Calendar language won't change on Ubuntu Gnome 17.04












0















I'm super new to this forum and just installed Ubuntu Gnome 17.04. Previously I had Ubuntu 16.10. What I would like to ask is that if there's a way to change time format on the calendar. I did select my region the Netherlands format and went all the way through checking my time locale which is LC_TIME="nl.NL.UTF-8". My main locale for the whole system is in English (us_US.UTF-8). It does show Dutch time format but only on the login screen. Once I enter my desktop the calendar is in English. I'll attach a screen-captured image of the trouble.



screnshot










share|improve this question

























  • I don't get it. Your language is English, so the app shows English. Do you just want to change the date format at the top-panel? 25 Aug instead of Aug 25 ?

    – pomsky
    Aug 25 '17 at 11:52











  • Can you show us what the command cat /etc/default/locale outputs?

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Aug 25 '17 at 12:08











  • If you want to change the format of the date, time ,... you can do that by going to settings -> region & language -> format

    – Loic L.
    Aug 25 '17 at 12:21











  • @GunnarHjalmarsson it's already LANG=nl_NL.UTF-8 and as the matter of fact, I noticed that my whole operating system is not entirely in English. Some actually in Dutch.

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:05











  • That's actually what I thought too, changing region but to no avail. I had to reconfigure the locale and put the default in English and simply configure the region and format using Dutch system. It worked on my Ubuntu 16.10 previously. @lolo

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:07


















0















I'm super new to this forum and just installed Ubuntu Gnome 17.04. Previously I had Ubuntu 16.10. What I would like to ask is that if there's a way to change time format on the calendar. I did select my region the Netherlands format and went all the way through checking my time locale which is LC_TIME="nl.NL.UTF-8". My main locale for the whole system is in English (us_US.UTF-8). It does show Dutch time format but only on the login screen. Once I enter my desktop the calendar is in English. I'll attach a screen-captured image of the trouble.



screnshot










share|improve this question

























  • I don't get it. Your language is English, so the app shows English. Do you just want to change the date format at the top-panel? 25 Aug instead of Aug 25 ?

    – pomsky
    Aug 25 '17 at 11:52











  • Can you show us what the command cat /etc/default/locale outputs?

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Aug 25 '17 at 12:08











  • If you want to change the format of the date, time ,... you can do that by going to settings -> region & language -> format

    – Loic L.
    Aug 25 '17 at 12:21











  • @GunnarHjalmarsson it's already LANG=nl_NL.UTF-8 and as the matter of fact, I noticed that my whole operating system is not entirely in English. Some actually in Dutch.

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:05











  • That's actually what I thought too, changing region but to no avail. I had to reconfigure the locale and put the default in English and simply configure the region and format using Dutch system. It worked on my Ubuntu 16.10 previously. @lolo

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:07
















0












0








0








I'm super new to this forum and just installed Ubuntu Gnome 17.04. Previously I had Ubuntu 16.10. What I would like to ask is that if there's a way to change time format on the calendar. I did select my region the Netherlands format and went all the way through checking my time locale which is LC_TIME="nl.NL.UTF-8". My main locale for the whole system is in English (us_US.UTF-8). It does show Dutch time format but only on the login screen. Once I enter my desktop the calendar is in English. I'll attach a screen-captured image of the trouble.



screnshot










share|improve this question
















I'm super new to this forum and just installed Ubuntu Gnome 17.04. Previously I had Ubuntu 16.10. What I would like to ask is that if there's a way to change time format on the calendar. I did select my region the Netherlands format and went all the way through checking my time locale which is LC_TIME="nl.NL.UTF-8". My main locale for the whole system is in English (us_US.UTF-8). It does show Dutch time format but only on the login screen. Once I enter my desktop the calendar is in English. I'll attach a screen-captured image of the trouble.



screnshot







language-support






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 11 at 4:39









Pablo Bianchi

2,4451530




2,4451530










asked Aug 25 '17 at 11:44







user729367




















  • I don't get it. Your language is English, so the app shows English. Do you just want to change the date format at the top-panel? 25 Aug instead of Aug 25 ?

    – pomsky
    Aug 25 '17 at 11:52











  • Can you show us what the command cat /etc/default/locale outputs?

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Aug 25 '17 at 12:08











  • If you want to change the format of the date, time ,... you can do that by going to settings -> region & language -> format

    – Loic L.
    Aug 25 '17 at 12:21











  • @GunnarHjalmarsson it's already LANG=nl_NL.UTF-8 and as the matter of fact, I noticed that my whole operating system is not entirely in English. Some actually in Dutch.

