On 2 Jun 2009, at 19:15, Germán Arias wrote:
If I write into a shell
defaults write NSGlobalDomain NSLanguages "(Spanish)"
this is write in .GNUstep.conf file, but after the definition of
NSGlobalDomain. In other words, there are two NSGlobalDomain
definition.
The first with my keys configuration, location, .... and the second
only
with the language. Of course when I run an app this run then in
english.
I need write manually the language in the first NSGlobalDomain
definition and erase the second. With this all work fine. But why? On
Windows work fine.
I think you need to provide step by step instructions to tell us how
to reproduce the problem you are seeing, and explain in some more
detail.
The reason I say this is that I clearly don't understand what you
mean, and my interpretation of your words makes no sense:
You say 'this is write in .GNUstep.conf file' ... but GNUstep only
reads from GNUstep.conf, it doesn't write to it.
You say 'there are two NSGlobalDomain definition' ... but the defaults
are stored as an NSDictionary written to file ('GNUstep/
Defaults/.GNUstepDefaults' in the current implementation, though this
is likely to change), and it's impossible to have two values stored
with the same ('NSGlobalDomain') key in the dictionary.
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