On Fri, 8 Feb 2019 10:42:06 +0100
Aurelien Jarno wrote:
> Yes, that's normal that only LANG is set, as it's the one with less
> priority. That said there was clearly something setting LC_ALL to
> en.US-UTF-8 before, you might want to grep /etc for that. When only LANG
> is set, you should get and
On Fri, 8 Feb 2019 10:21:41 +0100
Aurelien Jarno wrote:
> What is the content of /etc/default/locale? it looks like you have an
> additional entry than the LANG one set by dpkg-reconfigure locales.
"dpkg-reconfigure locales" only writes LANG=C.UTF-8 (or any other accordingly)
to that file. This
So for those of us (the entire world), who have been relying on this behavior:
> * en_US (.UTF-8) is used as the default English locale for all places that
> don't have a specific variant (and often even then). Generally, technical
> users use English as a system locale
How do we roll-back w
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