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:05











  • That's actually what I thought too, changing region but to no avail. I had to reconfigure the locale and put the default in English and simply configure the region and format using Dutch system. It worked on my Ubuntu 16.10 previously. @lolo

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:07





















  • I don't get it. Your language is English, so the app shows English. Do you just want to change the date format at the top-panel? 25 Aug instead of Aug 25 ?

    – pomsky
    Aug 25 '17 at 11:52











  • Can you show us what the command cat /etc/default/locale outputs?

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Aug 25 '17 at 12:08











  • If you want to change the format of the date, time ,... you can do that by going to settings -> region & language -> format

    – Loic L.
    Aug 25 '17 at 12:21











  • @GunnarHjalmarsson it's already LANG=nl_NL.UTF-8 and as the matter of fact, I noticed that my whole operating system is not entirely in English. Some actually in Dutch.

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:05











  • That's actually what I thought too, changing region but to no avail. I had to reconfigure the locale and put the default in English and simply configure the region and format using Dutch system. It worked on my Ubuntu 16.10 previously. @lolo

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:07



















I don't get it. Your language is English, so the app shows English. Do you just want to change the date format at the top-panel? 25 Aug instead of Aug 25 ?

– pomsky
Aug 25 '17 at 11:52





I don't get it. Your language is English, so the app shows English. Do you just want to change the date format at the top-panel? 25 Aug instead of Aug 25 ?

– pomsky
Aug 25 '17 at 11:52













Can you show us what the command cat /etc/default/locale outputs?

– Gunnar Hjalmarsson
Aug 25 '17 at 12:08





Can you show us what the command cat /etc/default/locale outputs?

– Gunnar Hjalmarsson
Aug 25 '17 at 12:08













If you want to change the format of the date, time ,... you can do that by going to settings -> region & language -> format

– Loic L.
Aug 25 '17 at 12:21





If you want to change the format of the date, time ,... you can do that by going to settings -> region & language -> format

– Loic L.
Aug 25 '17 at 12:21













@GunnarHjalmarsson it's already LANG=nl_NL.UTF-8 and as the matter of fact, I noticed that my whole operating system is not entirely in English. Some actually in Dutch.

– user729367
Aug 26 '17 at 18:05





@GunnarHjalmarsson it's already LANG=nl_NL.UTF-8 and as the matter of fact, I noticed that my whole operating system is not entirely in English. Some actually in Dutch.

– user729367
Aug 26 '17 at 18:05













That's actually what I thought too, changing region but to no avail. I had to reconfigure the locale and put the default in English and simply configure the region and format using Dutch system. It worked on my Ubuntu 16.10 previously. @lolo

– user729367
Aug 26 '17 at 18:07







That's actually what I thought too, changing region but to no avail. I had to reconfigure the locale and put the default in English and simply configure the region and format using Dutch system. It worked on my Ubuntu 16.10 previously. @lolo

– user729367
Aug 26 '17 at 18:07












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2














Okay guys, I managed to get this through.





  • I went to dconf-editor and enter system/locale/region and activate "use default value". Previously before I activated it, it showed my time locale (locale | grep TIME) as LC_TIME=en_GB.UTF-8.



    Using terminal would be:



    gsettings reset org.gnome.system.locale region


  • Then I logged off and logged in back


The calendar appeared using Dutch system which corresponded with my regional format setting.



dconf-editor system/locale/region






share|improve this answer


























  • Great! I was about to ask about that as the next step, but then I found your answer.

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Aug 26 '17 at 23:33



















2














Just change the language support settings (gnome-language-selector)



Language support - screenshot



I tested it and it works



Calender - screenshot






share|improve this answer


























  • I already did that to no avail. I even re-configured the locale too. Previously on my Ubuntu 16.10, I was able to set the whole system language in English and using Dutch format but now that I'm on Ubuntu Gnome 17.04, I couldn't.

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:01











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

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active

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active

oldest

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2














Okay guys, I managed to get this through.





  • I went to dconf-editor and enter system/locale/region and activate "use default value". Previously before I activated it, it showed my time locale (locale | grep TIME) as LC_TIME=en_GB.UTF-8.



    Using terminal would be:



    gsettings reset org.gnome.system.locale region


  • Then I logged off and logged in back


The calendar appeared using Dutch system which corresponded with my regional format setting.



dconf-editor system/locale/region






share|improve this answer


























  • Great! I was about to ask about that as the next step, but then I found your answer.

