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1 @node Message Translation, Searching and Sorting, Locales, Top
2 @c %MENU% How to make the program speak the user's language
3 @chapter Message Translation
4
5 The program's interface with the human should be designed in a way to
6 ease the human the task. One of the possibilities is to use messages in
7 whatever language the user prefers.
8
9 Printing messages in different languages can be implemented in different
10 ways. One could add all the different languages in the source code and
11 add among the variants every time a message has to be printed. This is
12 certainly no good solution since extending the set of languages is
13 difficult (the code must be changed) and the code itself can become
14 really big with dozens of message sets.
15
16 A better solution is to keep the message sets for each language are kept
17 in separate files which are loaded at runtime depending on the language
18 selection of the user.
19
20 The GNU C Library provides two different sets of functions to support
21 message translation. The problem is that neither of the interfaces is
22 officially defined by the POSIX standard. The @code{catgets} family of
23 functions is defined in the X/Open standard but this is derived from
24 industry decisions and therefore not necessarily based on reasonable
25 decisions.
26
27 As mentioned above the message catalog handling provides easy
28 extendibility by using external data files which contain the message
29 translations. I.e., these files contain for each of the messages used
30 in the program a translation for the appropriate language. So the tasks
31 of the message handling functions are
32
33 @itemize @bullet
34 @item
35 locate the external data file with the appropriate translations.
36 @item
37 load the data and make it possible to address the messages
38 @item
39 map a given key to the translated message
40 @end itemize
41
42 The two approaches mainly differ in the implementation of this last
43 step. The design decisions made for this influences the whole rest.
44
45 @menu
46 * Message catalogs a la X/Open:: The @code{catgets} family of functions.
47 * The Uniforum approach:: The @code{gettext} family of functions.
48 @end menu
49
50
51 @node Message catalogs a la X/Open
52 @section X/Open Message Catalog Handling
53
54 The @code{catgets} functions are based on the simple scheme:
55
56 @quotation
57 Associate every message to translate in the source code with a unique
58 identifier. To retrieve a message from a catalog file solely the
59 identifier is used.
60 @end quotation
61
62 This means for the author of the program that s/he will have to make
63 sure the meaning of the identifier in the program code and in the
64 message catalogs are always the same.
65
66 Before a message can be translated the catalog file must be located.
67 The user of the program must be able to guide the responsible function
68 to find whatever catalog the user wants. This is separated from what
69 the programmer had in mind.
70
71 All the types, constants and functions for the @code{catgets} functions
72 are defined/declared in the @file{nl_types.h} header file.
73
74 @menu
75 * The catgets Functions:: The @code{catgets} function family.
76 * The message catalog files:: Format of the message catalog files.
77 * The gencat program:: How to generate message catalogs files which
78 can be used by the functions.
79 * Common Usage:: How to use the @code{catgets} interface.
80 @end menu
81
82
83 @node The catgets Functions
84 @subsection The @code{catgets} function family
85
86 @comment nl_types.h
87 @comment X/Open
88 @deftypefun nl_catd catopen (const char *@var{cat_name}, int @var{flag})
89 The @code{catgets} function tries to locate the message data file names
90 @var{cat_name} and loads it when found. The return value is of an
91 opaque type and can be used in calls to the other functions to refer to
92 this loaded catalog.
93
94 The return value is @code{(nl_catd) -1} in case the function failed and
95 no catalog was loaded. The global variable @var{errno} contains a code
96 for the error causing the failure. But even if the function call
97 succeeded this does not mean that all messages can be translated.
98
99 Locating the catalog file must happen in a way which lets the user of
100 the program influence the decision. It is up to the user to decide
101 about the language to use and sometimes it is useful to use alternate
102 catalog files. All this can be specified by the user by setting some
103 environment variables.
104
105 The first problem is to find out where all the message catalogs are
106 stored. Every program could have its own place to keep all the
107 different files but usually the catalog files are grouped by languages
108 and the catalogs for all programs are kept in the same place.
