On Tue, Oct 08, 2002 at 10:35:51AM +0200, Robert Ian Smit wrote: > * Bob Nielsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [07-10-2002 22:57]: > > Along this same line, is there a locale setting which would allow mutt > > to display non-English characters? Now they all show up as "?". > > Nice way of putting that, non-English, but I guess you want to > display umlauts, circumflexes etc. > > Use locale (1) to check your setting. I had to change it from POSIX > to en_US. Ofcourse you will need to generate this locale on your > system if needed (dpkg-reconfigure locales)
My ./bash_profile contain LC_CTYPE=en_US.ISO-8859-1 export LC_CTYPE Keep all LC_* as C. I get all French/German... chars OK. So $ locale LANG=C LC_CTYPE=en_US.ISO-8859-1 LC_NUMERIC="C" LC_TIME="C" LC_COLLATE="C" LC_MONETARY="C" LC_MESSAGES="C" LC_PAPER="C" LC_NAME="C" LC_ADDRESS="C" LC_TELEPHONE="C" LC_MEASUREMENT="C" LC_IDENTIFICATION="C" LC_ALL= -- ~\^o^/~~~ ~\^.^/~~~ ~\^*^/~~~ ~\^_^/~~~ ~\^+^/~~~ ~\^:^/~~~ ~\^v^/~~~ +++++ Osamu Aoki @ Cupertino CA USA, GPG-key: A8061F32 .''`. Debian Reference: post-installation user's guide for non-developers : :' : http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/reference/ also http://qref.sf.net `. `' "Our Priorities are Our Users and Free Software" --- Social Contract -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]