Sunday 16 December 2018

linux - Why "LANG=C"? (not D or E or F)


In order to turn off localisation features one should set the LANG environment variable to "C".


Why "C"? Where did it come from?



Answer



In the C programming language, the locale name C “specifies the minimal environment for C translation” (C99 §7.11.1.1; the principle has been the same since at least the 1980s). As most operating systems are written in C, especially the Unix-inspired ones where locales are set through the LANG and LC_xxx environment variables, C ends up being the name of a “safe” locale everywhere.


POSIX specifies that both C and POSIX must be valid locale names, with the same neutral settings.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Where does Skype save my contact's avatars in Linux?

I'm using Skype on Linux. Where can I find images cached by skype of my contact's avatars? Answer I wanted to get those Skype avat...