Dan Shimshoni writes:
> I had installed Fedora 21 on x86_64 (server, and with kde). When
> installation started, I selected the language as "british english" and
> not "American English".
I am guessing the installation chose a British keyboard for you. This is
a bit surprising because Red Hat, u
Hi, Linux-IL,
I had installed Fedora 21 on x86_64 (server, and with kde). When
installation started, I selected the language as "british english" and not
"American English".
Now when I log in and press some keys, I get unwanted results.
For example, when pressing @ I get the " character.
Now wit
Alan Yaniger wrote on Mon, Jan 05, 2015 at 14:09:06 +0200:
> Hi Linux-IL members,
>
> I'm using bidiv to read Hebrew in mutt.
>
> It works ok with reading Hebrew messages, but not when reading the
> subject headers, which still show the Hebrew backwards.
>
Personally, I set edit_headers=on, and
Hi Daniel,
On 05/01/15 16:17, Daniel Shahaf wrote:
> Did you try changing
> echo $@
> to
> echo "$@"?
>
Thanks, that caused a major improvement.
Alan
--
Alan Yaniger
Tk Open Systems, Ltd
Telephone: 0546-841-481
Skype: alanyaniger
http://tkos.co.il
___
Hi Rabin,
I've used and tried mlterm, and there's no difference. If you have
checked that this gets around the problem, please let me know, and we
can compare configurations.
Alan
On 05/01/15 14:22, Rabin Yasharzadehe wrote:
> You can try and use mlterm.
>
> --
> Rabin
>
> On Mon, Jan 5, 2015
You can try and use mlterm.
--
Rabin
On Mon, Jan 5, 2015 at 2:09 PM, Alan Yaniger wrote:
> Hi Linux-IL members,
>
> I'm using bidiv to read Hebrew in mutt.
>
> It works ok with reading Hebrew messages, but not when reading the
> subject headers, which still show the Hebrew backwards.
>
> So I w
Hi Linux-IL members,
I'm using bidiv to read Hebrew in mutt.
It works ok with reading Hebrew messages, but not when reading the
subject headers, which still show the Hebrew backwards.
So I wrote the following script caled "bidi_index" to enable reading of Hebrew
in the subjects:
echo $@ > /tmp