GNU bug report logs - #75379
30.0.93; project-find-regexp expects "C" or "en" locale

Previous Next

Package: emacs;

Reported by: Matthias Meulien <orontee <at> gmail.com>

Date: Sun, 5 Jan 2025 10:36:01 UTC

Severity: normal

Found in version 30.0.93

Full log


View this message in rfc822 format

From: Dmitry Gutov <dmitry <at> gutov.dev>
To: Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org>
Cc: 75379 <at> debbugs.gnu.org, orontee <at> gmail.com
Subject: bug#75379: 30.0.93; project-find-regexp expects "C" or "en" locale
Date: Sun, 5 Jan 2025 21:35:56 +0200
On 05/01/2025 20:46, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
>> Date: Sun, 5 Jan 2025 20:03:34 +0200
>> From: Dmitry Gutov <dmitry <at> gutov.dev>
>>
>> Overriding the language seems indeed the way to go here.
>>
>> About using LANG specifically, any chance that it might interfere with
>> the system's configured encoding, e.g. UTF-8 vs other? In your example,
>> does searching for accented characters work as well?
>>
>> IIUC we can try LC_MESSAGES as the more specialized var. Does
>> LC_MESSAGES=en work as well?
> 
> Please note that this doesn't work on Windows.
> 
> First, the Windows locale-dependent routines don't heed environment
> variables, so setting LANG etc. in the environment will only do what
> you expect if the program in question was either explicitly programmed
> to pay attention to those variables or was linked with Gnulib
> replacements for locale functions.
> 
> And second LC_MESSAGES is not supported by Windows locales at all.

Okay, but first of all, do Grep or Ripgrep use different localizations 
on Windows, not just English?

If yes, is there a way to force locale at least for these ports?

> Can't we instead have a database of these messages, like we do with
> the "password" prompts?

Like the one is 'password-word-equivalents'? It seems like the approach 
of last resort. But if nothing else will work...




This bug report was last modified 160 days ago.

Previous Next


GNU bug tracking system
Copyright (C) 1999 Darren O. Benham, 1997,2003 nCipher Corporation Ltd, 1994-97 Ian Jackson.