Regen'd OPTIONs after Shin-Ichi's changes

From https://sourceforge.net/p/tuxpaint/tuxpaint-docs/ci/ad098eca7de6adba07468b67e1b576095cd2cab0/
This commit is contained in:
Bill Kendrick 2021-03-25 09:07:16 -07:00
parent 1425db0578
commit 50d3e99ccb
10 changed files with 146 additions and 51 deletions

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@ -412,7 +412,7 @@ Windows Users
onscreen-keyboard=yes
Presents a clickable on-screen keyboard when using the Text and
< b>Label tools.
Label tools.
onscreen-keyboard-layout=LAYOUTNAME
@ -646,7 +646,12 @@ Windows Users
Tux Paint will fall back to using that typical directory,
of no XDG configuration can be read, or nothing is set for
"XDG_PICTURES_DIR".
* Windows — TBD!
* Windows - "My Pictures" directory for each user (normaly
"c:\Users\USERNAME\Pictures").
You can directly open the folder as follows:
* Press "[Windows]+[R]" key to open "Run ..." dialogue.
* Enter "Shell:My Pictures" in the text box and push
[OK].
* macOS — TBD!
Note: When the defaults are used, a new "TuxPaint" subdirectory
@ -1594,8 +1599,16 @@ Setting Your Environment's Locale
...which will set the language for the lifetime of that DOS window.
For something more permanent, try editing your computer's
"autoexec.bat" file using Windows' "sysedit" tool:
For something more permanent, you can set environment variable using
"System properties" dialogue as follows:
* Press "[Windows]+[R]" key to open "Run ..." dialogue.
* Enter "sysdm.cpl" in the text box and push "[OK]" button to open
"System properties" dialogue.
* Select "Advanced" tab.
* Click "Environment Variables..." button.
* Edit the value of the parameter "LANG" (should be newly created
if not exists).
Special Fonts

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@ -580,8 +580,7 @@
<dd>
<p>
Presents a clickable on-screen keyboard when using the <b>Text</b> and <
b>Label</b> tools. </p>
Presents a clickable on-screen keyboard when using the <b>Text</b> and <b>Label</b> tools. </p>
</dd>
<dt>
@ -913,8 +912,10 @@ b>Label</b> tools. </p>
<li>Linux &amp; Unix — If available, wherever your desktop environment is configured for pictures to be stored, based on your XDG (X Desktop Group) configuration. (Try running the command-line "<code style="white-space: nowrap;">xdg-user-dir PICTURES</code>" to find out.)<br>
Typically (in an English locale), this will be a "<code>Pictures</code>" subdirectory in your home directory (i.e., "<code>$HOME/Pictures</code>" aka "<code>~/Pictures</code>").<br>
Tux Paint will fall back to using that typical directory, of no XDG configuration can be read, or nothing is set for "<code>XDG_PICTURES_DIR</code>". </li>
<li>Windows — TBD! <!-- FIXME -->
<li>Windows - "My Pictures" directory for each user (normaly "c:\Users\<i>USERNAME</i>\Pictures").<br>You can directly open the folder as follows: <ul>
<li>Press "[Windows]+[R]" key to open "Run ..." dialogue.</li>
<li>Enter "Shell:My Pictures" in the text box and push [OK].</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>macOS — TBD! <!-- FIXME -->
@ -4917,8 +4918,14 @@ b>Label</b> tools. </p>
...which will set the language for the lifetime of that DOS window. </p>
<p>
For something more permanent, try editing your computer's "<code>autoexec.bat</code>" file using Windows' "<b>sysedit</b>" tool: </p>
For something more permanent, you can set environment variable using "System properties" dialogue as follows: </p>
<ul>
<li>Press "[Windows]+[R]" key to open "Run ..." dialogue.</li>
<li>Enter "sysdm.cpl" in the text box and push "[OK]" button to open "System properties" dialogue.</li>
<li>Select "Advanced" tab.</li>
<li>Click "Environment Variables..." button.</li>
<li>Edit the value of the parameter "LANG" (should be newly created if not exists).</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>