On Wed, 5 Feb 2020 07:43:39 +0530, you wrote: >On Tue, Feb 4, 2020 at 8:10 PM Aaron LI <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> In a terminal, set the LANG environment variable (e.g., to en_US.UTF-8): >> >> For csh: setenv LANG en_US.UTF-8 >> For sh: export LANG=en_US.UTF-8 >> >> Then you can see new locale settings with the 'locale' command. >> >> And try to 'ls' your files to see whether you see the right characters. >> > >Thank you :-) > >I tried it and now instead of > >03 - ????????? ?????????????????????????????? ??????????????? >?????????????????????????????? - ????????? ?????????????????????.pdf > >the file name shows up in terminal as > >03 - ___ ______ ___ ______ - __ _____.pdf > >Wondering if I should be using some other locale *not* starting with en_
The language of the local doesn't really matter, what matters is the UTF-8 part which should allow the display of non-ASCII characters. Just to double check, when you installed the font did it allow you to see the proper characters in Chrome? (is the font installed properly)
