>glibc setlocale() uses those environment variables, but not LANGUAGE. >So, "LANGUAGE=foo perl -e 42" doesn't trigger the warning on my Linux >box. But it's in the warning message when it does get triggered, like >yours above.
Just for the record ... part of me feels like this makes sense. Part of me is channelling my inner Eric Gillespie and saying, "Why doesn't nmh just shut up and deal with it?". I think the difference here is this is a system-wide configuration, and not a problem with an individual message, so a message warning about a system misconfiguration is reasonable. But I'm still not completely happy about it (but I have no better suggestion). (I thought everyone pretty much had those set to something reasonable on modern systems, but as we've seen that's not always the case). --Ken _______________________________________________ Nmh-workers mailing list [email protected] https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/nmh-workers
