> > I still see characters such as hyphens
> > (-), boldface pipes, and single quotes rendered as â (circumflex-a) in my
> > terminal windows. If I set LANG=en_US.ISO-8859-1, then the characters are
> > shown correctly.
>
> Your locale setup is fine. The problem here is that your terminal is
> i
On Fri, Jun 05, 2009 at 06:08:01PM -0400, Andrew Schulman wrote:
>
> I still see characters such as hyphens
> (-), boldface pipes, and single quotes rendered as â (circumflex-a) in my
> terminal windows. If I set LANG=en_US.ISO-8859-1, then the characters are
> shown correctly.
Your locale setup
On Fri, Jun 05, 2009 at 06:08:01PM -0400, Andrew Schulman wrote:
> Thank you both for your help.
>
> > You could try cleaning things up a bit with 'localepurge'
>
> Looking at the package description, this doesn't seem like a good idea. And
> anyway, my problem isn't that I have too many locales.
Thank you both for your help.
> You could try cleaning things up a bit with 'localepurge'
Looking at the package description, this doesn't seem like a good idea. And
anyway, my problem isn't that I have too many locales. It seems to be a
font problem.
> $ sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales
Yes, I h
On Sat, Jun 06, 2009 at 02:52:00AM +0900, Osamu Aoki wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Fri, Jun 05, 2009 at 12:55:29PM -0400, Andrew Schulman wrote:
> > In order to avoid problems with CUPS (yes Master, I shall comply) and get
> > consistency within my LAN, I'm finally giving up on the ISO-8859-1 locale
> > and
Hi,
On Fri, Jun 05, 2009 at 12:55:29PM -0400, Andrew Schulman wrote:
> In order to avoid problems with CUPS (yes Master, I shall comply) and get
> consistency within my LAN, I'm finally giving up on the ISO-8859-1 locale
> and switching my desktop host to use UTF-8. I've already corrected
> /etc/
On Fri, Jun 05, 2009 at 12:55:29PM -0400, Andrew Schulman wrote:
> In order to avoid problems with CUPS (yes Master, I shall comply) and get
> consistency within my LAN, I'm finally giving up on the ISO-8859-1 locale
> and switching my desktop host to use UTF-8. I've already corrected
> /etc/local
In order to avoid problems with CUPS (yes Master, I shall comply) and get
consistency within my LAN, I'm finally giving up on the ISO-8859-1 locale
and switching my desktop host to use UTF-8. I've already corrected
/etc/locale.gen, to change the default locale to UTF-8:
$ egrep -v '^(#|$)' /etc/l
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