Difference between revisions of "Locale"
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The file '''locale.gen''' contains information on all available translations for the kernel. All lines are commented by default, and you only remove the comment from those you want to use. | The file '''locale.gen''' contains information on all available translations for the kernel. All lines are commented by default, and you only remove the comment from those you want to use. | ||
After you have chosen the languages you must generate the translations for the system to find and use them. The change will only take effect after a restart. The translation files are generated by the command | After you have chosen the languages you must save the file and generate the translations for the system to find and use them. The change will only take effect after a restart. The translation files are generated by the command | ||
sudo locale-gen | sudo locale-gen |
Revision as of 12:20, 28 February 2018
Locale
Locale is defined as your display language and your locations preference for time and date display, monetary layout, paper size and several other location specifics.
At least three locale definitions is used, KDE, X11, and kernel.
Kernel
The kernel locale is controlled by the files
/etc/locale.gen /etc/locale.conf /etc/vconsole.conf
locale.gen
The file locale.gen contains information on all available translations for the kernel. All lines are commented by default, and you only remove the comment from those you want to use.
After you have chosen the languages you must save the file and generate the translations for the system to find and use them. The change will only take effect after a restart. The translation files are generated by the command
sudo locale-gen
locale.conf
The file locale.conf contains information on your TTY language and possibly other location specifics.
The available settings are
LANG LANGUAGE LC_ADDRESS LC_COLLATE LC_CTYPE LC_IDENTIFICATION LC_MEASUREMENT LC_MESSAGES LC_MONETARY LC_NAME LC_NUMERIC LC_PAPER LC_TELEPHONE LC_TIME
Our chinese users sometimes faces difficulties getting the settings right so with the help of such user we have put together a sample configuration. It is a sample but you get the idea and you can adapt it to you specific needs. The only thing to change is the ISO locale code to match that of your location
Sample locale.conf
LANG=zh_TW.UTF-8 LANGUAGE=zh_TW:en_AU LC_ADDRESS=en_AU.UTF-8 LC_IDENTIFICATION=en_AU.UTF-8 LC_MEASUREMENT=en_AU.UTF-8 LC_MONETARY=en_AU.UTF-8 LC_MESSAGES=zh_TW.UTF-8 LC_NAME=en_AU.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=en_AU.UTF-8 LC_PAPER=en_AU.UTF-8 LC_TELEPHONE=en_AU.UTF-8 LC_TIME=en_AU.UTF-8
vconsole.conf
The file vconsole.conf holds information on your keyboard layout and the font displayed in the TTY - the physical console.
Sample vconsole.conf
Sample setup for danish keyboard and font.
~ >>> cat /etc/vconsole.conf KEYMAP=dk FONT=ter-118n
X11
For each user on a graphical system you will find a file in the homefolder named ~/.xprofile. This file can be used to control which interface language the X system should use.
Our chinese friend has kindly provided the settings he is using to get his interface right and the settings is provided in the hope they will be useful. It is a sample and as such you might need to adapt them to your location and preference.
# Set display language to zh_TW and gcin as default IM export LANG=zh_TW.UTF-8 export LANGUAGE=zh_TW:en_AU export LC_MESSAGES=zh_TW.UTF-8 export LC_CTYPE=zh_TW.UTF-8 export XMODIFIERS=@im=gcin export GTK_IM_MODULE=gcin export QT_IM_MODULE=gcin export XIM_MODULE=gcin
KDE
Generally you should not need any tweaking but for your info, you can define regional settings in plasma and the are saved in the file
~/.config/plasma-localerc
Plasma exports the settings using
~/.config/plasma-locale-settings.sh
More info
This page was created per request in the forumpost How to change GUI settings