Wolfgang Sourdeau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Since ISO-8859-15 is basicall ISO-8859-1+euro+some other characters. > Why is the "@euro" needed ?
A few often used chars has changed. So it is important to know which cahrset is used. For example 1/2 and the french oe-ligature seems to be on the same place. I have no idea if there is other differences between the two locales, but you could expect that LC_MONETARY=es_ES and [EMAIL PROTECTED] would give different behaviours from some programs. -- hash-bang-slash-bin-slash-bash