On Fri, 2009-05-01 at 15:13 +0200, Tobias Quathamer wrote: > On Friday 01 May 2009 at 14:13, Frank Lin PIAT wrote: > > Actually, I was wondering about those three letters iso codes > > (ISO-636-2T or iso-636-3......@?) > > Ah. The ISO standard 639 consists of four parts. One part is ISO 639-1, > which represents the well-known two letter codes (en, it, fr, ...) > Since your application is about localization, those codes should be enough, > [..]
I'll stick to 639-1 codes. > > Now I have another problem, it's that I prefer a "compact" (i.e common) > > language name. > > > > It seems I can reliably drop anything after semi-column and inside > > parenthesis: > > [...] > > Well, probably. The iso-codes package provides the language names exactly > like they are written in the ISO standard, sometimes this might be too much > information. If you don't want that information, just remove it from the > output. Ok, So I'll drop some stuffs as explained above. Thank you for those information. Franklin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected]

