That was helpful. So it's dynamic, therefore reasonably future proof. Nice job, Karl!

The answer I wanted on my system is:

› rpm -q --qf %{VERSION} glibc-locale 2.29 › for l in $(locale -a) ; do \ LC_CTYPE=$l perl5.30.0 -Mlocale \ -E'say $ENV{LC_CTYPE} if "i" ne lc "I"' ; \ done az_AZ crh_UA ku_TR ku_TR.utf8 tr_CY tr_CY.utf8 tr_TR tr_TR.utf8 tt_RU@iqtelif
To save the interested reader a trip to the list of ISO 639 codes, that's Azeri, Crimean Tatar, Kurdish, Turkish, Tatar.

In reply to Re^4: [5.30] What counts as a Turkic locale? by daxim
in thread [5.30] What counts as a Turkic locale? by daxim

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