Andreas Schwab writes: > > "Alan Curry" <[email protected]> writes: > > > Who's the "power" here anyway? > > You are, actually. Everyone can define locales to behave the way he > likes, see localedef(1).
I avoid this by not having any locales installed. But that doesn't help all the other victims. > > > From the name "en_US" one might guess that it represents the behavior > > expected by English-speaking users in or from the US. But those users > > have lived with computers for a generation or two. What they expect is > > ASCIIbetical. > > Nowadays most people don't know what ASCII is. They may not know how to name it, but they do complain when it isn't used, enough that it's a FAQ. People install a GNU/Linux distribution, pick "English" from the language menu, and get a set of sorting rules that doesn't makes sense. Sorry, should have told the installer you speak "C". "Donna Summer" just doesn't belong between "Don Adams" and "Don Pardo", and everyone knows it. Not a bug? Bah. Not a coreutils bug, but it's a bug. If glibc was in the same bug tracking system with coreutils, reports like this one could be reassigned there. -- Alan Curry
