![]() ![]() There shoul be a LANGUAGE variable in /etc/default/ locale. In my /usr/share/ i18n/SUPPORTED encoding are in uppercase (look your to be sure). So check /usr/share/ i18n/SUPPORTED and copy/paste a string witch contain the character coding string, is your case is should be either en_US.ISO-8859-15 (for Windows compatibility) or en_US.UTF-8 (for the rest of the wolrd !!). ![]() It a very important part since it tell the system how to display character (espcilialy in filename). PATH="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games"Īs i could see there no character encoding(UTF-8 or ISO88591) assign to your LANG environment variable. > /usr/share/i18n/SUPPORTED ou use 'sudo update-locale' with valid ![]() Nope, I don't use any desktop environment. ![]() > If you use GNOME interface you should update ~/.dmrc the same way. PATH="/ usr/local/ sbin:/usr/ local/bin: /usr/sbin: /usr/bin: /sbin:/ bin:/usr/ games" > /usr/share/ i18n/SUPPORTED ou use 'sudo update-locale' with valid > LANGUAGE with a valid encoding string like 'fr_CA.UTF-8' found in You could edit /etc/default/locale manualy and replace LANG and > Setting system wide locale for Ubuntu 10.10 net/ubuntu/ +source/ localeconf/ +question/ 130696 > Your question #130696 on localeconf in ubuntu changed: I want to remove that long list of en_XX locales that I will never use However, that didn't get me anywhere either: However I found such tactics no longer works under Ubuntu. In Debian, I just need to update /etc/locale.gen and do locale-gen, and I'm done. I am having a hard time trying to configure my system locales. ![]()
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