Rahul Sundaram wrote: > It includes all the L10N content. Rickey Moore wrote: > I'll spring, what's the LION content? Using a sans-serif font, Rickey? L-ten-N is short for locali[sz]ation. It's supposed to change the way a program works by, for example, referring to the language settings to find out whether the user prefers "localisation" or "localization". It might change user-visible text, default page sizes, dictionaries, and support right-to-left text. There are supposed to be ten characters between the "l" and "n". Personally, I find these abbreviations particularly obscure. Hope this helps, James. -- E-mail address: james | Banana in disk drive error @westexe.demon.co.uk |