Thanks Michael It turns out that my $LANG was set to POSIX, rather than to en_AU. Changed it to en_AU in my .bash_profile and date formats are back to normal. Cheers Damien
On Tue, 2003-07-29 at 07:00, Not Zed wrote: > Timezone != time locale. > > You need to set your locale appropriately. I did it at install time, > and maybe you can do it at login time, or something else which I don't > know of. > > Michael > > On Sun, 2003-07-27 at 07:19, Damien Solley wrote: > > A quick question: > > How can I get Evo 1.4 to display dates in dd/mm/yyyy format? I have > > selected Australia/Sydney as my time zone in the settings dialogue, but > > when I create a new appointment I have to navigate through dates in > > mm/dd/yyyy format. My Debian system timezone is set to Australia/Sydney > > as well. > > I distinctly remember that Evo 1.2 displayed the dates correctly, but am > > not sure how I got it too :-) > > Thanks in advance for any pointers, > > Damien > > _______________________________________________ > evolution maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/evolution -- Damien Solley _______________________________________________ evolution maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/evolution
