Ryan Sims wrote:
> #en_US ISO-8859-1
> en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8
> #ja_JP.EUC-JP EUC-JP
> #ja_JP.UTF-8 UTF-8
> #ja_JP EUC-JP
> #en_HK ISO-8859-1
> #en_PH ISO-8859-1
> #de_DE ISO-8859-1
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ISO-8859-15
> #es_MX ISO-8859-1
> #fa_IR UTF-8
> #fr_FR ISO-8859-1
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ISO-8859-15
> #it_IT ISO-8859-1
>
>
> The file says this, tho:
> # Whenever glibc is emerged, the locales listed here will be
> automatically
> # rebuilt for you.  After updating this file, you can simply run
> `locale-gen`
> # yourself instead of re-emerging glibc.
>
> which leads me to believe that it only applies to glibc.
>
> I've remerged everything with -nls, and things are well.  uim failed
> with an error about "mygettext not declared in this scope", so I set
> it to +nls in package.use, and it's happy again.
>
>
> On 12/16/06, Walter Dnes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Thu, Dec 14, 2006 at 09:57:51AM -0500, Ryan Sims wrote
>>
>> > Thanks.  I do have my LINGUAS variable set to "en," but as I
>> understand
>> > it[1], the LINGUAS variable is expanded to use flags, so ebuilds
>> that don't
>> > use those flags wont respect LINGUAS, is that correct?
>> >
>> > [1]http://devmanual.gentoo.org/general-concepts/linguas/index.html
>>
>>   What do your /etc/locale.gen and /etc/locales.build files look like?
>> I've commented out a whole slew of languages in them.
>>
>> -- 
>> Walter Dnes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> In linux /sbin/init is Job #1
>> My musings on technology and security at http://techsec.blog.ca
>> -- 
>> gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
>>
>>
>
>

I don't have uim installed so I didn't have that problem.  So it seems
to be working OK for you then?

Dale

:-)  :-)
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