GNU bug report logs -
#51832
Piping unicode text in `shell-command'
Previous Next
Full log
Message #62 received at 51832 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
Philipp <p.stephani2 <at> gmail.com> writes:
>> Am 14.11.2021 um 14:41 schrieb Lars Ingebrigtsen <larsi <at> gnus.org>:
>>
>> Alan Third <alan <at> idiocy.org> writes:
>>
>>> I've attached a patch that may do something towards preventing this
>>> problem but ultimately this is a convenience to give a best guess at
>>> choosing the correct dictionary, date format, etc. If we can't easily
>>> fix it then we can drop it and tell people to set it in their init.el
>>> themselves.
>>
>> That didn't fix the issue for me, I'm afraid -- with that patch, LANG is
>> still the invalid en_NO.UTF-8 for me.
>
> Maybe we should add similar logic as iTerm2
> (https://github.com/gnachman/iTerm2/blob/79aff4d59fd591e7628649bcabe5f27541740bf6/sources/PTYSession.m#L7107):
> create the locale identifier from language code and country code
> instead of the current locale identifier, and use setlocale (or
> better, newlocale) to check whether it's valid, and fall back to
> en_US.UTF-8 otherwise?
Native macOS Terminal also has similar logic that calls setlocale. It
tries to setlocale on LC_ALL (first argument 0) with these locale
identifiers in turn, until one of them succeeds:
- "localeIdentifier.UTF-8"
- "languageCode_countryCode.UTF-8"
- "languageCode_countryCode"
So they seem to give preference to [[NSLocale currentLocale]
localeIdentifier] and only use "languageCode_countryCode" as fallback.
This bug report was last modified 2 years and 248 days ago.
Previous Next
GNU bug tracking system
Copyright (C) 1999 Darren O. Benham,
1997,2003 nCipher Corporation Ltd,
1994-97 Ian Jackson.