Re: [Ubuntu-ch] Page and date format in US-installation

2010-01-07 Thread Simon Schneebeli
Hello Wolf,

It looks that this mostly did the trick. I've added LC_MEASUREMENTS, but 
somehow Openoffice seams to still prefer inches...

Anyway, that's not that important.

Thanks a lot.

 Simon

Wolf Geldmacher wrote:
> Hi Simon,
> 
> The following might help you:
> 
> - You can set a default paper format in /etc/papersize, see "man 5 
> papersize". This
>   should take care of all programs that do printing.
> 
> - You can set system wide default values for the time and paper format 
> by setting
> LC_TIME="de_CH.UTF-8"
>   and
>   LC_PAPER="de_CH.UTF-8"
>   in /etc/default/locale, leaving LANG="en_US" in the same file - see 
> "man locale".
>   The specific settings should override the generic setting in the same 
> file.
> 
> Your mileage may vary, though, as not all programs handle these settings 
> correctly.
> 
> Cheers,
> Wolf
> 
> On Thu, 7 Jan 2010, Simon Schneebeli wrote:
> 
>> Hello all,
>>
>> I have just updated my computer from Ubuntu 9.04 to 9.10 (actually did a
>> clean install and then copied my files back on my computer).
>>
>> One thing that I have never managed to configure properly is the
>> standard page and date format. Since my installation is in US-en, page
>> format is always Letter, and the date is MM/DD/ instead of 
>> DD.MM..
>>
>> I just wondered whether there is any "switch" to easily change this once
>> and for all and for all programmes without affecting the language 
>> settings.
>>
>> Thanks for any help.
>>
>> Simon
>>
>> -- 
>> Ubuntu-ch mailing list
>> Ubuntu-ch@lists.ubuntu.com
>> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-ch
>>
> 

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Re: [Ubuntu-ch] Page and date format in US-installation

2010-01-07 Thread Wolf Geldmacher
Hi Simon,

The following might help you:

- You can set a default paper format in /etc/papersize, see "man 5 papersize". 
This
   should take care of all programs that do printing.

- You can set system wide default values for the time and paper format by 
setting
LC_TIME="de_CH.UTF-8"
   and
LC_PAPER="de_CH.UTF-8"
   in /etc/default/locale, leaving LANG="en_US" in the same file - see "man 
locale".
   The specific settings should override the generic setting in the same file.

Your mileage may vary, though, as not all programs handle these settings 
correctly.

Cheers,
Wolf

On Thu, 7 Jan 2010, Simon Schneebeli wrote:

> Hello all,
>
> I have just updated my computer from Ubuntu 9.04 to 9.10 (actually did a
> clean install and then copied my files back on my computer).
>
> One thing that I have never managed to configure properly is the
> standard page and date format. Since my installation is in US-en, page
> format is always Letter, and the date is MM/DD/ instead of DD.MM..
>
> I just wondered whether there is any "switch" to easily change this once
> and for all and for all programmes without affecting the language settings.
>
> Thanks for any help.
>
> Simon
>
> -- 
> Ubuntu-ch mailing list
> Ubuntu-ch@lists.ubuntu.com
> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-ch
>

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[Ubuntu-ch] Page and date format in US-installation

2010-01-07 Thread Simon Schneebeli
Hello all,

I have just updated my computer from Ubuntu 9.04 to 9.10 (actually did a 
clean install and then copied my files back on my computer).

One thing that I have never managed to configure properly is the 
standard page and date format. Since my installation is in US-en, page 
format is always Letter, and the date is MM/DD/ instead of DD.MM..

I just wondered whether there is any "switch" to easily change this once 
and for all and for all programmes without affecting the language settings.

Thanks for any help.

 Simon

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