Mailing List ArchiveSupport open source code!
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][tlug] debian japanese
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: [tlug] debian japanese
- From: Michael Moyle <michael@example.com>
- Date: Thu, 21 Mar 2002 03:09:21 -0800
- Cc: michael@example.com
- Content-disposition: inline
- Content-transfer-encoding: 8bit
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
- User-agent: Mutt/1.3.27i
Some of you may remember me asking about using japanese characters with debian. I was able to get it up and running, but there are some hitches. Somtimes being on the cutting edge is a drag. Getting mutt to work was particularly aggravating. In the end it was simple, and I am thankful for Frank Bennent's earlier posts. There are two basic things that need to happen to get mutt working once all the fonts are intalled: 1. add set charset="euc-jp" to .muttrc 2. make sure your locale ($LANG environment variable) is set to ja_JP.eucJP. For kterm and canna input, the LANG variable does not need to be set. You can view japanese files and write kana's with LANG=C. For mutt it does. Too bad this wasn't documented anywhere. I am thinking of putting up a web site describing what I did. Does this exist somewhere or will this be something new? Maybe I missed a relevant site. What I would like to do is post clearly defined, step by step things to do to get Japanese working with mutt, emacs, and debian. Since I could not find this information, I have been forced to spend a few hours learning about these subsytems. Sadly this is becoming a complaint about linux, there are several technical projects I want to work on, and none of them involve configuring linux, so there goes my limited time to work on "real" work. This is where MS and maybe mac have the advantage. Too bad MS sucks to bad to be tolerable, and Mac does not run (ironically) windowmaker. Such is life as a virgo, everything has to be perfect. So here go: 1) Canna defaults to Shift-Space, can this be changed? This default means that the way I type, I am switching into canna all the time. 2) Emacs, the .emacs files language-env provides removes Alt-Meta support. I cannot tell where, and I will have to revist those heady days of lisp programming in college and do a line by line debug of this .emacs file if no one knows what to do. I'm not going to do that just yet. I'm going to do drink beer. As one might imagine, loosing Alt Meta support in Emacs, pretty much sucks. I may have to report this as a bug, if its not just some messup on my part. Do any of these problems exist with debian-jp? Maybe the thing to do (next time) is to start with debian-jp and hope everything works. Compounding things could be the fact that I am running debian woody, which is not release, and could have some bugs, like in the language-env package. ありがと ございます! best regards, Michael
- Follow-Ups:
- [tlug] Re: debian japanese
- From: Michael Moyle
- [tlug] Re: debian japanese
- From: Tobias Diedrich
- Re: [tlug] debian japanese
- From: Charles Muller
- Re: [tlug] debian japanese
- From: Matt Gushee
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Prev by Date: [tlug] Backup CD
- Next by Date: [tlug] Re: debian japanese
- Previous by thread: Re: [tlug] Backup CD
- Next by thread: [tlug] Re: debian japanese
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links