Darryl Gregorash composed on 2016-04-10 07:35 (UTC-0600):
Felix Miata wrote:
Wolfgang Bauer composed on 2016-04-10 10:35 (UTC+0200):
Wolfgang Bauer composed:
What locale are you using?
Good question. How do I tell? I'm an American in the US who speaks, reads and writes only one language, so don't ordinarily have to pay much attention to locale issues. My main issues regarding locale are getting iso format dates, times in 86400 seconds per day format, and letter paper.
What happens if you explicitly set your local timezone in the Region field?
It produces the https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=340982 problem, no way to discover and select iso date among the bazillion countries in the select list.
Wolfgang's /usr/share/plasma/plasmoids/org.kde.plasma.digitalclock/contents/ui/DigitalClock.qml edit solves the clock problem, but doing as you suggest fubars the date (little endian instead of iso). Fubar? It's well beyond that, I think. With a region setting of English Canada, seconds show up here, and I can select ISO date format (and have done so). There seem to be some rather funky assumptions about "acceptable" formats when the region is set to the USA. There should not be any need to hack a script to be able to set one's system in some
On 10/04/16 12:04 PM, Felix Miata wrote: preferred way. There are two regional settings for the USA: "United States - American English" and "UnitedStates"; do you get a little endian date with both of those? Note that setting the system to use ISO date is not in the list of regional settings; AFAICT it is not anywhere in the desktop configuration, nor even in YaST. In YaST/System/Environment/Language, you -can- set RC_LC_TIME to define the output format for date and time. Perhaps you could try setting ISO dates in there. Still, no matter how the system is set up, one should still be able to select ISO date format in the clock applet settings. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-kde+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-kde+owner@opensuse.org