Florian Kulzer wrote the following on 06.02.2009 10:15
<- *snip* ->
> I have no idea if Gnome has a mechanism to override that
> once it starts.
That's posible with:
,[ $ grep LANG ~/.gnomerc ]
export LANG="en_US.UTF-8"
`-
--
bye Thilo
Foss User wrote:
I want that when Debian boots and I log into gnome and open
gnome-terminal, echo $LANG shows en_US instead of en_IN.
I found that in /etc/environment, the content was:
LANG="en_IN"
So, I changed it to LANG="en_US" and rebooted the system. But after
rebooting and opening gnome-
* Foss User [2009 Feb 05 22:37 -0600]:
> I want that when Debian boots and I log into gnome and open
> gnome-terminal, echo $LANG shows en_US instead of en_IN.
>
> I found that in /etc/environment, the content was:
>
> LANG="en_IN"
>
> So, I changed it to LANG="en_US" and rebooted the system. B
On Fri, Feb 06, 2009 at 04:35:56 +, Foss User wrote:
> I want that when Debian boots and I log into gnome and open
> gnome-terminal, echo $LANG shows en_US instead of en_IN.
>
> I found that in /etc/environment, the content was:
>
> LANG="en_IN"
>
> So, I changed it to LANG="en_US" and reboo
If export is the only way to do it, I can of course put the export
LANG=en_US statement in /etc/profile.
However, I am thinking then what is the use of /etc/environment? What
purpose does /etc/environment serve if changing LANG="en_IN" to
LANG="en_US" in /etc/environment doesn't affect the LANG sh
You should change language in login screen for gnome. Otherwise, you can
change your language with export command in terminal. i.e. export
LANG='en_US' But this doesn't affect the gnome. It's only work for
current terminal.
On Fri, 2009-02-06 at 04:35 +, Foss User wrote:
> I want that when Deb
I want that when Debian boots and I log into gnome and open
gnome-terminal, echo $LANG shows en_US instead of en_IN.
I found that in /etc/environment, the content was:
LANG="en_IN"
So, I changed it to LANG="en_US" and rebooted the system. But after
rebooting and opening gnome-terminal, I find ec
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