Commit 0ff1c3e5 authored by Bruce Momjian's avatar Bruce Momjian

*** empty log message ***

parent d6166a5d
<!-- $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"> <chapter id="charset">
<title>Localization</> <title>Localization</>
...@@ -68,8 +68,15 @@ initdb --locale=sv_SE ...@@ -68,8 +68,15 @@ initdb --locale=sv_SE
in Sweden (<literal>SE</>). Other possibilities might be in Sweden (<literal>SE</>). Other possibilities might be
<literal>en_US</> (U.S. English) and <literal>fr_CA</> (French <literal>en_US</> (U.S. English) and <literal>fr_CA</> (French
Canadian). If more than one character set can be used for a Canadian). If more than one character set can be used for a
locale then the specifications look like this: locale then the specifications can take the form
<literal>cs_CZ.ISO8859-2</>. What locales are available on your <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 under what names depends on what was provided by the operating
system vendor and what was installed. On most Unix systems, the command system vendor and what was installed. On most Unix systems, the command
<literal>locale -a</> will provide a list of available locales. <literal>locale -a</> will provide a list of available locales.
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