e64196c7b3
Fix part of https://github.com/friendica/friendica/issues/4665 `php [shell file]` does not work, so use `php [php file]` instead. `php bin/console.php` is more robust than e.g. `bin/console` which does not work on Windows, or *nix systems without Bash
121 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
121 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
Utilities
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php bin/console.php typo - is a crude syntax checker to avoid checking in files with simple
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typos. It basically just loads each of our project files at once. Run from
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cmdline and see if any parsing errors are reported.
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Internationalisation
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php bin/console.php extract - extracts translatable strings from our project files. It
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currently doesn't pick up strings in other libraries we might be using such as
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the HTML parsers.
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In order for extract to do its job, every use of the L10n::t() translation function
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must be preceded by one space. The string also can not contain parentheses. If
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parens are required in a string which requires translation, please use hex escapes.
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\x28 = (
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\x29 = )
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This only applies to English. Other languages may use parens in strings
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because they don't require extraction.
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strings.php - a recent run of the strings program. This provides output that
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is suitable for direct inclusion in the program.
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There are also translatable strings in the various files in the view/lang/en
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directory. By setting $lang = 'something' in .htconfig.php, the application
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will search for view/lang/something/filename prior to the English version in
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view/lang/en/filename when loading templates and view files.
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The translated string table should be placed in view/lang/$lang/strings.php for
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automatic inclusion.
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You are not restricted to using known languages. You may also use this to
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translate the software into "pirate", "surfer" or merely to replace certain
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text which you don't care for.
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Note: The view/lang/en directory contains many HTML template files, some of which
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only have a few words of English text amongst the HTML. Over time we will move
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the translation to the replace_macros() function which calls these files and
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then relocate the files to the view directory. The files in the top-level view
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directory are template files which do not require translation.
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Placeholders
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Do not translate placeholders in strings! Things like %s, %d, %1$s and $somename
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are used to add dynamic content to the string.
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%s represents a dynamic string, like in "Welcome to %s"
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%d represents a dynamic number, like in "%d new messages"
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$somename is a variable like in php
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In %1$s %2$s, the numbers are the position index of multiple dynamic content.
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You could swap position in string of indexed placeholders.
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e.g.
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"%1$s's %2$s" => "John's photo", "John's item"
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"%2$s di %1$s" => "foto di John", "elemento di John"
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Plural
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The L10n::tt() function supports plural form. The extract command writes this in
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strings.php as an array, one string for every plural form language supports:
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$a->string["%d message sent"] = Array(
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0 => "%d message sent",
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1 => "%d messages sent",
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);
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The function string_plural_select($n) defined in strings.php, return the string
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index to use, related to the numbers of item (value of $n).
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This is modeled after ngettext function of GNU gettext.
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More info at http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/gettext/Plural-forms.html
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Xgettext and .po workflow
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1. Run bin/run_xgettext.sh script (on *unix sistems, with GNU xgettext installed)
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This script runs xgettext on source tree, extracting strings from L10n::t() and L10n::tt()
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functions, and creates a util/messages.po file.
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$ cd bin; ./run_xgettext.sh
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2. copy util/messages.po to view/lang/<language>/messages.po
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Replace <language> with the language you are working on - e.g. 'es', 'fr', 'de', etc.
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3. open view/lang/<language>/messages.po with a text editor and fill in infos in
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"Last-Translator: FULL NAME <EMAIL@ADDRESS>"
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"Language-Team: LANGUAGE <LL@li.org>\n"
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"Language: \n"
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(eg:
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"Last-Translator: Guybrush Threepwood <gb@host.com>"
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"Language-Team: Pirate Friendika <pirate-friendika-ml@host.com>\n"
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"Language: pi\n"
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)
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For the line
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"Plural-Forms: nplurals=INTEGER; plural=EXPRESSION;\n"
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read GNU gettext manual at
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http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/gettext/Plural-forms.html
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4. You could then translate the strings in text editor, but I suggest to use one
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of the many .po editors out there, like QtLinguist
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5. run
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$ php bin/console.php po2php view/lang/<language>/messages.po
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to create the strings.php file
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When strings are added or modified in source, you could run
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$ cd bin; ./run_xgettext.sh ../view/lang/<language>/messages.po
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to extract strings from source files and join them with the existing .po file:
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new strings are added, the existing are not overwritten.
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If you already translated Friendica using strings.php, you could import your old
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translation to messages.po. Run:
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$ php bin/console.php php2po view/lang/<language>/strings.php
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