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Oszkó Albert said the following on 12/28/2009 04:44 PM:
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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.
It may be usefull to have root in English, and the users in the local language, as the administrator needs to acess the documentation (man pages, etc), which are usually badly or not translated at all.
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.
Exactly :-)
So:
* global * per user * per command
Right.
He, Carlos! Is there a setting for Scouse? :-)
Mmm? Scouse? Ah! The Liverpool dialect, the wikipedia says. Uau. That's new for me. Well, this is GNU, you can add a translation for any language and add it to the system. It just needs volunteers >;-) Sometimes the local goverment subsidizes such translations. It happens in Spain with some of our regional languages, I believe. Ask Liverpool's city council :-) By the way, there are 35 'en' locales. Have a look: 'locale -a | grep en_' - -- Cheers, Carlos E. R. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAks5RqUACgkQtTMYHG2NR9VksACeL05brtMm6HoADPN7Z0Xt0ml4 9GAAn3B7IxeppG6zK3zzYJOecxcAyUzA =QinN -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----