Am Fri, 18 Dec 2009 22:51:11 +0100 schrieb Claude Paroz <cla...@2xlibre.net>:
> Le vendredi 18 décembre 2009 à 18:04 +0100, Christopher Roy Bratusek a > écrit : > (...) > > Also using intltool for translating sawfish is not recommended, as > > intltool can only recognize strings surounded by (_ ) but most of > > sawfishs strings aren't. Now if you use intltool-update will mark > > all *valid* strings as #~. So for the time beeing, you should make > > sure that the old strings are not disabled/untranslated when using > > intltool. > > > > Current sane way is to do the following: > > > > cd po > > > > # generates a *complete* .pot > > ./make-pot > > > > # updates all po files against the new pot file > > for PO in $(ls *.po); do > > ./update.sh $(basename $PO .po) > > done > > > > Editing the po file NOW is safe. > > > > I know that this is not optimal, sorry. > > Hi Chris, > > Damned-Lies supports special way to generate pot files, under two > conditions: > - the custom script should apply in a clean tree (that is without > requiring an autogen/configure) > - the custom script should be written in a 'standard' (no troll > intent!) language (e.g. bash, perl, python). > > Another way would be to commit the pot file in Git and Damned-Lies > could use it to generate stats. I know it's suboptimal to commit > generated files, but it would be a workaround. > > Claude > Hi Claude, both scripts are shell scripts, which should work with any modern sh. I just commited a little change to make-pot to make it work in a clean tree (it checks wether $(srcdir)/DOC exists or not, and creates it, if not -- the DOC file is generated by repdoc, which makes the difference between a intltool or make-pot generated pot-file: it detects all strings). update.sh works, if there's a pot file in the tree. Chris _______________________________________________ gnome-i18n mailing list gnome-i18n@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-i18n