I can only agree on this. Serbian, as well as other Slavic/Eastern European languages use genitive and it would be great to inplement it in glibc.
Miloš 19.04.2017. 16.46, "Piotr Drąg" <piotrd...@gmail.com> је написао/ла: 2017-04-19 0:19 GMT+02:00 Rafal Luzynski <digitalfr...@lingonborough.com>: > Hello, > > I was told that GNOME i18n is the right place to discuss this issue > because it gathers translators from more languages than any other > place in this part of the net. The problem has been reported to GNOME > bugzilla as bug 749206 [1] but in fact it's not a GNOME bug but glibc > bug. [2] > > What is the issue: in many languages, mostly from eastern Europe, > including my native language, a correct grammatical form of the month > name when used in the full date context is genitive. A literal > translation to English applying the same rule would be "18 of April". > Also we still need the nominative case when the month name appears > standalone (for example sometimes we just want to say "April"). > > The proposed solution is to change strftime() function and anything > that is backed by or compatible with strftime(): in glib2 the > functions are g_date_time_format() and g_date_strftime(). These > functions besides "%B" (full month name) should start supporting > "%OB" (alternative month name). Also nl_langinfo() function would > be modified: as now MON_1, MON_2, ..., MON_12 return the data to > be used as the result of "%B" format specifiers the new set of > constants ALTMON_1, ALTMON_2, ..., ALTMON_12 would be introduced > to provide the data for "%OB" format specifier. > > This exact solution: > > - has been implemented in *BSD systems (FreeBSD, OpenBSD etc.) in > 1990s; > - is also supported in Apple systems (OS X and iOS) except exposing > ALTMON_n constants in nl_langinfo(); > - has been accepted by POSIX as the future change of the > specification but has not yet released it. [3] > > Now the controversial part: in all those solutions nl_langinfo(MON_n) > and strftime("%B") return the genitive case of the month name and > the newly introduced nl_langinfo(ALTMON_n) and strftime("%OB") return > the nominative form. It's controversial because now in Linux > nl_langinfo(MON_n) and strftime("%B") return the nominative case > while the other case is simply not supported. This would require > somehow incompatible change. (Note: the backward compatibility feature > can be introduced.) > > Also it should be emphasized that "genitive and nominative" is > a little unprecise misleading. Correctly it should be named "the > correct form when using the month in the full date context, together > with the day number" vs. "standalone, without the day number". > For example, the languages which have the genitive form but don't > use it in the full date context would use their own proper form > instead. > > Why did BSD, Apple, and POSIX choose that counterintuitive approach? > One should make a bigger survey before answering this question but > I believe that it's because the date formats are more often used to > format the date with the day of the month number than to format the > month name standalone. This change would fix all applications which > display the dates without any change in their source code so I think > it is good even if it would break those few applications which > display the month names standalone. By "break" I mean "they would > start displaying the month names in an incorrect form (similarly > as all other applications display the month names incorrectly now)". > > Note that a similar approach has been chosen by ICU and CLDR with > their own date formats: MMMM represents the month name in a genitive > case while LLLL is used when they need a nominative case explicitly. > > glibc maintainers hesitate to accept this solution. I believe they > need some feedback from the people who actually are going to use this > feature. So far they agreed [4] to accept this solution but only if > it is documented as the new experimental feature and if it is not > yet documented which of "%B" and "%OB" is genitive (full date format) > and which is nominative (standalone). The idea was that it should > be decided by the language communities which is which. Also sometimes > they suggest that BSD implementation is wrong and should be switched. > > So, language communities, what is your opinion about it? > > GNOME is a multiplatform project, it is intended to work correctly > on Linux but also Windows, OS X, BSD and many other platforms. I think > it will be easier for the application developers if Linux follows > other platforms as well as the future POSIX specification. > > You may be also interested in seeing my slides about the issue: [5] > I just wanted to say that I fully agree with your proposed solution. It’s an important fix that every other platform (be it proprietary, like Windows or macOS, or free, like KDE or *BSDs) already have. Best regards, -- Piotr Drąg https://piotrdrag.fedorapeople.org _______________________________________________ gnome-i18n mailing list gnome-i18n@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-i18n
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