On Tue, May 06, 2008 at 02:23:41PM +0300, Dotan Cohen wrote: > > Check that "en_NZ.UTF-8" is a legal locale on your machine, and that > it should not be "en_NZ.utf8". The -a flag on the locale command will > show you. On my machine, the "utf" letters are lowercase: > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ locale -a > C > en_DK.utf8 > en_GB.utf8 > en_US.utf8 > he_IL.utf8 > POSIX
locale -a gives: C en_NZ en_NZ.iso88591 en_NZ.utf8 en_US en_US.iso88591 mi_NZ mi_NZ.iso885913 mi_NZ.utf8 POSIX But locale gives: LANG=en_NZ.UTF-8 LC_CTYPE="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_NUMERIC="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_TIME="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_COLLATE=C LC_MONETARY="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_MESSAGES="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_PAPER="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_NAME="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_ADDRESS="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_TELEPHONE="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_MEASUREMENT="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_IDENTIFICATION="en_NZ.UTF-8" LC_ALL= I picked the locale using dpkg-reconfigure locales -- Chris. ====== "One, with God, is always a majority, but many a martyr has been burned at the stake while the votes were being counted." -- Thomas B. Reed -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]