Hello Brett,
with sip.setapi("QString",2) you gets always an unicode string back,
witch is a true python object. So there can't be any Qt methods any
more. This is why your second example fails.
You have two solutions. The one you mentioned or since Python 2.6 the
new unicode format method:
qApp.translate("test","Internationalize {0}").format(42)
or with named arguments:
qApp.translate("test","Internationalize {my_number}").format(my_number=42)
There are many other options for the format method described in the
Python documentation.
Tobias
Brett Stottlemyer schrieb am 27.11.2010 21:27:
Hi, all-
I'd like to use sip.setapi("QString",2), but I'm using internationalization
as well and it is giving me some trouble.
If I try:
qApp.translate("test","Internationalize")
I get Unicode "Internationalize" as the result (as expected)
When I try:
qApp.translate("test","Internationalize %1").arg("42")
I get
AttributeError: 'unicode' object has no attribute 'arg'. I guess this is
expected, too, but I was hoping Phil had done some magic to have it work as
expected.
Is there a way to get this to work using Qt style formatting? Or do I need
to convert everything to python-style, like this:
qApp.translate("test","Internationalize %d")%42
Thanks,
Brett
_______________________________________________
PyQt mailing list [email protected]
http://www.riverbankcomputing.com/mailman/listinfo/pyqt