[TYPO3] Multiple languages with multiple domains in a single page tree?
Francesco Pessina
typo3news at yahoo.it
Fri Apr 7 12:32:42 CEST 2006
Thanks for the lesson, it's very interesting! In the past I haved some
trouble (now resolved) with charset and languages in the HTML generated
by Typo and this clear some of my doubts.
Best regards,
Francesco.
Rick Janda ha scritto:
> Hi Francesco,
>
> en_IE at euro stands for English language locale for Ireland with Euro
> sign. The charset is ISO-8859-15. Without @euro it would be ISO-8859-1,
> which has no Euro sign. The Euro currency could be outputed wrong in
> this case.
>
> en_??.UTF-8 is with utf-8, but the locale_all entry has nothing to do
> with the charset used for the html rendering. It sets LC_ALL environment
> variable with PHP setlocale(), which is evaluated e.g. from date
> functions to ouput dates in the localized manner. Typo3 convert it to
> the wanted html output encoding anyway.
> I think, it is only an issue, if you or some typo3 code uses php
> functions, that includes currency symbols in its output.
>
> Ciao,
> Rick
>
>
> Francesco Pessina wrote:
>> Great work!
>>
>> I've checked my config. and I found that it works because apache know
>> in the httpd.conf how to "remap" all HTTP POST to relative websites.
>> The "domain" configuration in Typo3 seems to be not necessary under
>> this circumstance and the globalString simply modify the header in the
>> HTTP header (I think). I have all my websites in a single tree (the
>> second solution of Kasper's Multilanguage Site article).
>>
>> A very stupid question: in your config.locale_all you have set
>> en_IE at euro but what it mean? What stand IE and @euro? I use the
>> standard en_US or en_UK (for USA or United Kingdom)? Is compatible
>> with utf-8 charset?
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Francesco.
>>
More information about the TYPO3-english
mailing list