Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Locales - Solaris 8
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Locales - Solaris 8 Post 38654 by finster on Tuesday 22nd of July 2003 11:53:14 AM
Old 07-22-2003
Locales - Solaris 8

Can anyone tell me the difference between the 2 Locales:

North American Partial Locales
en_US.ISO8859-1
en_US.ISO8859-15

Does it matter which one to use?

What are the differences?
Thanks.


-I have found the below info but I don't know what it means(Also no RFC# for 8859-15):

Name: ISO-8859-1-Windows-3.0-Latin-1 [HP-PCL5]
MIBenum: 2000
Source: Extended ISO 8859-1 Latin-1 for Windows 3.0.
PCL Symbol Set id: 9U
Alias: csWindows30Latin1

Name: ISO_8859-1:1987 [RFC1345,KXS2]
MIBenum: 4
Source: ECMA registry
Alias: iso-ir-100
Alias: ISO_8859-1
Alias: ISO-8859-1 (preferred MIME name)
Alias: latin1
Alias: l1
Alias: IBM819
Alias: CP819
Alias: csISOLatin1



Name: ISO-8859-15
MIBenum: 111
Source: ISO
Please see: <http://www.iana.org/assignments/charset-reg/ISO-8859-15>
Alias: ISO_8859-15
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

Locales in AIX

Currently we have the following locales installed on two of our servers SERVER-1 $ locale -a C POSIX en_US en_US.8859-15 en_US.ISO8859-1 EN_US EN_US.UTF-8 ZH_CN ZH_CN.UTF-8 HI_IN HI_IN.UTF-8 ko_KR ko_KR.IBM-eucKR zh_TW zh_TW.IBM-eucTW SERVER-2 (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: voorkey
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

formatting date for different locales

Hi, I need to know 1.the usage of LC_TIME with setlocale(). 2.the usage of getdate() utility I read that date formatting for different languages needs 1.user-supplied template file and 2.DATEMSK environment variable set to path of the template fie. Can anyone pls tell... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Aeon
2 Replies

3. Red Hat

Displaying the available locales in english

Hi, I am developing a program that would ask the user to set the locale. For that, I need to display them to user in plain english. like English(US) English (Uk) depending on the user selection I need to set the locale. Is there a command in redhat linux that would... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: eamani_sun
1 Replies

4. HP-UX

HPUX 10.20 - Warning! One or more of your selected locales are not available.

On our system a user successfully ran the only application on the system this morning. When they tried to login a bit later they could not. The Admin tried to reboot the server and it seemed to reboot ok. When logged in the admin tried to change directories and gets the below message (note they... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jmdzied
1 Replies

5. Web Development

Detecting browser locales/languages and generating output

We have a Java app that renders Localized text on user's browser session based upon browser language settings. The app reads the browser language settings and prepares the localized text. But recently we faced issues for Mozilla 5.0 version browser. Note our code works fine in IE. Taking an... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: uunniixx
1 Replies

6. AIX

Locales and conversion tables confusion - Some characters don't get translated

Hello, my program running on AIX receives a message (from MQ) which is in CCSID 870 (LATIN-2 EBCDIC). It needs to convert it to CCSID 912 (ISO-8859-2). For this conversion, it uses the Websphere MQ functionality, but which, according to the manual, uses AIX's system conversion tables. (Btw - it... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Adamm
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Setting locales

I'm having a problem with my locale setting. Essentially, when using Xmgrace or Awk, all . are replaced with , leading to wrong arithmetic. Here is an explanation of the problem: awk printing thousands with commas. see LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 How can I permanently set the locale... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: chrisjorg
1 Replies

8. Debian

Locales UTF8 - not working

Hello, I'm facing a strange problem in one of my Debian server, what is happening right now it that I have runned dpkg-reconfigure locales to set en_US UTF-8 so in that way I could use accentuation in my system. # locale -a C en_US.utf8 POSIX pt_BR.utf8 However, when I create a new... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: pxb368@motorola
12 Replies
localemanager(8)					    BSD System Manager's Manual 					  localemanager(8)

NAME
localemanager -- Configure OpenDirectory Server Locales SYNOPSIS
localemanager operation [-l localename] [-subnet 1.2.3.4/5] [-server servername] [-i IP address] DESCRIPTION
localemanager creates, destroys, and edits OpenDirectory Server Locale information. Locales are collections of OpenDirectory servers to assist clients in locating the nearest OpenDirectory Server. To use OpenDirectory Server Locales, simply create a locale on an OD server with the createLocale operation. Then add servers and subnets to the locale. All localemanager operations are performed on the local OpenDirectory node. The first time a locale is created, a DefaultLocale will automatically be created as well. The DefaultLocale will be used for any clients that don't match a subnet in any other locale. Before a locale can be configured, the server must already be an OpenDirectory server. Locales can be defined on each of the OD servers or on a single OD server in the group of OD master/replicas. For the latter, the locale information will get replicated to all of the other servers but locales will need to be "enabled" on the other servers by running the command localemanager enableLocales. Commands: help Displays the commands and options. createLocale Creates a new locale on the local OD server. This command requires the -l option. deleteLocale Deletes a locale from the local OD server. This command requires the -l option. showLocale Displays the current locale(s). The -l option can be used to display a specific locale. If -l is not specified, all locales are displayed. enableLocales Enables the use of locales on an OD server. This command is automatically run the first time any localemanager command is run on an OD server. Therefore this command only needs to be run if no other localemanager commands have been (or will be) run on this server. addSubnet Adds a new subnet to the specified locale. This command requires the -l -subnet options. removeSubnet Removes a subnet from the specified locale. This command requires -l -subnet options. addServer Adds a server to the specified locale. This command requires the -l -server options. If the -i option is specified, that IP address will be used by locale clients. This may be useful for multi-homed servers to restrict locale clients to a specific network interface. If the -i option is not specified the IP address(es) will be looked up. removeServer Removes a server from the specified locale. This command requires -l -server options. If the -i option is specified, only that IP address will be removed from the locale. If the -i option is no specified, all of the server's IP addresses will be removed from the locale. Options: -l locale Locale name. -subnet 192.168.0.0/16 Subnet specified in CIDR notation. -server server.example.com Server fully-qualified domain name. -i 192.168.1.1 Use this IP address for the server. Typically used to limit locale clients to a specific interface on a multi-homed server. FILES
/var/log/localemanager.log localemanager log file. SEE ALSO
slapconfig(8) HISTORY
First introduced in Mac OS X 10.7 Darwin June 2, 2019 Darwin
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:49 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy