hmn,

thanks I just changed my XF86Config and nothing happened. I still have
no hebrew.

Also in the openoffice printsetup I no longer see a place to add fonts?

How do I determine why I don't have hebrew?

I installed all the proper fonts and applications.

still no hebrew?

Any ideas how to trace where the problem is?

Aaron
On Wed, 2004-04-28 at 16:08, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 27, 2004 at 04:22:42AM +0300, Micha Feigin wrote:
> > On Sun, Apr 25, 2004 at 11:22:50PM +0300, aamehl wrote:
> > > On Sunday 25 April 2004 14:32, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > > Hi 
> > > Yes I know about alien,
> > > but if you saw my previous thread you would see that on debian things
> > > are not 
> > > called the same names or in the same places.
> > > 
> > 
> > Most files (i.e the ones in /usr/share) seem like they should go in the
> > same place.
> > 
> > The only file that seems to be a problem is etc/X11/Xkbmap which I am
> > not sure how it should be converted automatically (you can add it
> > manually to XF86config-4). It will probably take a sed script or
> > something like that.
> 
> IIRC debian does not have anything equivalent.
> 
> Though you can add a simple setxkbmap command in a separate file under
> /etc/X11/Xsession.d . Editing XF86Config* in such a script is generally
> not a good idea, as it is not easy to undo.
> 
> BTW: the proper place for vim files has changed a bit from wody to
> sarge, IIRC: I think it is in something like /usr/share/vim/common on
> sarge .

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