Dear Translators, I'm writing these tips in hope they are useful.
Did you ever have to translate a string which consists mainly of some magic "percent-letter" sequences, with a comment that this is a date format or that you should read the strftime(3) man page for the full format specification or sometimes even without any comment at all? Here I'd like to explain only two format specifiers: - "%d" will produce the day of the month number preceded with zero if it is less than 10 (01, 02, ..., 09, 10, 11...) - "%e" will produce the day of the month number preceded with a space if it is less than 10 (" 1", " 2", ... " 9", "10"...) If this is what you want to achieve then leave this as it is. However, if you prefer to achieve a plain decimal number without any additional padding in your translated date format you should put "-" between the percent character and the letter. This "-" means "do not pad the day number with an additional zero nor an additional space". So summarizing: - "%B %d" will produce "April 09"; - "%B %e" will produce "April 9" (notice two spaces); - "%B %-d" will produce "April 9"; - "%B %-e" will produce "April 9". Yes, "%-d" and "%-e" produces the same output. Of course, "April" will be translated to your language automatically, and of course you can reorder the format specifiers (do you want "April 9" or "9 April"?) and you can put something different between the format specifiers than a single space, according to the rules of your language. Best regards, Rafal _______________________________________________ gnome-i18n mailing list gnome-i18n@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-i18n