Re: what is supposed to set $LANG?

2007-11-08 Thread Andrei Popescu
On Thu, Nov 08, 2007 at 10:34:48AM +0200, Micha Feigin wrote: I found out yesterday that this must be a bash setup problem since open a terminal doesn't set $LANG but su to a user does set it. I think that there is a problem between the login shell and non-login shell On my (sid) machine

Re: what is supposed to set $LANG?

2007-11-08 Thread Micha Feigin
On Wed, 07 Nov 2007 20:34:31 -0500 David Clymer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Tue, 2007-11-06 at 23:59 +0200, Micha Feigin wrote: I noticed lately that $LANG is no longer set by default on my system. Seems that it is defined correctly in /etc/defaults and when changing to root it is also

Re: what is supposed to set $LANG?

2007-11-08 Thread Micha Feigin
I have a newly installed system and no /etc/environment, looking at files from an old system, it's supposed to be created by localeconf which no longer exists. The settings are now set in /etc/defaults/locale but the are not read for new terminals, also doesn't seem to help what kind of shell is

Re: what is supposed to set $LANG?

2007-11-07 Thread David Clymer
On Tue, 2007-11-06 at 23:59 +0200, Micha Feigin wrote: I noticed lately that $LANG is no longer set by default on my system. Seems that it is defined correctly in /etc/defaults and when changing to root it is also defined, but it is not defined for the default user seems like some programs

what is supposed to set $LANG?

2007-11-06 Thread Micha Feigin
I noticed lately that $LANG is no longer set by default on my system. Seems that it is defined correctly in /etc/defaults and when changing to root it is also defined, but it is not defined for the default user seems like some programs get confused by the lack of a default encoding thanks --