>>>>> "Drew" == Drew Parsons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> Preparing correct locale: Pick a locale you would use. I >> decided to use en_GB, you may use something else, the important >> part is the UTF-8 encoding. 1) generate the locale: # >> localedef -v -c -i en_GB -f UTF-8 /usr/lib/locale/en_GB.UTF-8 Drew> Isn't the "correct" approach to define en_AU UTF-8 in Drew> /etc/locale.gen, and run locale-gen? I am not sure if this is what you meant, but my understanding is that there is far greater support for the _GB locale, rather then the _AU locale: [515] [scrooge:bam] ~ >du /usr/share/locale/en_GB 136 /usr/share/locale/en_GB/LC_MESSAGES 140 /usr/share/locale/en_GB [516] [scrooge:bam] ~ >du /usr/share/locale/en_AU 8 /usr/share/locale/en_AU/LC_MESSAGES 12 /usr/share/locale/en_AU ideally, if the message is not found in _AU, it should fall back onto _GB, but I am not sure this is possible. Experimentation shows that using en_AU often uses the US spelling of words, where en_GB doesn't. Drew> mutt is cool that way! No I can see your accents properly Drew> :) And some chinese characters too sometimes! I just hope Drew> ncurses gets released soon with proper utf-8 support! and (x)emacs! How do you get gdm to log you in using a nonstandard locale? I can - select a list of different languages, but not different versions of English - in the configuration screen see a list of "default" locales, and select en_UK, but en_UK is not a valid locale. I believe it should be en_GB. - in the configuration screen manually type "en_GB", but this doesn't seem to do anything. -- Brian May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>