109
110 @cindex NLSPATH environment variable
111 To tell the @code{catopen} function where the catalog for the program
112 can be found the user can set the environment variable @code{NLSPATH} to
113 a value which describes her/his choice. Since this value must be usable
114 for different languages and locales it cannot be a simple string.
115 Instead it is a format string (similar to @code{printf}'s). An example
116 is
117
118 @smallexample
119 /usr/share/locale/%L/%N:/usr/share/locale/%L/LC_MESSAGES/%N
120 @end smallexample
121
122 First one can see that more than one directory can be specified (with
123 the usual syntax of separating them by colons). The next things to
124 observe are the format string, @code{%L} and @code{%N} in this case.
125 The @code{catopen} function knows about several of them and the
126 replacement for all of them is of course different.
127
128 @table @code
129 @item %N
130 This format element is substituted with the name of the catalog file.
131 This is the value of the @var{cat_name} argument given to
132 @code{catgets}.
133
134 @item %L
135 This format element is substituted with the name of the currently
136 selected locale for translating messages. How this is determined is
137 explained below.
138
139 @item %l
140 (This is the lowercase ell.) This format element is substituted with the
141 language element of the locale name. The string describing the selected
142 locale is expected to have the form
143 @code{@var{lang}[_@var{terr}[.@var{codeset}]]} and this format uses the
144 first part @var{lang}.
145
146 @item %t
147 This format element is substituted by the territory part @var{terr} of
148 the name of the currently selected locale. See the explanation of the
149 format above.
150
151 @item %c
152 This format element is substituted by the codeset part @var{codeset} of
153 the name of the currently selected locale. See the explanation of the
154 format above.
155
156 @item %%
157 Since @code{%} is used in a meta character there must be a way to
158 express the @code{%} character in the result itself. Using @code{%%}
159 does this just like it works for @code{printf}.
160 @end table
161
162
163 Using @code{NLSPATH} allows arbitrary directories to be searched for
164 message catalogs while still allowing different languages to be used.
165 If the @code{NLSPATH} environment variable is not set, the default value
166 is
167
168 @smallexample
169 @var{prefix}/share/locale/%L/%N:@var{prefix}/share/locale/%L/LC_MESSAGES/%N
170 @end smallexample
171
172 @noindent
173 where @var{prefix} is given to @code{configure} while installing the GNU
174 C Library (this value is in many cases @code{/usr} or the empty string).
175
176 The remaining problem is to decide which must be used. The value
177 decides about the substitution of the format elements mentioned above.
178 First of all the user can specify a path in the message catalog name
179 (i.e., the name contains a slash character). In this situation the
180 @code{NLSPATH} environment variable is not used. The catalog must exist
181 as specified in the program, perhaps relative to the current working
182 directory. This situation in not desirable and catalogs names never
183 should be written this way. Beside this, this behavior is not portable
184 to all other platforms providing the @code{catgets} interface.
185
186 @cindex LC_ALL environment variable
187 @cindex LC_MESSAGES environment variable
188 @cindex LANG environment variable
189 Otherwise the values of environment variables from the standard
190 environment are examined (@pxref{Standard Environment}). Which
191 variables are examined is decided by the @var{flag} parameter of
192 @code{catopen}. If the value is @code{NL_CAT_LOCALE} (which is defined
193 in @file{nl_types.h}) then the @code{catopen} function use the name of
194 the locale currently selected for the @code{LC_MESSAGES} category.
195
196 If @var{flag} is zero the @code{LANG} environment variable is examined.
197 This is a left-over from the early days where the concept of the locales
198 had not even reached the level of POSIX locales.
199
200 The environment variable and the locale name should have a value of the
201 form @code{@var{lang}[_@var{terr}[.@var{codeset}]]} as explained above.
202 If no environment variable is set the @code{"C"} locale is used which
203 prevents any translation.
