This has nothing to do with GDM, this is related to the new way that
Ubuntu handles languages in Gnome.

At the moment, the system language is set properly by GDM (as can be
witnessed through Firefox for example) but ignored inside Gnome, the way
languages are handled in Gnome is through a preferences list. The idea
behind the preferences list is to allow a fallback option in case an
application does not support a user's primary language, it can support a
user's secondary language instead.

However, this comes at a cost of having to log out and then in again in
order to change the primary language and gives a slightly tricky
interface for configuration. Also, I do not believe that this reflects
how a multi-language environment actually works, for example, my
girlfriend and I use the same user account but different languages, it
was quite easy with Karmic's system but extremely frustrating now.

The use case for this system is good for an African who speaks French as
their second language or a dude from Transcaucasia or something that
speaks Russian as their second language, but the vast majority of the
world either have a primary language that has been fully translated,
English as a second language, do not use Ubuntu, or all three. I think
the bulk of users will want to be switching between two fully translated
languages, since those are the popular ones and the old system was far
better for that.

Anyway, GDM works flawlessly with respect to language, could someone re-
file this?

-- 
Language defaults to the GDM screen language on user login, even though the 
user selects a different language.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/542113
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to