Dear
On Wed, Aug 09, 2000 at 03:19:13PM +0200, Wouter Hanegraaff wrote: > > The only place I found LANG=C appeared to be /etc/environment, and > changing this to LANG='' appears to have solved the problem. > > Why is LANG set to C from /etc/environment; which package puts this in? > And what does LANG=C mean to programs in general? > LANG is variable in bash. man bash has shown me that LANG is being used to set up default locale behaviour if other LC_* variables are not set. Good that you find that, now I can use mutt in iso-8859-2 mode. Really cool. However, I don't know what "C" means. Sincerely, Marko Cehaja