8 isn't a valid locale setting; y

Re[2]: Question marks in localized man pages

2010-09-11 Thread Ilya Basin
AK> On Saturday, September 11, 2010, Ilya Basin wrote: >> Hi. My default LANG is C.UTF-8. If I change it to ru.UTF-8, all >> non-ascii characters in man pages are displayed as question marks. AK> ru.UTF-8 isn't a valid locale setting; you need a territory in there AK> as well, e.g. ru_RU.UTF-8, ot

Re: Question marks in localized man pages

2010-09-11 Thread Andy Koppe
On Saturday, September 11, 2010, Ilya Basin wrote: > Hi. My default LANG is C.UTF-8. If I change it to ru.UTF-8, all > non-ascii characters in man pages are displayed as question marks. ru.UTF-8 isn't a valid locale setting; you need a territory in there as well, e.g. ru_RU.UTF-8, otherwise you en

Question marks in localized man pages

2010-09-11 Thread Ilya Basin
Hi. My default LANG is C.UTF-8. If I change it to ru.UTF-8, all non-ascii characters in man pages are displayed as question marks. I found that on Linux before going to nroff, the unzipped man page is first piped through /usr/bin/preconv that escapes non-ascii chars: vim \- Vi IMproved (\[u0423]