Raster, On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 2:34 AM, Carsten Haitzler <[email protected]> wrote: > On Wed, 13 Oct 2010 02:11:46 +0300 Ulisses Furquim <[email protected]> > said: > >> Hi, >> >> On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 1:25 AM, Carsten Haitzler <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> > On Mon, 11 Oct 2010 19:39:56 +0400 batden <[email protected]> said: >> > >> > that contains translations for specific applications and toolsets etc. not >> > 1 mo per app at all (no way to know how the .desktop file maps to some >> > specific .mo to open). what mo file contains the translations? if what you >> > say is true - the .mo translations are used to GENERATe the.desktop files - >> > then the .desktop files should have all the translations in them. they >> > don't. >> > >> > so where is the magic .mo or set of .mo's that need to be loaded and used? >> > and don't tell me "every .mo in the langpack local dir needs to be loaded" >> > as thats just not going to happen :) >> >> In Ubuntu they're using a "X-Ubuntu-Gettext-Domain" key in the >> .desktop file to specify the translation domain for gettext. :-) Other >> distros must be using something similar. > > but gnome-terminal.mo... doesn't exist for most locales. ffor example for > gnome-terminal. same with inkscape, or gimp... the only ones i see are for > en_* > - n de, fr, es, pt, ja, ko... etc.
IIRC they have langpack packages so you can have .mo files only for some locales (and I think someone on this thread already mentioned that). > that mo can be sanely used for the app - but a launcher/menu having to load an > extra N .mo files (1 per app/desktop) just to get 1, 2 or 3 strings from them > for the .desktop... that seems a wonderfully extreme way to do this. and > evidence doesn't show that this is the case - at least here on 10.04 Well, I do think they do that. However, in order to be sure I'd need to check. Best regards, -- Ulisses Furquim ProFUSION embedded systems http://profusion.mobi Mobile: +55 19 9250 0942 Skype: ulissesffs ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Beautiful is writing same markup. Internet Explorer 9 supports standards for HTML5, CSS3, SVG 1.1, ECMAScript5, and DOM L2 & L3. Spend less time writing and rewriting code and more time creating great experiences on the web. Be a part of the beta today. http://p.sf.net/sfu/beautyoftheweb _______________________________________________ enlightenment-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/enlightenment-users
