Sorry, you've just answered that! Thanx!<span></span><br><br>El divendres 15 de febrer de 2013, Òscar Martínez Carmona ha escrit:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
How do I switch it back to English?<div>I appreciate the spanish version but English looks much cooler!<span></span><br><br>El divendres 15 de febrer de 2013, Hans-Christoph Steiner ha escrit:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
<br>
Pd-extended should use the same language that the user is using. If not, its<br>
a bug. Pd-extended on Mac OS X looks at what language the Dock is configured<br>
in and uses that. Apparently, this is not reliable, since I guess people buy<br>
systems in one language, then use them in another, and the Dock doesn't seem<br>
to respect that change. You can check the language of your Dock and your<br>
global locale by running this in the Terminal:<br>
<br>
defaults read com.apple.dock loc<br>
defaults read NSGlobalDomain AppleLocale<br>
<br>
The easiest fix it to probably set the language of the Dock like this:<br>
<br>
defaults write com.apple.dock loc en_US<br>
<br>
I have no idea why its failing on Windows, maybe for a similar reason. As far<br>
as I could tell, Pd-extended uses the 'proper' registry value:<br>
<br>
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\International<br>
<br>
Could you send the value of that registry key on machines that fail to respect<br>
the user setting?<br>
<br>
.hc<br>
<br>
On 02/15/2013 01:03 AM, rene beekman wrote:<br>
> How do I set / change the default language on both Windoze and Mac for 0.43<br>
> ?<br>
> I don't have a Windoze machine myself, so can't test there, but the readme<br>
> for the Mac version does not say anything about it. There also seems to be<br>
> no setting in the preference file for this (or at least none that I could<br>
> find).<br>
><br>
> I searched the list-archives and the "best" instruction I found was to<br>
> delete all .msg files inside /po, which seems a bit crude to me.<br>
> Is there a more elegant way to do this?<br>
><br>
> I understand from an older discussion that the assumption was that<br>
> "non-technical" people were assumed to want to use Pd in their native<br>
> language. I did installs this week on about a dozen machines<br>
> and apparently they all belonged to "non-technical" people, even though<br>
> every single one of them runs all software on their machine in English<br>
> only... Wouldn't it be wiser to assume that whatever the language is that<br>
> the OS is running in, is also the language that people really want to use<br>
> their software in?<br>
> Just my two cents.<br>
><br>
><br>
><br>
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</blockquote></div><br><br>-- <br>Òscar Martínez Carmona<br><br>
</blockquote><br><br>-- <br>Òscar Martínez Carmona<br><br>