204
205 The return value of the function is in any case a valid string. Either
206 it is a translation from a message catalog or it is the same as the
207 @var{string} parameter. So a piece of code to decide whether a
208 translation actually happened must look like this:
209
210 @smallexample
211 @{
212 char *trans = catgets (desc, set, msg, input_string);
213 if (trans == input_string)
214 @{
215 /* Something went wrong. */
216 @}
217 @}
218 @end smallexample
219
220 @noindent
221 When an error occurred the global variable @var{errno} is set to
222
223 @table @var
224 @item EBADF
225 The catalog does not exist.
226 @item ENOMSG
227 The set/message tuple does not name an existing element in the
228 message catalog.
229 @end table
230
231 While it sometimes can be useful to test for errors programs normally
232 will avoid any test. If the translation is not available it is no big
233 problem if the original, untranslated message is printed. Either the
234 user understands this as well or s/he will look for the reason why the
235 messages are not translated.
236 @end deftypefun
237
238 Please note that the currently selected locale does not depend on a call
239 to the @code{setlocale} function. It is not necessary that the locale
240 data files for this locale exist and calling @code{setlocale} succeeds.
241 The @code{catopen} function directly reads the values of the environment
242 variables.
243
244
245 @deftypefun {char *} catgets (nl_catd @var{catalog_desc}, int @var{set}, int @var{message}, const char *@var{string})
246 The function @code{catgets} has to be used to access the massage catalog
247 previously opened using the @code{catopen} function. The
248 @var{catalog_desc} parameter must be a value previously returned by
249 @code{catopen}.
250
251 The next two parameters, @var{set} and @var{message}, reflect the
252 internal organization of the message catalog files. This will be
253 explained in detail below. For now it is interesting to know that a
254 catalog can consists of several set and the messages in each thread are
255 individually numbered using numbers. Neither the set number nor the
256 message number must be consecutive. They can be arbitrarily chosen.
257 But each message (unless equal to another one) must have its own unique
258 pair of set and message number.
259
260 Since it is not guaranteed that the message catalog for the language
261 selected by the user exists the last parameter @var{string} helps to
262 handle this case gracefully. If no matching string can be found
263 @var{string} is returned. This means for the programmer that
264
265 @itemize @bullet
266 @item
267 the @var{string} parameters should contain reasonable text (this also
268 helps to understand the program seems otherwise there would be no hint
269 on the string which is expected to be returned.
270 @item
271 all @var{string} arguments should be written in the same language.
272 @end itemize
273 @end deftypefun
274
275 It is somewhat uncomfortable to write a program using the @code{catgets}
276 functions if no supporting functionality is available. Since each
277 set/message number tuple must be unique the programmer must keep lists
278 of the messages at the same time the code is written. And the work
279 between several people working on the same project must be coordinated.
280 We will see some how these problems can be relaxed a bit (@pxref{Common
281 Usage}).
282
283 @deftypefun int catclose (nl_catd @var{catalog_desc})
284 The @code{catclose} function can be used to free the resources
285 associated with a message catalog which previously was opened by a call
286 to @code{catopen}. If the resources can be successfully freed the
287 function returns @code{0}. Otherwise it return @code{@minus{}1} and the
288 global variable @var{errno} is set. Errors can occur if the catalog
289 descriptor @var{catalog_desc} is not valid in which case @var{errno} is
290 set to @code{EBADF}.
291 @end deftypefun
292
293
294 @node The message catalog files
295 @subsection Format of the message catalog files
296
297 The only reasonable way the translate all the messages of a function and
298 store the result in a message catalog file which can be read by the
299 @code{catopen} function is to write all the message text to the
300 translator and let her/him translate them all. I.e., we must have a
301 file with entries which associate the set/message tuple with a specific
302 translation. This file format is specified in the X/Open standard and
303 is as follows:
304
305 @itemize @bullet
306 @item
307 Lines containing only whitespace characters or empty lines are ignored.
308
309 @item
310 Lines which contain as the first non-whitespace character a @code{$}
311 followed by a whitespace character are comment and are also ignored.
312
313 @item
314 If a line contains as the first non-whitespace characters the sequence
315 @code{$set} followed by a whitespace character an additional argument
316 is required to follow. This argument can either be:
317
318 @itemize @minus
319 @item
320 a number. In this case the value of this number determines the set
321 to which the following messages are added.
