![]() ![]() The app is used for copying photos from SD cards to hard drives and renaming the photos once they have been copied to the hard drive. With the last command all accented characters were replaced with question marks in Konsole.I am in the process of converting an existing shiny app into a golem shiny package. I think I’ll have to log out for this to work… $ sudo locale-gen "en_HK.UTF-8"īut the command is not good for opensuse so I found the command from arvidjaar and here rw-r-r- 1 henk wij 0 ?įirst list the current locale settings for the user. See these from the same directory /home/henk/test/unicode: lĭrwxr-xr-x 7 henk wij 4096 Jan 2 19:05. has problems showing file names containing Unicode characters outside the ASCII range. I showed already that it has repercussions in the locale statement. Thus, IMHO, you have to live with that warning, or have to live with the malformed date expression. It is not just Perl that stumbles into the Swedish date representation. Locale: Kan LC_ALL niet op de standaard taalregio instellen: Bestand of map bestaat yes, there is a warning there also. But for the normal users, I understand you prefer Italian (like I prefer Dutch), but that is for different users with different environments and not a mix.Į.g. I can understand that for system purposes you prefer Engish (in fact LANG=C) as I do. And since then people try all sorts of by-passes to this problem (which apparently is not addressed by KDE at do not completely understand your explanation about your locale settings. Since some level of KDE, it does not support ISO formatted dates. Probably because the user wants the date expressed in ISO format. I think I can explain this (more or less). Perl says that one of locales does not exist, it is en_SE.UTF-8 in this case.The question is where this locale name comes from. I didn’t know that this can confuse perl, also becouse the language mixing seems planned in linux and kde ![]() Yes, you are right, the question is still, what does Perl try to communicate and can that message be avoided by doing something about the locale variables.Īnd yes, italian becouse I’m in italy, US becouse I prefere US as system language and when my foreign friends or collegues use the pc is easier, and swedish english for the ISO date. And probably in a way that that does not break the way they are used now (I assume that Italian, Swedish, US-English mix was created with a purpose). And then confusion about what the question was.īut I assume the question is still, what does Perl try to communicate and can that message be avoided by doing something about the locale variables. It isn’t there :(.Īfter that the whole discussion deviated to the question why locale-gen isn’t on your 15.3 and if that is a bug or not. Then you thought that maybe locale-gen was on /usr/bin and that maybe that wasn’t in your PATH variable, thus you tried to specify the full path to bash. You tried a third time, probably thinking that bash then by great magic can find locale-gen. Then you tried that again and alas, bash can still not find locale-gen. Then you show how you used that command and that bash told you it could find locale-gen nowhere. Then you explained that you found “instructions on the web” without telling where, or what or anything except that these, for us mysterious, instructions told you to use the command locale-gen. (I assume that it is the mix of Italian, Swedish and English variables that confuses Perl, but I do not know much about Perl). I had the idea that your problem was a Perl message about your locale. bash: /usr/bin/locale-gen: No such file or directory If 'localegen' is not a typo you can use command-not-found to lookup the package that contains it, like this: If 'locale-gen' is not a typo you can use command-not-found to lookup the package that contains it, like this: I searched in the web but the instructions gave me this error: locale-gen is not present pla4-TW:~ # localedef -i en_US -f UTF-8 en_US.UTF-8pla4-TW:~ # export LANGUAGE=en_US.UTF-8 Perl: warning: Falling back to a fallback locale ("en_US.UTF-8"). Launching exiftool this error appear perl: warning: Setting locale failed.perl: warning: Please check that your locale settings:Īre supported and installed on your system. ![]()
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