* Jean-Baptiste Quenot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20031102 16:24]:
> * Joan Picanyol i Puig:
>
> > > It works for me, the accentuated chars show up in xterm...
> > It doesn't for me, nor in console or under X. I'm pasting underneath
> > what I see from the console (excerpt from the test file):
> 3) Ru
* Joan Picanyol i Puig:
> > It works for me, the accentuated chars show up in xterm...
>
> It doesn't for me, nor in console or under X. I'm pasting underneath
> what I see from the console (excerpt from the test file):
What I suggest is:
1) Restore login.conf and shell profile as it was
2) Te
* Jean-Baptiste Quenot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20031101 19:09]:
> * Joan Picanyol i Puig:
> > * Jean-Baptiste Quenot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20031101 15:53]:
> >
> > > * Joan Picanyol i Puig:
> > > > I have these lines in /etc/login.conf
> > > >
> > > > :setenv=LC_CTYPE=ISO8859-15,LANG=ca_ES.ISO8859-15:
* Joan Picanyol i Puig:
> * Jean-Baptiste Quenot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20031101 15:53]:
>
> > * Joan Picanyol i Puig:
> >
> > > I have these lines in /etc/login.conf
> > >
> > > :setenv=LC_CTYPE
[I expect mutt to properly set MFT, if it didn't please Cc: me]
* Jean-Baptiste Quenot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20031101 15:53]:
> * Joan Picanyol i Puig:
> > I have these lines in /etc/login.conf
> >
> > :setenv=LC_CTYPE=ISO8859-15,LANG=ca_ES.ISO8859-15: \
> > :lang=ca_ES.ISO-8859-15:\
> > :charset=
* Joan Picanyol i Puig:
> > I suggest to set LC_CTYPE=es_ES.ISO8859-15 in your shell's init
> > file, and don't forget to export that variable (export with [ba]sh,
> > setenv with [t]csh).
>
> I have these lines in /etc/login.conf
>
> :setenv=LC_CTYPE=ISO8859-15,LANG=ca_ES.ISO8859-15: \
> :
[please honour MFT, not subscribed]
* Jean-Baptiste Quenot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20031101 12:12]:
> * In console or in X11?
Both
> * If X11, what terminal emulator do you use?
xterm
> * What shell do you use?
bash
> * What language and especially encoding has your mail?
(15:23:01 <~/tmp>) 0 $ gr
* Joan Picanyol:
> I can't see accents in mutt's internal pager (even though I can see
> them in vim). I've read iconv(), terminfo() and the Internalization
> section in the Handbook among others, but I'm out of ideas.
* In console or in X11?
* If X11, what terminal emulator do you use?
* W