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From: | Jim Busser |
Subject: | Re: [Gnumed-devel] Re: Possible solution for altering date formats (Debian)? |
Date: | Wed, 01 Jul 2009 11:07:34 -0700 |
Interesting...... despite that it was as root that I did dpkg-reconfigure and enabled en_DK.utf8 as the only locale, and set it as the default, when I restarted the computer:
- the bootup echos issued a warning that Postgres had a problem because the server could not be initiated with the locale en_CA.utf8 becuase it did not exist but more interestingly
- the system issued a dialog box advising me that because en_CA.utf8 did not exist, the system default (C ?) would be used.
I am not sure why that would be... maybe something about the locale that was chosen during the installation needs to be kept available.
The gnumed-client could then not connect to the backend... I was issued (no surprise) a message that no server was accepting connections on that socket.
I again ran dpkg-reconfigure locales, included en_CA.utf8 (along with en_DK.utf8) in the locales to be generated, and despite that I did still set en_DK.utf8 as the default, but which seems to be ignored, because after rebooting when I ran
envI saw that while LC_TIME was en_DK.utf8 my LANG and GDM_LANG were both still defaulting to en_CA.utf8
So within the current session, as normal user jbusser I did LANG=en_DK.utf8 GDM_LANG=en_DK.utf8 and then &> LC_TIME=en_DK.utf8 ./gm-from-cvs.sh but it still made no difference in GNUmed.Maybe if postgres is installed as part of the debian installation, something about the original locale becomes a postgres default that requires that locale to remain available even after the system would have its default altered.
Alternatively in the GNUmed client menu GNUmed > Options > Database > Languagethere exist about five options none of which are en_DK and the widget seems not fully enough yet developed to permit to create New or Edit or Delete.
On 1-Jul-09, at 4:01 AM, Andreas Tille wrote:
On Wed, Jul 01, 2009 at 11:19:25AM +0200, Karsten Hilbert wrote:That will depend on whether data for that locale is installed at all. Make sure you've got the package installed: apt-get install locales-all Then run: locale -a | grep en_DK to check.I admit I did not fully understand your problem but in the past I was able to solve nearly every locale problem via sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales Kind regards Andreas. -- http://fam-tille.de _______________________________________________ Gnumed-devel mailing list address@hidden http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnumed-devel
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