Oszkó Albert said the following on 12/28/2009 04:44 PM:
Thanks for the tip! I am in Hungary, and i am Hungarian, so all is well. But i would like to know where to put such settings. Long long time ago I used SunOS 4.1.3 and in that there was a .cshrc file in the home directory (since C shell was the default) which could be edited. What is the equivalent of it in oS?
Putting something in ~/.cshrc or ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc will over-ride the global settings on a per user ONLY basis. Is that what you want? Is that what you really want? Or do you want to set language (etc) for the whole system? If you are the only user and you want to work in Hungarian, or most of your users are Hungarian, I'd recommend setting that language for the whole system. The if you do have a single non-Hungarian speaker he can over-ride at the per user level. The examples Carlos gave were an over-ride on a per command basis, which is useful for getting round the fact that any of us here don't read Hungarian, which the zypper reports were, I presume, using for titles and labels. I suspect Carlos was also dropping a hint that you or any future non-English users use the English example for generating output to this, an English language list. So: * global * per user * per command He, Carlos! Is there a setting for Scouse? :-) -- "The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who can't read them." --Mark Twain -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org