From 0d6bcb2b7d08e3a41481372c1ae0d11868d88b1b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Silvio Rhatto Date: Sat, 7 Oct 2017 19:32:06 -0300 Subject: New repo layout with git migration --- .../openoffice/openoffice.d/etc/profile.d/lang.sh | 33 ---------------------- 1 file changed, 33 deletions(-) delete mode 100755 tags/0.5.1/templates/openoffice/openoffice.d/etc/profile.d/lang.sh (limited to 'tags/0.5.1/templates/openoffice/openoffice.d/etc/profile.d/lang.sh') diff --git a/tags/0.5.1/templates/openoffice/openoffice.d/etc/profile.d/lang.sh b/tags/0.5.1/templates/openoffice/openoffice.d/etc/profile.d/lang.sh deleted file mode 100755 index c9cde20..0000000 --- a/tags/0.5.1/templates/openoffice/openoffice.d/etc/profile.d/lang.sh +++ /dev/null @@ -1,33 +0,0 @@ -#!/bin/sh -# Set the system locale. (no, we don't have a menu for this ;-) -# For a list of locales which are supported by this machine, type: -# locale -a - -# en_US is the Slackware default locale: -export LANG=pt_BR - -# 'C' is the old Slackware (and UNIX) default, which is 127-bit -# ASCII with a charmap setting of ANSI_X3.4-1968. These days, -# it's better to use en_US or another modern $LANG setting to -# support extended character sets. -#export LANG=C - -# There is also support for UTF-8 locales, but be aware that -# some programs are not yet able to handle UTF-8 and will fail to -# run properly. In those cases, you can set LANG=C before -# starting them. Still, I'd avoid UTF unless you actually need it. -#export LANG=en_US.UTF-8 - -# Another option for en_US: -#export LANG=en_US.ISO8859-1 - -# One side effect of the newer locales is that the sort order -# is no longer according to ASCII values, so the sort order will -# change in many places. Since this isn't usually expected and -# can break scripts, we'll stick with traditional ASCII sorting. -# If you'd prefer the sort algorithm that goes with your $LANG -# setting, comment this out. -export LC_COLLATE=C - -# End of /etc/profile.d/lang.sh - -- cgit v1.2.3