On 8 Nov 2011, at 13:45, Gary L. Wade wrote:
> That's how it's always worked.
I just did show the font panel in TextEdit and looked at Arial:
10.5 shows Bold, Italic. etc. (English)
10.6 and 10.7 show Fett, Kursiv etc. (German).
So this NSFont behaviour (which I guess is used in the font pane
On 8 Nov 2011, at 13:45, Gary L. Wade wrote:
> That's how it's always worked. One can argue that Apple should ask the user,
> when moving a more-specific locale (en-GB) away from a less-specific locale
> (en), if the less-specific locale should "stick around" and be moved up into
> the intuiti
That's how it's always worked. One can argue that Apple should ask the user,
when moving a more-specific locale (en-GB) away from a less-specific locale
(en), if the less-specific locale should "stick around" and be moved up into
the intuitive order following the more-specific locale. Naturally,
Assuming that I have the following language preferences (System Preferences →
Language and Text → Language):
British English,
Deutsch
Français
English
what is a program supposed to do if it has:
en.lproj
de.lproj
but NOT en_GB.lproj ?
I guess (but did not find an authoritative answer) that it s