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[bugs #9403] GNUstep does not assume an NSLanguage if one is not set in


From: Alex Perez
Subject: [bugs #9403] GNUstep does not assume an NSLanguage if one is not set in the defaults
Date: Sun, 20 Jun 2004 22:42:20 -0400
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.6) Gecko/20040518 Firefox/0.8

This mail is an automated notification from the bugs tracker
 of the project: GNUstep.

/**************************************************************************/
[bugs #9403] Latest Modifications:

Changes by: 
                Alex Perez <aperez@student.santarosa.edu>
'Date: 
                Mon 06/21/2004 at 02:22 (America/Los_Angeles)

            What     | Removed                   | Added
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Assigned to | None                      | CaS







/**************************************************************************/
[bugs #9403] Full Item Snapshot:

URL: <http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?func=detailitem&item_id=9403>
Project: GNUstep
Submitted by: Alex Perez
On: Mon 06/21/2004 at 02:20

Category:  Base/Foundation
Severity:  5 - Average
Item Group:  Change Request
Resolution:  None
Assigned to:  CaS
Status:  Open


Summary:  GNUstep does not assume an NSLanguage if one is not set in the 
defaults

Original Submission:  This problem, which has existed for at least one year and 
two months, was first addressed by Rene Berber and Robert Burns in  an e-mail 
correspondence on Discuss-GNUstep on April 28, 2003. Adam's e-mail reply, 
stating clearly that this is a bug, followed soon after and can be viewed at 
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/discuss-gnustep/2003-04/msg00441.html

Essentially, the problem I was experiencing was that timestamps in GNUMail were 
not displaying properly. Instead of the time, I see %r. After discussing this 
publically on the GNUstep IRC channel, Ludovic and Rob Burns told me what the 
"solution" was, which was to set NSLanguages to anything (in my case English). 
The bug is that English (or /something/) should be assumed if NSLanguages is 
not set. This affects every single person who uses GNUMail, since the 
probability is extremely high that they have not set their NSLanguages default.











For detailed info, follow this link:
<http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?func=detailitem&item_id=9403>

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