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+ + +

The User's View

+ +

+When GNU gettext will truly have reached is goal, average users +should feel some kind of astonished pleasure, seeing the effect of +that strange kind of magic that just makes their own native language +appear everywhere on their screens. As for naive users, they would +ideally have no special pleasure about it, merely taking their own +language for granted, and becoming rather unhappy otherwise. + +

+

+So, let's try to describe here how we would like the magic to operate, +as we want the users' view to be the simplest, among all ways one +could look at GNU gettext. All other software engineers: +programmers, translators, maintainers, should work together in such a +way that the magic becomes possible. This is a long and progressive +undertaking, and information is available about the progress of the +Translation Project. + +

+

+When a package is distributed, there are two kind of users: +installers who fetch the distribution, unpack it, configure +it, compile it and install it for themselves or others to use; and +end users that call programs of the package, once these have +been installed at their site. GNU gettext is offering magic +for both installers and end users. + +

+ + + +

The Current `ABOUT-NLS' Matrix

+ +

+Languages are not equally supported in all packages using GNU +gettext. To know if some package uses GNU gettext, one +may check the distribution for the `ABOUT-NLS' information file, for +some `ll.po' files, often kept together into some `po/' +directory, or for an `intl/' directory. Internationalized packages +have usually many `ll.po' files, where ll represents +the language. section Magic for End Users for a complete description of the format +for ll. + +

+

+More generally, a matrix is available for showing the current state +of the Translation Project, listing which packages are prepared for +multi-lingual messages, and which languages is supported by each. +Because this information changes often, this matrix is not kept within +this GNU gettext manual. This information is often found in +file `ABOUT-NLS' from various distributions, but is also as old as +the distribution itself. A recent copy of this `ABOUT-NLS' file, +containing up-to-date information, should generally be found on the +Translation Project sites, and also on most GNU archive sites. + +

+ + +

Magic for Installers

+ +

+By default, packages fully using GNU gettext, internally, +are installed in such a way that they to allow translation of +messages. At configuration time, those packages should +automatically detect whether the underlying host system provides usable +catgets or gettext functions. If neither is present, +the GNU gettext library should be automatically prepared +and used. Installers may use special options at configuration +time for changing this behavior. The command `./configure +--with-included-gettext' bypasses system catgets or gettext to +use GNU gettext instead, while `./configure --disable-nls' +produces program totally unable to translate messages. + +

+

+Internationalized packages have usually many `ll.po' +files. Unless +translations are disabled, all those available are installed together +with the package. However, the environment variable LINGUAS +may be set, prior to configuration, to limit the installed set. +LINGUAS should then contain a space separated list of two-letter +codes, stating which languages are allowed. + +

+ + +

Magic for End Users

+ +

+We consider here those packages using GNU gettext internally, +and for which the installers did not disable translation at +configure time. Then, users only have to set the LANG +environment variable to the appropriate `ll' prior to +using the programs in the package. See section The Current `ABOUT-NLS' Matrix. For example, +let's presume a German site. At the shell prompt, users merely have to +execute `setenv LANG de' (in csh) or `export +LANG; LANG=de' (in sh). They could even do this from their +`.login' or `.profile' file. + +

+


+

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