
C H A P T E R 6
T H E R A S P B E R R Y P I S O F T W A R E C O N F I G U R A T I O N T O O L
97
4 Internationalisation Options
This menu option provides a way for users in countries other than the UK to configure the Pi
for their needs (see Figure 6-2). By default, Raspbian sets itself to use UK English language
settings, time zone settings and keyboard layout. Users in other countries will find that cer-
tain keys on their keyboards don’t type the right characters, particularly those using non-
QWERTY keyboard layouts such as AZERTY or QWERTZ.
Figure 6-2:
The
raspi-
config
Internationalisa-
tion Options
screen
Use the cursor keys to select the Internationalisation Options choice and press Enter. This
loads a submenu that provides access to three different location-based settings: Change
Locale, Change Timezone and Change Keyboard Layout.
I1 Change Locale
This option, selected with the cursor keys and Enter, provides a list of all the languages avail-
able to the Pi. The list is extensive and includes most common languages. Use the cursor keys
to scroll through the list that appears, and press the spacebar to put a * symbol next to the
language or languages you would like to use.
Each language is named in a particular way: the first two characters represent the language
name based on the International Organisation for Standardisation’s two-letter identifier.
Next comes an underscore, followed by another two characters that represent the country-
specific identifier for that language. The prefix
en_GB
, for example, specifies the variant of
English used in Great Britain;
en_US
, by contrast, is English as used in the United States of
America.
Following the language and country identifier is a string that shows the
character encoding
used by the language. Most languages will have more than one option here, but the majority
of users will only need to select one: the
UTF-8
. This specifies the Unicode Transformation
Format 8-bit encoding—the most common and compatible encoding standard.
Summary of Contents for A
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Page 3: ...Raspberry Pi User Guide 2nd Edition...
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Page 5: ...Raspberry Pi User Guide 2nd Edition Eben Upton and Gareth Halfacree...
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Page 26: ...R A S P B E R R Y P I U S E R G U I D E S E C O N D E D I T I O N 10...
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Page 29: ...Chapter 1 Meet the Raspberry Pi...
Page 37: ...Chapter 2 Getting Started with the Raspberry Pi...
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Page 57: ...Chapter 3 Linux System Administration...
Page 79: ...Chapter 4 Troubleshooting...
Page 89: ...Chapter 5 Network Configuration...
Page 109: ...Chapter 6 The Raspberry Pi Software Configuration Tool...
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Page 123: ...Chapter 7 Advanced Raspberry Pi Configuration...
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Page 141: ...Chapter 8 The Pi as a Home Theatre PC...
Page 151: ...Chapter 9 The Pi as a Productivity Machine...
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Page 161: ...Chapter 10 The Pi as a Web Server...
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Page 173: ...Chapter 11 An Introduction to Scratch...
Page 189: ...Chapter 12 An Introduction to Python...
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Page 219: ...Chapter 13 Learning to Hack Hardware...
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Page 235: ...Chapter 14 The GPIO Port...
Page 249: ...Chapter 15 The Raspberry Pi Camera Module...
Page 265: ...Chapter 16 Add on Boards...
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Page 281: ...Appendix A Python Recipes...
Page 287: ...Appendix B Raspberry Pi Camera Module Quick Reference...
Page 293: ...Appendix C HDMI Display Modes...