On Tue, Dec 31, 2002 at 07:34:37AM -0800, Gordon Messmer wrote: > A much better solution is to simply tell your terminal emulator to use > the UTF-8 character set. > > Kevin~ what terminal are you using? For the record, I'm seeing the same problem. I'm running gnome-terminal on Solaris ("fixed" font, if it matters), displaying back to a Windows X server (Exceed 7.x). From gnome-terminal, I'm ssh'ing over to a couple of psyche boxes at home. So far, man is the only misbehaving command, but I have to admit I don't use a lot of programs that monkey with curses. The LANG=en_US setting seems to have done the trick, but I'd rather be fixing this "correctly". ;-) -- Edward S. Marshall <esm@logic.net> http://esm.logic.net/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [ Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas. ] -- Psyche-list mailing list Psyche-list@redhat.com https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/psyche-list