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You should post such distro-specific questions on a forum for that particular distro. It would also help you to edit your profile and put the name of the distro you use there.
You should post such distro-specific questions on a forum for that particular distro. It would also help you to edit your profile and put the name of the distro you use there.
not only fedora but also rehat , suse and ubuntu...
Explain what you mean by 'my machine language'. Are you referring to machine language in the sense of 'assembler language'; the low-level instructions executed by the CPU? Do you want to know how to write self-modifying code? (in most cases in Linux, you can't).
Or are you referring to languages spoken by humans; some internationalization of text written and displayed by your OS and applications?
Something else altogether different?
Explain what you mean by 'my machine language'. Are you referring to machine language in the sense of 'assembler language'; the low-level instructions executed by the CPU? Do you want to know how to write self-modifying code? (in most cases in Linux, you can't).
Or are you referring to languages spoken by humans; some internationalization of text written and displayed by your OS and applications?
Something else altogether different?
--- rod.
sorry for my incomplte querry..
my machine languge in the sence language selection like english, french germen...
to my gui application..
is there any way to change the language of my gui application..?
i wanna do it programatically...
When I first saw your post, I thought you somehow wanted to change to a different host architecture for some reason (the term "machine language" == "assembly code" == "instruction set").
Yes, you can definitely change an application's language programmatically.
But in order to do so, the application must have been written to support different languages in the first place. For example, it's relatively straightforward to write a fully "internationalized" GUI in GTK+ or Qt.
When I first saw your post, I thought you somehow wanted to change to a different host architecture for some reason (the term "machine language" == "assembly code" == "instruction set").
Yes, you can definitely change an application's language programmatically.
But in order to do so, the application must have been written to support different languages in the first place. For example, it's relatively straightforward to write a fully "internationalized" GUI in GTK+ or Qt.
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