To fix this problem, you can set in /etc/environment :
LANG="en_CA.UTF-8"
Of course, add your own language/country code. Reboot so the change can take effect.
This bug should remain open however; there should be a default "LANG=<language/country selected by user>.UTF-8". UTF-8 should be the default, out of the box.
To fix this problem, you can set in /etc/environment :
LANG="en_CA.UTF-8"
Of course, add your own language/country code. Reboot so the change can take effect.
This bug should remain open however; there should be a default "LANG=< language/ country selected by user>.UTF-8". UTF-8 should be the default, out of the box.