Carlos E. R. composed on 2018-12-26 08:57 (UTC+0100):
Felix Miata wrote:
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, ... Now that I look at the photos, the answer is slightly different. Machine 00srv does not use posix in the locale configuration.
/etc/sysconfig/language
## Type: string(ctype) ## Default: ctype # # This defines if the user "root" should use the locale settings # which are defined here. # Value "ctype" means that root uses just LC_CTYPE. # ROOT_USES_LANG="ctype"
I never change this.
I don't either, and since both PCs are using the same /etc/sysconfig/language file, with that same specification, what is this supposed to be telling me, and particularly, with regard to Konsole output?
(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.)
Non UTF-8 charset, go back more than a decade.
Plain en_US is by definition non-UTF-8? I thought it was an alias to something else that may or may not be UTF-8 equivalent? Box drawing characters have been available on PCs for more than three decades. -- 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