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 Originally Posted by hany
Please re-read my post. NLS_LANG tells Oracle what the OS characterset is. It's not the other way around, you do not specify the database characterset through NLS_LANG.
You can't have two OS charactersets at the same time, can you?
Please review Note 158577.1 on metalink. It explains NLS_LANG very well.
Seems that you didn't understood my problem (or I don't understand you). I have two databases on the same machine DB1 and DB2. When I use DB1 I have to set NLS_LANG to WE8MSWIN1252... when I use DB2 I have to set NLS_LANG to AL32UTF8... I wonder if there is a parameter to specify for each database what NLS_LAG to use... I understood from you that I can't have two NLS_LANG at the same time, but I wonder if there is another parameter that specify NLS_LANG for each database not for all.
Regards
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