322
323 @item
324 an identifier consisting of alphanumeric characters plus the underscore
325 character. In this case the set get automatically a number assigned.
326 This value is one added to the largest set number which so far appeared.
327
328 How to use the symbolic names is explained in section @ref{Common Usage}.
329
330 It is an error if a symbol name appears more than once. All following
331 messages are placed in a set with this number.
332 @end itemize
333
334 @item
335 If a line contains as the first non-whitespace characters the sequence
336 @code{$delset} followed by a whitespace character an additional argument
337 is required to follow. This argument can either be:
338
339 @itemize @minus
340 @item
341 a number. In this case the value of this number determines the set
342 which will be deleted.
343
344 @item
345 an identifier consisting of alphanumeric characters plus the underscore
346 character. This symbolic identifier must match a name for a set which
347 previously was defined. It is an error if the name is unknown.
348 @end itemize
349
350 In both cases all messages in the specified set will be removed. They
351 will not appear in the output. But if this set is later again selected
352 with a @code{$set} command again messages could be added and these
353 messages will appear in the output.
354
355 @item
356 If a line contains after leading whitespaces the sequence
357 @code{$quote}, the quoting character used for this input file is
358 changed to the first non-whitespace character following the
359 @code{$quote}. If no non-whitespace character is present before the
360 line ends quoting is disable.
361
362 By default no quoting character is used. In this mode strings are
363 terminated with the first unescaped line break. If there is a
364 @code{$quote} sequence present newline need not be escaped. Instead a
365 string is terminated with the first unescaped appearance of the quote
366 character.
367
368 A common usage of this feature would be to set the quote character to
369 @code{"}. Then any appearance of the @code{"} in the strings must
370 be escaped using the backslash (i.e., @code{\"} must be written).
371
372 @item
373 Any other line must start with a number or an alphanumeric identifier
374 (with the underscore character included). The following characters
375 (starting after the first whitespace character) will form the string
376 which gets associated with the currently selected set and the message
377 number represented by the number and identifier respectively.
378
379 If the start of the line is a number the message number is obvious. It
380 is an error if the same message number already appeared for this set.
381
382 If the leading token was an identifier the message number gets
383 automatically assigned. The value is the current maximum messages
384 number for this set plus one. It is an error if the identifier was
385 already used for a message in this set. It is OK to reuse the
386 identifier for a message in another thread. How to use the symbolic
387 identifiers will be explained below (@pxref{Common Usage}). There is
388 one limitation with the identifier: it must not be @code{Set}. The
389 reason will be explained below.
390
391 The text of the messages can contain escape characters. The usual bunch
392 of characters known from the @w{ISO C} language are recognized
393 (@code{\n}, @code{\t}, @code{\v}, @code{\b}, @code{\r}, @code{\f},
394 @code{\\}, and @code{\@var{nnn}}, where @var{nnn} is the octal coding of
395 a character code).
396 @end itemize
397
398 @strong{Important:} The handling of identifiers instead of numbers for
399 the set and messages is a GNU extension. Systems strictly following the
400 X/Open specification do not have this feature. An example for a message
401 catalog file is this:
402
403 @smallexample
404 $ This is a leading comment.
405 $quote "
406
407 $set SetOne
408 1 Message with ID 1.
409 two " Message with ID \"two\", which gets the value 2 assigned"
410
411 $set SetTwo
412 $ Since the last set got the number 1 assigned this set has number 2.
413 4000 "The numbers can be arbitrary, they need not start at one."
414 @end smallexample
415
416 This small example shows various aspects:
417 @itemize @bullet
418 @item
419 Lines 1 and 9 are comments since they start with @code{$} followed by
420 a whitespace.
421 @item
422 The quoting character is set to @code{"}. Otherwise the quotes in the
423 message definition would have to be left away and in this case the
424 message with the identifier @code{two} would loose its leading whitespace.
425 @item
426 Mixing numbered messages with message having symbolic names is no
427 problem and the numbering happens automatically.
