Ok... At /usr/share/i18n/locales/ I have several Files so that might not be the problem. Or is it? (Now I'm a bit lost in this locations vs Translations).
>Generally, the locale is set on a per-user basis. If you want to set >the locale for individual processes, you have to set LANG/LC_* >yourself, e.g. providing a script which sets the variables before >invoking the application. So I can have a script that, as example, reads third parameter (grass64 -wxpython ES_es) and set the LANGUAGE as Spanish? Thank you On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 1:38 PM, Glynn Clements <gl...@gclements.plus.com>wrote: > > Gilbert Ferrara wrote: > > > I tryed to add LANG=es_ES LANGUAGE=es_ES to > > my /usr/local/grass-6.4.0svn/etc/init.sh and I got the following at my > > terminal window: > > (process:2196): Gdk-WARNING **: locale not supported by C library > > > > (process:2196): Gtk-WARNING **: Locale not supported by C library. > > Using the fallback 'C' locale. > > > > What it might be? > > This suggests that you don't have the necessary locale files > installed; look in /usr/share/i18n/locales. Some distributions only > support UTF-8 locales, in which case you may need to use es_ES.UTF-8. > > > By the way, How can I have 2 language sets I mean 2 different launchers > with > > 2 different languages? > > Launchers? > > Generally, the locale is set on a per-user basis. If you want to set > the locale for individual processes, you have to set LANG/LC_* > yourself, e.g. providing a script which sets the variables before > invoking the application. > > -- > Glynn Clements <gl...@gclements.plus.com> >
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