The locale support has been updated in libc 5.4.x
. You can avoid many of
the individual program setups described in section
International character sets in specific applications if the programs
on your system is prepared for locale support. The Debian distribution comes
with this support if you install the wg15-locale
package. Systems with
GNU libc 2
(libc 6.x
) support locales by default (see remarks about
Red Hat Linux release 5.0 later in this section.)
If you use a system without locale support, you can add such support using the following method:
libc 5.4.x
library. You can get this
from
Yggdrasil Computing.localedef
program installed. It should come
with the library./usr/share/i18n/locales/
and the
charmap sources in /usr/share/i18n/charmaps/
.localedef
program to build the locale data files:
localedef -ci da_DK -f ISO_8859-1:1987 da_DK(Note for non-Danish readers: You can build locale data files for other locales in the same way. All locale and charmap sources are at the DKUUG site.)
To enable support for the Danish locale on a system with locale support you just have to set one of the following environment variables:
LANG=da_DKor
LC_ALL=da_DK
Try da_DK.ISO_8859-1
if da_DK
does not work.
Both environment variables set all the individual locale catgories. You can also set a single locale category by using the name of the category as an environment variable. The locale catogories are:
Locale category Application --------------- ----------- LC_COLLATE Collation of strings (sort order.) LC_CTYPE Classification and conversion of characters. LC_MESSAGES Translations of yes and no. LC_MONETARY Format of monetary values. LC_NUMERIC Format of non-monetary numeric values. LC_TIME Date and time formats. LC_ALL Sets all of the above (overrides all of them.) LANG Sets all the categories, but can be overridden by the individual locale categories.
In Red Hat Linux 5.2 you can set the environment variables LANG and/or
LC_ALL in the file /etc/sysconfig/i18n
by adding lines such as
this:
LC_ALL=da_DK
A few programs such as bash
and GNU emacs
still need specific
setup as described in section
International character sets in specific applications, but most
should work without further attention. Programs such as nvi
which
did not work with 8 bit characters before should work now.
Locale support should be more common as distributions based on the new
GNU libc 2
become available. Beware that although Red Hat Linux release
5.0 comes with GNU libc 2
, the locale support is not working. You have to
build the locale data files by executing localedef
yourself. You can build
the Danish locale data files with the following command:
localedef -c -i da_DK -f ISO-8859-1 da_DK
As of glibc-2.0.7-4.i386.rpm
the locale data files are included with the
libraries and this is no longer necessary.