On Sat, Jan 05, 2008 at 09:31:04AM -0500, Peter Smerdon wrote:
> Florian Kulzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > On Thu, Jan 03, 2008 at 15:05:10 -0500, Peter Smerdon wrote:
> >
> > [...]
> >
> >> Hi, I too have some issue with UTF-8, although I can install and remove
> >> software without a prob
Florian Kulzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The only difference to the setup of your normal user seems to be
> LANGUAGE. Is there any reason that you reference the iso8859-1 locales
> there instead of the utf-8 ones? Were the iso8859-1 locales generated on
> your system? Check if they are listed
On Sat, Jan 05, 2008 at 15:22:13 -0500, Peter Smerdon wrote:
> Florian Kulzer writes:
>
> > Maybe the locale variables are not properly defined for root. What do
> > you get if you run
> >
> > su - -c locale
> >
> > (Or log in as root on the console and check the "locale" output then. If
> > you
Florian Kulzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Maybe the locale variables are not properly defined for root. What do
> you get if you run
>
> su - -c locale
>
> (Or log in as root on the console and check the "locale" output then. If
> you normally use "su" without the "-" option or "sudo" to do yo
On Sat, Jan 05, 2008 at 09:31:04 -0500, Peter Smerdon wrote:
> Florian Kulzer writes:
> > On Thu, Jan 03, 2008 at 15:05:10 -0500, Peter Smerdon wrote:
> >
> > [...]
> >
> >> Hi, I too have some issue with UTF-8, although I can install and remove
> >> software without a problem, my logs get filled w
Florian Kulzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thu, Jan 03, 2008 at 15:05:10 -0500, Peter Smerdon wrote:
>
> [...]
>
>> Hi, I too have some issue with UTF-8, although I can install and remove
>> software without a problem, my logs get filled with perl warnings about
>> locales.
>
> If you want he
On Wed, Jan 02, 2008 at 09:45:06PM -0800, Daniel Burrows wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 03, 2008 at 01:50:42PM +1300, Chris Bannister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> was heard to say:
> > On Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 05:19:52PM -0800, Daniel Burrows wrote:
> > > I'd guess that the locale of the workstation is relevant h
On Thu, Jan 03, 2008 at 03:05:10PM -0500, Peter Smerdon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was
heard to say:
> Hi, I too have some issue with UTF-8, although I can install and remove
> software without a problem, my logs get filled with perl warnings about
> locales.
Which logs? Terminal output? ~/.xsession
On Thu, Jan 03, 2008 at 15:05:10 -0500, Peter Smerdon wrote:
[...]
> Hi, I too have some issue with UTF-8, although I can install and remove
> software without a problem, my logs get filled with perl warnings about
> locales.
If you want help with that then we need to see the warning messages.
Daniel Burrows <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> btw, my locale(1) outputs:
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] locale
> LANG=en_US.UTF-8
> LC_CTYPE="en_US.UTF-8"
> LC_NUMERIC="en_US.UTF-8"
> LC_TIME="en_US.UTF-8"
> LC_COLLATE="en_US.UTF-8"
> LC_MONETARY="en_US.UTF-8"
> LC_MESSAGES="en_US.UTF-8"
> LC_PAPER="en_US.
OK, my questions on mutt and the en_US.UTF-8 package have been answered
pretty thoroughly (thanks, all!), but nobody's touched on my other
question. Just to get the answer into the archive for the sake of
others who may have the same question (or to remind myself in a couple
years...) now that I'v
On Thu, Jan 03, 2008 at 01:50:42PM +1300, Chris Bannister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
was heard to say:
> On Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 05:19:52PM -0800, Daniel Burrows wrote:
> > I'd guess that the locale of the workstation is relevant here. Your
> > terminal is going to be running in your locale (you didn'
On Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 05:19:52PM -0800, Daniel Burrows wrote:
> I'd guess that the locale of the workstation is relevant here. Your
> terminal is going to be running in your locale (you didn't mention if
> was the system console or an X terminal, but I assume an X terminal),
> and so it won't
David <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thomas Dickey wrote:
>> Daniel Burrows <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> IIRC there was a situation a few years ago where you had to install a
>>> Unicode-enabled xterm, pass "-u", or both. Sarge dates to 2005; I'm sure
>>> that there were X terminals in 2005
Thomas Dickey wrote:
Daniel Burrows <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
IIRC there was a situation a few years ago where you had to install a
Unicode-enabled xterm, pass "-u", or both. Sarge dates to 2005; I'm sure
that there were X terminals in 2005 that could handle UTF-8, but I don't
know if the d
Sven Joachim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2008-01-01 20:57 +0100, Daniel Burrows wrote:
>> Note that just changing the environment variable inside the terminal
>> won't help -- it's the terminal that needs to interpret those sequences,
>> so you have to run *the terminal itself* in the new lo
Daniel Burrows <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> IIRC there was a situation a few years ago where you had to install a
> Unicode-enabled xterm, pass "-u", or both. Sarge dates to 2005; I'm sure
> that there were X terminals in 2005 that could handle UTF-8, but I don't
> know if the default xterm did
On 2008-01-01 20:57 +0100, Daniel Burrows wrote:
> Note that just changing the environment variable inside the terminal
> won't help -- it's the terminal that needs to interpret those sequences,
> so you have to run *the terminal itself* in the new locale.
Some terminals also allow to change th
On Tue, Jan 01, 2008 at 12:48:04PM -0600, Dave Sherohman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
was heard to say:
> On Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 05:19:52PM -0800, Daniel Burrows wrote:
> > On Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 06:23:52PM -0600, Dave Sherohman <[EMAIL
> > PROTECTED]> was heard to say:
> > > Is it significant that the
On Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 05:19:52PM -0800, Daniel Burrows wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 06:23:52PM -0600, Dave Sherohman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> was heard to say:
> > Is it significant that the old machine was using the basic en_US locale
> > or that I've been accessing both of them via ssh from a
On Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 06:23:52PM -0600, Dave Sherohman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
was heard to say:
> Is it significant that the old machine was using the basic en_US locale
> or that I've been accessing both of them via ssh from a workstation with
> its locale set to C?
I'd guess that the locale of
Greetings, all!
I've just moved over from an ancient self-hosted Debian box onto some
more modern hardware and things are going mostly smoothly, but I'm
having some issues with mutt's thread indicators (extended-ASCII arrows)
displaying improperly. I've double-checked that I've got all locale
set
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