David Nielsen wrote: > fre, 20 01 2006 kl. 05:35 -0800, skrev David Boles: >> David Nielsen wrote: >>> fre, 20 01 2006 kl. 18:13 +1030, skrev n0dalus: >>>> On 1/20/06, David Boles <dgboles@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> I was asked why the GNOME panel clock calendar displays weeks that begin with >>>>> Monday. >>>>> >>>>> The other questions are. Can it be changed to begin with Sunday? And, of >>>>> course if possible, how to change it? If not, why not? >>>> I could be wrong, but I think it uses the system locale to determine >>>> what day the week starts on. >>> You'd be right, provided the application actually reads that bit of >>> information. Which leaves me in the situation where the clock applet >>> says the first day of the week is Sunday and Evolution Calendar says in >>> Monday - in the same session mind you. The worst bit is that for once >>> Evolution is right, in Denmark Monday is the first day of the week. >>> >>> I think this insanity warrents a bugreport. >>> >>> David *I hate mondays* Nielsen >> That 'other desktop', the one that starts with a 'K', starts the week with a >> Monday for me also. But it can be changed. I wonder why, or how, it can be >> changed in GNOME? > > Because this is and should be dependant on the locale setting - it's by > far the best way to handle getting the correct settings for an given > country. Rely on already established functionality rather than > reinventing the wheel, although that seems to be the trademark of that > other desktop. > > Oh and please don't cc me I'm on the list, although for some reason my > mails to -test/-devel don't appear in my mailbox, they are in the > archives though. I'm guessing Evolution is suffering from development > syndrome atm. > > - David Point one. I live in the USA and my locale is American English, fonts, all. My GNOME calendar week starts with Monday as does a KDE calendar. The last time I looked the week here starts with Sunday. Point two. I did not Cc: you myself. By replying to your post on the list I get two To: lines in the email header. One to you and one to the list. I thought that you had wanted it that way so I left it that way. This time I removed the To: to you. There is something wrong with gmail, I am told. You will get the 'list traffic' but not anything you reply to or post back as 'list traffic'. If/when someone adds to the thread you get their reply with your part in the quote. It sounds strange but I had the same thing happening here and on other lists where I used that address. -- David -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list