Table 3. Language identifiers | (continued) | |
|
|
|
Language |
| Language identifier |
|
|
|
Danish |
| dk |
|
|
|
Dutch |
| nl |
|
|
|
English |
| en |
|
|
|
Finnish |
| fi |
|
|
|
French |
| fr |
|
|
|
German |
| de |
|
|
|
Greek |
| el |
|
|
|
Hungarian |
| hu |
|
|
|
Italian |
| it |
|
|
|
Japanese |
| jp |
|
|
|
Korean |
| kr |
|
|
|
Norwegian |
| no |
|
|
|
Polish |
| pl |
|
|
|
Portuguese |
| pt |
|
|
|
Romanian |
| ro |
|
|
|
Russian |
| ru |
|
|
|
Slovak |
| sk |
|
|
|
Slovenian |
| sl |
|
|
|
Spanish |
| es |
|
|
|
Swedish |
| se |
|
|
|
Turkish |
| tr |
|
|
|
Related reference:
v“Displaying the db2setup command in your national language” on page 68
Displaying the db2setup command in your national language
The db2setup command queries the operating system to determine the existing language settings. If the language setting of your operating system is supported by db2setup, then that language will be used.
If your system uses the same code pages but different locale names than those supported by the DB2 interface, you can still see the translated db2setup by setting your LANG environment variable to the appropriate value by entering the following command:
bourne (sh), korn (ksh), and bash shells:
LANG=<locale> export LANG
C shell:
setenv LANG <locale>
where locale is a locale supported by the DB2 interface.
Related reference:
68Getting started with DB2 installation and administration