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Bruce Momjian 2010-02-28 02:19:47 +00:00
parent d6166a5d7e
commit 0ff1c3e547
1 changed files with 10 additions and 3 deletions

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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
<!-- $PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/charset.sgml,v 2.96 2010/02/03 17:25:05 momjian Exp $ -->
<!-- $PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/charset.sgml,v 2.97 2010/02/28 02:19:47 momjian Exp $ -->
<chapter id="charset">
<title>Localization</>
@ -68,8 +68,15 @@ initdb --locale=sv_SE
in Sweden (<literal>SE</>). Other possibilities might be
<literal>en_US</> (U.S. English) and <literal>fr_CA</> (French
Canadian). If more than one character set can be used for a
locale then the specifications look like this:
<literal>cs_CZ.ISO8859-2</>. What locales are available on your
locale then the specifications can take the form
<replaceable>language_territory.codeset</>. For example,
<literal>fr_BE.UTF-8</> represents the French language (fr) as
spoken in Belgium (BE), with a <acronym>UTF-8</> character set
encoding.
</para>
<para>
What locales are available on your
system under what names depends on what was provided by the operating
system vendor and what was installed. On most Unix systems, the command
<literal>locale -a</> will provide a list of available locales.