Hi Yuri, try this below, export LANG=zh_TW.UTF-8 export LC_CTYPE=zh_TW.UTF-8 export LC_MESSAGES en_US.ISO8859-1 export LC_TIME en_US.ISO8859-1
this may let your gcin working and keep your system speak in english further more, you may want to read this doc http://chinsan2.twbbs.org/zh-tut/ Regards, jyuny1 2008/6/7 Yuri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Hi Jyun-Yi, > > I am using bash. > And XMODIFIERS, GTK_IM_MODULE and QT_IM_MODULE variables are all set to the > values you wrote. > But in QT applications the prompt window doesn't pop up as in GTK ones. > > I am not setting any of LANG/LC_ALL/LC_CTYPE to Chinese. > This may be related to the problem. > When I set all of those to zh_TW.UTF-8 gcin begins to pop up the prompt > window from QT applications just like from GTK. But after selection the word > doesn't appear 9in the editbox. > But I don't want to use Chinese locale since this makes all applications > speak Chinese. And I only want to be able to type Chinese words. > > Do you know how to achieve this? > > Yuri > > > Jyun-Yi Liou wrote: > >> Hi Yuri, >> First of all, You do not specify what shell you are using. TCSH or BASH? >> Second, waht DE you using too? >> >> for TCSH, it should be this in your ~/.xinitrc >> setenv XMODIFIERS='@im=gcin' >> setenv GTK_IM_MODULE=gcin >> setenv QT_IM_MODULE=gcin >> >> I guess you are using TCSH not BASH. >> gcin can let you type chinese in GTK apps without set GTK_IM_MODULE >> >> You can check the SHELL VARIABLE that is set or not after logged-in X. >> >> Regards, >> jyuny1 >> >> > _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"