On Fri, Oct 26, 2007 at 12:55:45PM -0600, Joseph wrote:
> # dispatch-conf
> WARNING: terminal is not fully functional
>
> I've never seen it before.
It's because the remote machine doesn't have termcap/terminfo data for
urxvt. Doing TERM=rxvt ssh [EMAIL PROTECTED] works as a workaround, although
On 10/26/07 12:43, Derek Martin wrote:
Do you have ".Xauthority" file in your home directory?
Er, yes... but I'm not sure what that has to do with it. .Xauthority
is a file which the X server checks to see if you have permission
(cookies) to access the display. I guess you might mean .Xdefaul
On Tue, Oct 23, 2007 at 09:29:23AM -0600, Joseph wrote:
> Thanks for the input Derek,
>
> On 10/23/07 01:12, Derek Martin wrote:
> I have the same settings in my "locale"
Good.
> >Using this, I can type Korean, Japanese, and Chinese (though I know
> >very little Japanese, and almost no Chines
Thanks for the input Derek,
On 10/23/07 01:12, Derek Martin wrote:
The key to displaying all of those languages simultaneously is UTF-8.
Your locale should look something like this:
$ 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=C
LC_M
On Mon, Oct 22, 2007 at 07:51:01PM -0600, Joseph wrote:
> What kind of xterm do you folks use with Mutt to display correctly Asian
> fonts, Chinese, Japanese, Korean etc?
I use standard xterm, using a UTF-8 environment and the GNU universal
unicode (iso-10646) fonts, but the Chinese character sup
What kind of xterm do you folks use with Mutt to display correctly Asian fonts,
Chinese, Japanese, Korean etc?
I've the following Chinese (I think) fonts installed: zh-kcfonts, arphicfonts,
jisx0213, unfonts
I have install "cxterm" and when I try to run it I get:
-
Warning: Cannot convert st