On 08/05/12 10:53, Ed Greshko wrote:
FWIW.
I have recreated you problem by editing my /etc/sysconfig/i18n file to contain
#LANG="en_US.UTF-8"
LANG="en_US"
SYSFONT="True"
on my F17 Beta test system. I then rebooted and I get exactly what you get
So, I'm confident that'll fix your prob
FWIW.
I have recreated you problem by editing my /etc/sysconfig/i18n file to contain
#LANG="en_US.UTF-8"
LANG="en_US"
SYSFONT="True"
on my F17 Beta test system. I then rebooted and I get exactly what you get
So, I'm confident that'll fix your problem
Sorry I could not do it earlie
On 05/08/2012 08:37 PM, Jonathan Kamens wrote:
> On 05/06/2012 08:27 AM, Kevin DeKorte wrote:
>> Can you check your locale on the GDM login page? I had this problem
>> when I upgraded to F16, in that I could not see utf-8 characters in
>> the terminal. Turned out my locale was set to en_US.C or som
On 05/06/2012 08:27 AM, Kevin DeKorte wrote:
Can you check your locale on the GDM login page? I had this problem
when I upgraded to F16, in that I could not see utf-8 characters in
the terminal. Turned out my locale was set to en_US.C or something
like that when it should have been en_US.UTF8. Ch
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On 05/05/2012 10:54 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 05/06/2012 12:39 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> On 05/06/2012 12:18 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> Wellthis may be "odd".
>>>
>>> As I think you can see, the file name displays correctly in the
>>> email.
>>>
>
On 05/06/2012 12:39 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 05/06/2012 12:18 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> Wellthis may be "odd".
>>
>> As I think you can see, the file name displays correctly in the email.
>>
>> If I touch 09 ביילע.mp3" I get a correct file name...
>>
>> If I 7za x utf8.7z I get this 09
On 05/06/2012 12:18 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> Wellthis may be "odd".
>
> As I think you can see, the file name displays correctly in the email.
>
> If I touch 09 ביילע.mp3" I get a correct file name...
>
> If I 7za x utf8.7z I get this 09 ×?×?×?×?×¢.txt
FWIW I created a file called
well i tried it
when i make the file with touch 09 ביילע it shows the same thing when
i do ls | grep 09
ביילע
well this really odd but i wuld like to test it again if you gt
another file in Hebrew
On Sun, May 6, 2012 at 12:18 AM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 05/06/2012 12:07 PM, Jonathan Kamens wrot
On 05/06/2012 12:07 PM, Jonathan Kamens wrote:
> On 05/05/2012 11:58 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> For those of us not able to input Hebrew Could you type in a sample?
> Here's an example file name:
>
> 09 ביילע.mp3
>
> Having said that, it could get corrupted by email just as easily as by ls, so
On 05/05/2012 11:58 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
For those of us not able to input Hebrew Could you type in a sample?
Here's an example file name:
09 ביילע.mp3
Having said that, it could get corrupted by email just as easily as by
ls, so I've attached a 7z file with a similar file name embedded
On 05/06/2012 11:53 AM, Jonathan Kamens wrote:
> Two additional things about this I've discovered...
>
> 1. Changing the encoding of the terminal to utf-8 in the Terminal | Set
> Character
> Encoding menu doesn't help. It changes the garbage that is displayed, but it's
> still garbage.
>
> 2. If I
Two additional things about this I've discovered...
1. Changing the encoding of the terminal to utf-8 in the Terminal |
Set Character Encoding menu doesn't help. It changes the garbage
that is displayed, but it's still garbage.
2. If I do "echo *.mp3" instead of
OK, so I could be remembering wrong, but I could have sworn that at
some point in the past gnome-terminal was able to display file names
with utf-8 characters in them.
Now, however, when I have a file on my desktop whose name looks like
this:
It lo
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