Benhard,

Looks i have misled you, i am sorry for that, because I did not try "ko".
What i want to know is how NTFS-3G can support two languages or multiple
languages at the same time, not only Chinese or Korean.

I think if NTFS-3g can, it will be more convenient.

On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 2:18 AM, Bernhard Kaindl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Dear hufh,
>
>  to sum up what you see:
>
> * locale=zh_CN.UTF-8: Chinese file name are displayed but Korean not
> * locale=ko: Korean file name can be displayed but Chinese not
>
> I must say that it strikes me like odd that you say you see Korean
> with 'locale=ko', because at least on my recent openSUSE system, there
> is no such locale, e.g. I get error messages when I try to get information
> bout it's codeset:
>
> LC_ALL=ko locale charmap
> locale: Cannot set LC_CTYPE to default locale: No such file or directory
> locale: Cannot set LC_ALL to default locale: No such file or directory
> ANSI_X3.4-1968
>
> It may be defined in your /usr/share/locale/locale.alias file.
>
> But even if it is, you'd need to know to which locale it is aliased.
>
> All what I can say is that AFAIK, you have to use a locale which uses
> UTF-8 and you can verify it like this:
>
> LC_ALL=zh_CN.UTF-8 locale charmap
> UTF-8
>
> In addition, to see Chinese and Korean at the same time in one directory
> listing, you have to use a font which actually provides all the characters
> which you want to see from *both* languages (Chinese and Korean).
>
> That means: In addition to a locale which uses UTF-8, you need an UTF-8
> font which provides the glyphs (the visual representation of the
> characters)
> at the Unicode code points for the characters.
>
> This means, this should be outside of the scope of ntfs-3g: If your are
> using
> an locale with uses UTF-8 and a font for UTF-8 which has the glyphs for
> both
> languages, then you should see both at the same time, but likely nobody
> here
> can help you with that, you likely should look for help from people which
> regularily use Chinese and Korean at the same time without switching
> locales.
>
> From the part of NTFS-3g, all what you can do is to verify that the locale
> which you are using at mount time is *really* using UTF-8 as character
> set,
> and you can verify this with the command which I gave you above.
>
> Bernhard
>
> On Mon, 25 Feb 2008, hufh wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I am experiencing an issue related to multi-language. I wants to mount a
> > NTFS partition, on which some Chinese file name and Korean file name
> exsit.
> > If i set "locale=zh_CN.UTF-8", Chinese file name can be displayed but
> Korean
> > can't, if i set "locale=ko", Korean file name can be displayed but
> Chinese
> > can't. I want to display all of file names at the same time, anybody can
> > tell me how i should do? Thanks in advance.
>
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