On Friday 28 October 2016 22:56:22 e Lpe wrote: > Ok, thanks for the lesson. > I made a mistake. I apologize. > I din't saw how as changed Debian distribution and community since 2002. > It's so far... > Forget this thread, or mail, call it as you want. > I will found a solution by myself. > > And thanks to people try to help. > End off.
We still don't know what you are trying to do. Brian told you a solution to what seems to be your problem. Why not try it? If your problem is what it seems to be this will solve it. Lisi > > 2016-10-28 14:31 GMT-04:00 Greg Wooledge <wool...@eeg.ccf.org>: > > On Fri, Oct 28, 2016 at 07:19:47PM +0100, Brian wrote: > > > 4. There is a way to get your error mesaages in English but I have > > > forgotten how. Someone will be along in a while to explain how it > > > is done. > > > > If you're working from a command shell, you can do: > > > > export LC_ALL=C > > > > and then the rest of your commands should all produce output in the > > "C" locale (traditional US English, ASCII characters only). > > > > If you're working with a GUI, then all bets are off. You might be able > > to restart the GUI application with the locale variables set differently, > > but if it's something like a display manager invoked directly from > > /sbin/init then it could become difficult. Or, the GUI application may > > have its own internal language selection.