
Carlos E. R. composed on 2018-12-26 03:54 (UTC+0100):
Felix Miata wrote:
These are from 42.3 installations. On both, /etc/sysconfig/language is identical, and 'DroidSansMono.ttf: "Droid Sans Mono" "Regular"' results from 'fc-match monospace'. These show good vs. bad box drawing characters in Konsole3: Good: http://fm.no-ip.com/SS/Suse/lc423goodP5BSE.jpg Bad http://fm.no-ip.com/SS/Suse/lc423bad00srv.jpg
Locale on the good host, all POSIX except CTYPE and ALL, same in Konsole3 as in XTerm: # locale LANG=POSIX LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC="POSIX" LC_TIME="POSIX" LC_COLLATE="POSIX" LC_MONETARY="POSIX" LC_MESSAGES="POSIX" LC_PAPER="POSIX" LC_NAME="POSIX" LC_ADDRESS="POSIX" LC_TELEPHONE="POSIX" LC_MEASUREMENT="POSIX" LC_IDENTIFICATION="POSIX" LC_ALL=
This is typical of running locale as root. You have to do it as the user that has the session.
I guess I didn't remember to write as much as I needed to. I know root and users are normally different, but not /why/ they are by default configured differently. Here, except for LC_ALL, all are [en_US|en_US.UTF-8] (by default) for ordinary users (which usually have 'export LC_TIME=en_DK' in .bashrc). (What, if anything as a practical matter, makes en_US and en_US.UTF-8 differ I don't know either, but I'd really rather not see displayed CJK and other alphabets' characters I don't read.) -- Evolution as taught in public schools is religion, not science. Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks! Felix Miata *** http://fm.no-ip.com/ -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-support+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-support+owner@opensuse.org