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Aug 26 '17 at 23:33
















2














Okay guys, I managed to get this through.





  • I went to dconf-editor and enter system/locale/region and activate "use default value". Previously before I activated it, it showed my time locale (locale | grep TIME) as LC_TIME=en_GB.UTF-8.



    Using terminal would be:



    gsettings reset org.gnome.system.locale region


  • Then I logged off and logged in back


The calendar appeared using Dutch system which corresponded with my regional format setting.



dconf-editor system/locale/region






share|improve this answer


























  • Great! I was about to ask about that as the next step, but then I found your answer.

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Aug 26 '17 at 23:33














2












2








2







Okay guys, I managed to get this through.





  • I went to dconf-editor and enter system/locale/region and activate "use default value". Previously before I activated it, it showed my time locale (locale | grep TIME) as LC_TIME=en_GB.UTF-8.



    Using terminal would be:



    gsettings reset org.gnome.system.locale region


  • Then I logged off and logged in back


The calendar appeared using Dutch system which corresponded with my regional format setting.



dconf-editor system/locale/region






share|improve this answer















Okay guys, I managed to get this through.





  • I went to dconf-editor and enter system/locale/region and activate "use default value". Previously before I activated it, it showed my time locale (locale | grep TIME) as LC_TIME=en_GB.UTF-8.



    Using terminal would be:



    gsettings reset org.gnome.system.locale region


  • Then I logged off and logged in back


The calendar appeared using Dutch system which corresponded with my regional format setting.



dconf-editor system/locale/region







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 12 at 20:07









Pablo Bianchi

2,4451530




2,4451530










answered Aug 26 '17 at 18:43







user729367




















  • Great! I was about to ask about that as the next step, but then I found your answer.

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Aug 26 '17 at 23:33



















  • Great! I was about to ask about that as the next step, but then I found your answer.

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Aug 26 '17 at 23:33

















Great! I was about to ask about that as the next step, but then I found your answer.

– Gunnar Hjalmarsson
Aug 26 '17 at 23:33





Great! I was about to ask about that as the next step, but then I found your answer.

– Gunnar Hjalmarsson
Aug 26 '17 at 23:33













2














Just change the language support settings (gnome-language-selector)



Language support - screenshot



I tested it and it works



Calender - screenshot






share|improve this answer


























  • I already did that to no avail. I even re-configured the locale too. Previously on my Ubuntu 16.10, I was able to set the whole system language in English and using Dutch format but now that I'm on Ubuntu Gnome 17.04, I couldn't.

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:01
















2














Just change the language support settings (gnome-language-selector)



Language support - screenshot



I tested it and it works



Calender - screenshot






share|improve this answer


























  • I already did that to no avail. I even re-configured the locale too. Previously on my Ubuntu 16.10, I was able to set the whole system language in English and using Dutch format but now that I'm on Ubuntu Gnome 17.04, I couldn't.

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:01














2












2








2







Just change the language support settings (gnome-language-selector)



Language support - screenshot



I tested it and it works



Calender - screenshot






share|improve this answer















Just change the language support settings (gnome-language-selector)



Language support - screenshot



I tested it and it works



Calender - screenshot







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 12 at 20:24









Pablo Bianchi

2,4451530




2,4451530










answered Aug 25 '17 at 12:22









OMar MohamedOMar Mohamed

336




336













  • I already did that to no avail. I even re-configured the locale too. Previously on my Ubuntu 16.10, I was able to set the whole system language in English and using Dutch format but now that I'm on Ubuntu Gnome 17.04, I couldn't.

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:01



















  • I already did that to no avail. I even re-configured the locale too. Previously on my Ubuntu 16.10, I was able to set the whole system language in English and using Dutch format but now that I'm on Ubuntu Gnome 17.04, I couldn't.

    – user729367
    Aug 26 '17 at 18:01

















I already did that to no avail. I even re-configured the locale too. Previously on my Ubuntu 16.10, I was able to set the whole system language in English and using Dutch format but now that I'm on Ubuntu Gnome 17.04, I couldn't.

– user729367
Aug 26 '17 at 18:01





I already did that to no avail. I even re-configured the locale too. Previously on my Ubuntu 16.10, I was able to set the whole system language in English and using Dutch format but now that I'm on Ubuntu Gnome 17.04, I couldn't.

– user729367
Aug 26 '17 at 18:01


















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