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- Date: Tue, 24 Dec 2013 10:24:13 +0100
- From: Christian Horn <chorn@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] using eucjp on Linux
- References: <20131223213339.GA29849@fluxcoil.net> <CAKXLc7dotHh9TtDXK+tsV1HygUbM-cy6W4ur0DPms8QSd1ccvw@mail.gmail.com> <20131224073638.GC29849@fluxcoil.net> <20131224074735.GE29849@fluxcoil.net> <CAKXLc7fPFYzS9bjDV2jXWs+-hU8RTLz8e5xGm24h88R2Rq1_vA@mail.gmail.com>
- User-agent: Mutt/1.5.20 (2009-06-14)
On Tue, Dec 24, 2013 at 05:13:15PM +0900, Kalin KOZHUHAROV wrote: > On Tue, Dec 24, 2013 at 4:47 PM, Christian Horn <chorn@example.com> wrote: > > On Tue, Dec 24, 2013 at 08:36:38AM +0100, Christian Horn wrote: > >> On Tue, Dec 24, 2013 at 01:22:08PM +0900, Kalin KOZHUHAROV wrote: > >> > > >> > Can you try the following in this terminal: > >> > `LC_ALL=ja_JP.eucjp date|iconv -f eucjp` > >> > `LC_ALL=ja_JP.eucjp date|xxd` > >> > >> [chris@hive ~]$ LC_ALL=ja_JP.eucjp date|iconv -f eucjp > >> 2013年 12月 24日 火曜日 08:15:31 CET > >> [chris@hive ~]$ LC_ALL=ja_JP.eucjp date|xxd > >> 0000000: 3230 3133 c7af 2031 32b7 ee20 3234 c6fc 2013.. 12.. 24.. > >> 0000010: 20b2 d0cd cbc6 fc20 3038 3a31 353a 3438 ...... 08:15:48 > >> 0000020: 2043 4554 0a CET. > >> > >> The xxd output is the same as for "LC_ALL=ja_JP.utf8 date|xxd" > >> so seems like the LC_ALL=ja_JP.eucjp has no effect? > > > > Ah, I pasted the output correctly, but it _is_ different from > > the utf8 locale: > > > > [chris@hive ~]$ LC_ALL=ja_JP.utf8 date|xxd > > 0000000: 3230 3133 e5b9 b420 3132 e69c 8820 3234 2013... 12... 24 > > 0000010: e697 a520 e781 abe6 9b9c e697 a520 3038 ... ......... 08 > > 0000020: 3a34 383a 3130 2043 4554 0a :48:10 CET. > > [chris@hive ~]$ LC_ALL=ja_JP.eucjp date|xxd > > 0000000: 3230 3133 c7af 2031 32b7 ee20 3234 c6fc 2013.. 12.. 24.. > > 0000010: 20b2 d0cd cbc6 fc20 3038 3a34 383a 3133 ...... 08:48:13 > > 0000020: 2043 4554 0a CET. > > > Well since the "+%A" test worked all is fine at I/O level, there is > something eating your bites at the terminal level. > This is the relevant portion of my .Xresources: > XTerm*.VT100*.boldMode: false > XTerm*cjkWidth: true > XTerm*ximFont: -*-*-medium-r-normal--14-140-75-75-*-*-* > XTerm*font: > -efont-fixed-medium-r-normal--14-140-75-75-c-70-iso10646-1 > [..] > XTerm*wideFont: > -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-24-120-100-100-c-180-iso10646-1 After installing efont and the following change compared to your .Xresources I can use your .Xresources: XTerm*ximFont: -efont-fixed-medium-r-normal--14-140-75-75-c-140-iso10646-1 The xterm which gets started does not display the bash prompt. Using it in UTF8 mode and running "date", I only see the Kanji from that output, not the numbers. I was running this now: for i in $(xlsfonts); do echo "current font: $i"; xterm -fn $i -e 'LC_ALL=ja_JP.eucjp luit cat test_eucjp; sleep 10;'; done I did not completely go through all of the fonts, but for the ones I looked at I get "F|K\8l" again in the terminal. Looking at the -efont-* specifically, I either see visible "F|K\8l" or only a backslash " \ ", cut'n'pasting this into a utf8 terminal it turns up as "F|K\8l" again. No fedora bugs found for "xterm eucjp". Maybe I should setup a different distro in parallel and compare the behavior. cheers, Christian > > Try terminal if you can, I remember having issues with certain xterm > configurations, that is I switched to terminal a long time ago. > > Kalin.
- References:
- [tlug] using eucjp on Linux
- From: Christian Horn
- Re: [tlug] using eucjp on Linux
- From: Kalin KOZHUHAROV
- Re: [tlug] using eucjp on Linux
- From: Christian Horn
- Re: [tlug] using eucjp on Linux
- From: Christian Horn
- Re: [tlug] using eucjp on Linux
- From: Kalin KOZHUHAROV
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