Change Russian to German language in all examples to make this section looks

less Russian-centric for ignoramus
No English text changed in this commit!
This commit is contained in:
Andrey A. Chernov 2000-03-19 19:41:37 +00:00
parent 8a2bd9cb84
commit eb50786f0f
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=6798
2 changed files with 30 additions and 30 deletions

View file

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!--
The FreeBSD Documentation Project
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/l10n/chapter.sgml,v 1.29 2000/03/18 02:21:14 jim Exp $
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/l10n/chapter.sgml,v 1.30 2000/03/18 21:55:45 phantom Exp $
-->
<chapter id="l10n">
@ -225,13 +225,13 @@
<para>Here is a minimal example of a
<filename>.login_conf</filename> file in user's home
directory which has both variables set for Russian KOI8-R
directory which has both variables set for Latin-1
encoding:</para>
<programlisting>
me:My Account:\
:charset=KOI8-R:\
:lang=ru_RU.KOI8-R:</programlisting>
:charset=ISO-8859-1:\
:lang=de_DE.ISO_8859-1:</programlisting>
<para>See <link linkend="adm-setup">Administrator Level
Setup</link> and &man.login.conf.5; for more details.</para>
@ -250,13 +250,13 @@ me:My Account:\
:lang=<replaceable>locale_name</replaceable>:\
:tc=default:</programlisting>
<para>So sticking with our previous example using Russian, it
<para>So sticking with our previous example using Latin-1, it
would look like this:</para>
<programlisting>
russian:Russian Users Accounts:\
:charset=KOI8-R:\
:lang=ru_RU.KOI8-R:\
german:German Users Accounts:\
:charset=ISO-8859-1:\
:lang=de_DE.ISO_8859-1:\
:tc=default:</programlisting>
<para>Changing Login Classes with &man.vipw.8;</para>
@ -320,19 +320,19 @@ user:password:1111:11:<replaceable>language</replaceable>:0:0:User Name:/home/us
the two environment variables shown below in the
<filename>/etc/profile</filename> and/or
<filename>/etc/csh.login</filename> shell startup files. We
will use the Russian language as an example below:</para>
will use the German language as an example below:</para>
<para>In <filename>/etc/profile</filename>:</para>
<programlisting>
<envar>LANG=ru_RU.KOI8-R; export LANG</envar>
<envar>MM_CHARSET=KOI8-R; export MM_CHARSET</envar></programlisting>
<envar>LANG=de_DE.ISO_8859-1; export LANG</envar>
<envar>MM_CHARSET=ISO-8859-1; export MM_CHARSET</envar></programlisting>
<para>Or in <filename>/etc/csh.login</filename>:</para>
<programlisting>
<envar>setenv LANG ru_RU.KOI8-R</envar>
<envar>setenv MM_CHARSET KOI8-R</envar></programlisting>
<envar>setenv LANG de_DE.ISO_8859-1</envar>
<envar>setenv MM_CHARSET ISO-8859-1</envar></programlisting>
<para>Alternatively, you can add the above instructions to
<filename>/usr/share/skel/dot.profile</filename> (similar to
@ -346,12 +346,12 @@ user:password:1111:11:<replaceable>language</replaceable>:0:0:User Name:/home/us
<para>In <filename>$HOME/.xinitrc</filename>:</para>
<programlisting>
<envar>LANG=ru_RU.KOI8-R; export LANG</envar></programlisting>
<envar>LANG=de_DE.ISO_8859-1; export LANG</envar></programlisting>
<para>Or:</para>
<programlisting>
<envar>setenv LANG ru_RU.KOI8-R</envar></programlisting>
<envar>setenv LANG de_DE.ISO_8859-1</envar></programlisting>
<para>Depending on your shell (see above).</para>
</sect4>

View file

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!--
The FreeBSD Documentation Project
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/l10n/chapter.sgml,v 1.29 2000/03/18 02:21:14 jim Exp $
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/l10n/chapter.sgml,v 1.30 2000/03/18 21:55:45 phantom Exp $
-->
<chapter id="l10n">
@ -225,13 +225,13 @@
<para>Here is a minimal example of a
<filename>.login_conf</filename> file in user's home
directory which has both variables set for Russian KOI8-R
directory which has both variables set for Latin-1
encoding:</para>
<programlisting>
me:My Account:\
:charset=KOI8-R:\
:lang=ru_RU.KOI8-R:</programlisting>
:charset=ISO-8859-1:\
:lang=de_DE.ISO_8859-1:</programlisting>
<para>See <link linkend="adm-setup">Administrator Level
Setup</link> and &man.login.conf.5; for more details.</para>
@ -250,13 +250,13 @@ me:My Account:\
:lang=<replaceable>locale_name</replaceable>:\
:tc=default:</programlisting>
<para>So sticking with our previous example using Russian, it
<para>So sticking with our previous example using Latin-1, it
would look like this:</para>
<programlisting>
russian:Russian Users Accounts:\
:charset=KOI8-R:\
:lang=ru_RU.KOI8-R:\
german:German Users Accounts:\
:charset=ISO-8859-1:\
:lang=de_DE.ISO_8859-1:\
:tc=default:</programlisting>
<para>Changing Login Classes with &man.vipw.8;</para>
@ -320,19 +320,19 @@ user:password:1111:11:<replaceable>language</replaceable>:0:0:User Name:/home/us
the two environment variables shown below in the
<filename>/etc/profile</filename> and/or
<filename>/etc/csh.login</filename> shell startup files. We
will use the Russian language as an example below:</para>
will use the German language as an example below:</para>
<para>In <filename>/etc/profile</filename>:</para>
<programlisting>
<envar>LANG=ru_RU.KOI8-R; export LANG</envar>
<envar>MM_CHARSET=KOI8-R; export MM_CHARSET</envar></programlisting>
<envar>LANG=de_DE.ISO_8859-1; export LANG</envar>
<envar>MM_CHARSET=ISO-8859-1; export MM_CHARSET</envar></programlisting>
<para>Or in <filename>/etc/csh.login</filename>:</para>
<programlisting>
<envar>setenv LANG ru_RU.KOI8-R</envar>
<envar>setenv MM_CHARSET KOI8-R</envar></programlisting>
<envar>setenv LANG de_DE.ISO_8859-1</envar>
<envar>setenv MM_CHARSET ISO-8859-1</envar></programlisting>
<para>Alternatively, you can add the above instructions to
<filename>/usr/share/skel/dot.profile</filename> (similar to
@ -346,12 +346,12 @@ user:password:1111:11:<replaceable>language</replaceable>:0:0:User Name:/home/us
<para>In <filename>$HOME/.xinitrc</filename>:</para>
<programlisting>
<envar>LANG=ru_RU.KOI8-R; export LANG</envar></programlisting>
<envar>LANG=de_DE.ISO_8859-1; export LANG</envar></programlisting>
<para>Or:</para>
<programlisting>
<envar>setenv LANG ru_RU.KOI8-R</envar></programlisting>
<envar>setenv LANG de_DE.ISO_8859-1</envar></programlisting>
<para>Depending on your shell (see above).</para>
</sect4>