Difference between revisions of "Fixing locales"

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and appended to an existing bug report with the workaround information
 
and appended to an existing bug report with the workaround information
 
(note that double quotes do not work in the KMenu environment.)
 
(note that double quotes do not work in the KMenu environment.)
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[[Category:Howto]]

Revision as of 13:10, 10 October 2008

I was having locale problems. Why? I don't know. But all of a sudden, applications like K3B would complain about locales not being properly set.

For example, viewing a man page in Konsole would generate a warning about "LC_ALL" not being set

So, after reading a zillion webpages, I finally punted and just appended to my ~/.bashrc file and man pages worked again

export LANG="en_US.UTF-8"
export LC_ALL="en_US.UTF-8"
export LANGUAGE="en_US.UTF-8"
export LC_CTYPE="en_US.UTF-8"

I ended up editing /var/lib/locales/supported.d/local

which already had the line

en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8

to which I added the following two lines

en_US ISO-8859-1
en_US.ISO-8859-15 ISO-8859-15

then I did a

sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales

which updated my system

That command seems to regenerate all the locales in /usr/lib/locale/


There are a dizzying number of files, programs and settings involved in locale; and worse -- there are differences between distributions on what commands work, how they work; and where the configurations are stored. I suggest that you start off with

man:/locale-gen

to get an idea of what files are involved in your distribution.

For some reason, I do have an archive on my system (in addition to all the independent files) even though I've never issued the gen command with the archive option, and /etc/belocs/locale-gen.conf does not set the default to archive.

All the files in /var/lib/belocs will get updated when you run

sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales

See also[edit | edit source]

man:locale(1)

from that man page, you learn what

locale
locale -a
locale -m 

are

in /etc/default/locale I have these two lines:

LANG="en_US.UTF-8"
LANGUAGE="en_US:en"

in /etc/environment I have

PATH="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games"
LANGUAGE="en_US:en"
LANG="en_US.UTF-8"

in /usr/share/i18n/SUPPORTED there is a very long list of the supported locales. You can take any number of them and add them to your /var/lib/locales/supported.d/local

Workaround[edit | edit source]

Setting environment variables prior to launching an application is one way to work around this problem, but obviously does not solve it on a system-wise basis. I used this command in KMenu to get around the fact that the variable was set system-wide, but didn't get picked up in the application environment: env LC_ALL='en_US.UTF-8' && k3b %U and appended to an existing bug report with the workaround information (note that double quotes do not work in the KMenu environment.)