On Wed, Oct 16, 2002 at 04:48:15PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I came across this older mail by Markus: > > > General warning: Please do not use the locale name en_US.UTF-8 anywhere > > outside North America. Some older Solaris documentation suggested that > > this is the only UTF-8 locale you'll ever need, as locales don't change > > much sensible beyond the encoding anyway. This is not the case any more > > today! > > The problem is that on many Sun installations, en_US.UTF-8 is the > only UTF-8 locale available at all! > A decent solution to this problem would be to handle basic locale > information ("en_US") and encoding suffix ("UTF-8") separately and > specifiy that ANY available locale can be suffixed with ANY known > encoding, so installed de, gb, whatever locales could always be > run with UTF-8. > Is anything specified anywhere about this? Perhaps someone might > nag Sun to fix this broken thing.
Yes, this is actually what is specified in ISO/IEV 15897, that makes rules no how to name POSIX locales, amongst other things. You can find it on the WG20 projects page, N610 I belive Kind regards Keld -- Linux-UTF8: i18n of Linux on all levels Archive: http://mail.nl.linux.org/linux-utf8/