this post was submitted on 02 Jan 2024
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I just installed Fedora and I'm trying to figure out how to make it display Japanese fonts, by default it displays kanji as Chinese characters, I installed some fonts but still no change, how do I change this?

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[–] nmtake@lemm.ee 10 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Most cases will be solved with these settings (but some applications may need additional tweeks):

  1. Use ja_JP.UTF-8locale, or
  2. Use ~/.config/fontconfig/fonts.conf
[–] gary_host_laptop@lemmy.ml 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I was trying to do that but I'm unsure what to edit to do that, since most tutorials are using either a Debian based or Arch distro.

I was using a similar guide, and it also talked about the locale.gen, but that file was never to be found, I just searched a bit more into that and this popped up. So it seems Fedora handles things differently, but now I'm unsure what commands to execute since I'm not sure the ones in that thread are also valid for me.

[–] winety 2 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

You can use localectl to change the locale on Fedora. Here's what you need to do:

  • See if you have Japanese locale installed. Something like ja_JP.UTF-8 should be in the output of localectl list-locales.
  • If it's not, you should install it using the following command: sudo dnf install langpacks-ja (I'm not 100 % sure about this and I don't have a Fedora system to test it on.)
  • Set the locale: sudo localectl set-locale LANG=ja_JP.UTF-8
  • Reboot your system. Everything should be in Japanese now.

This will (probably) change everything to Japanese – texts in menus, error messages in the terminal, and also the font rendering. This answer on Stack Overflow suggests to do something with your fonts.conf. This way your UI would be in English (or your preferred language) and kanji would render as the Japanese variants.