428 @end itemize
429
430
431 While this file format is pretty easy it is not the best possible for
432 use in a running program. The @code{catopen} function would have to
433 parser the file and handle syntactic errors gracefully. This is not so
434 easy and the whole process is pretty slow. Therefore the @code{catgets}
435 functions expect the data in another more compact and ready-to-use file
436 format. There is a special program @code{gencat} which is explained in
437 detail in the next section.
438
439 Files in this other format are not human readable. To be easy to use by
440 programs it is a binary file. But the format is byte order independent
441 so translation files can be shared by systems of arbitrary architecture
442 (as long as they use the GNU C Library).
443
444 Details about the binary file format are not important to know since
445 these files are always created by the @code{gencat} program. The
446 sources of the GNU C Library also provide the sources for the
447 @code{gencat} program and so the interested reader can look through
448 these source files to learn about the file format.
449
450
451 @node The gencat program
452 @subsection Generate Message Catalogs files
453
454 @cindex gencat
455 The @code{gencat} program is specified in the X/Open standard and the
456 GNU implementation follows this specification and so processes
457 all correctly formed input files. Additionally some extension are
458 implemented which help to work in a more reasonable way with the
459 @code{catgets} functions.
460
461 The @code{gencat} program can be invoked in two ways:
462
463 @example
464 `gencat [@var{Option}]@dots{} [@var{Output-File} [@var{Input-File}]@dots{}]`
465 @end example
466
467 This is the interface defined in the X/Open standard. If no
468 @var{Input-File} parameter is given input will be read from standard
469 input. Multiple input files will be read as if they are concatenated.
470 If @var{Output-File} is also missing, the output will be written to
471 standard output. To provide the interface one is used to from other
472 programs a second interface is provided.
473
474 @smallexample
475 `gencat [@var{Option}]@dots{} -o @var{Output-File} [@var{Input-File}]@dots{}`
476 @end smallexample
477
478 The option @samp{-o} is used to specify the output file and all file
479 arguments are used as input files.
480
481 Beside this one can use @file{-} or @file{/dev/stdin} for
482 @var{Input-File} to denote the standard input. Corresponding one can
483 use @file{-} and @file{/dev/stdout} for @var{Output-File} to denote
484 standard output. Using @file{-} as a file name is allowed in X/Open
485 while using the device names is a GNU extension.
486
487 The @code{gencat} program works by concatenating all input files and
488 then @strong{merge} the resulting collection of message sets with a
489 possibly existing output file. This is done by removing all messages
490 with set/message number tuples matching any of the generated messages
491 from the output file and then adding all the new messages. To
492 regenerate a catalog file while ignoring the old contents therefore
493 requires to remove the output file if it exists. If the output is
494 written to standard output no merging takes place.
495
496 @noindent
497 The following table shows the options understood by the @code{gencat}
498 program. The X/Open standard does not specify any option for the
499 program so all of these are GNU extensions.
500
501 @table @samp
502 @item -V
503 @itemx --version
504 Print the version information and exit.
505 @item -h
506 @itemx --help
507 Print a usage message listing all available options, then exit successfully.
508 @item --new
509 Do never merge the new messages from the input files with the old content
510 of the output files. The old content of the output file is discarded.
511 @item -H
512 @itemx --header=name
513 This option is used to emit the symbolic names given to sets and
514 messages in the input files for use in the program. Details about how
515 to use this are given in the next section. The @var{name} parameter to
516 this option specifies the name of the output file. It will contain a
517 number of C preprocessor @code{#define}s to associate a name with a
518 number.
519
520 Please note that the generated file only contains the symbols from the
521 input files. If the output is merged with the previous content of the
522 output file the possibly existing symbols from the file(s) which
523 generated the old output files are not in the generated header file.
524 @end table
525
526
527 @node Common Usage
528 @subsection How to use the @code{catgets} interface
529
530 The @code{catgets} functions can be used in two different ways. By
531 following slavishly the X/Open specs and not relying on the extension
532 and by using the GNU extensions. We will take a look at the former
533 method first to understand the benefits of extensions.
534
535 @subsubsection Not using symbolic names
536
537 Since the X/Open format of the message catalog files does not allow
538 symbol names we have to work with numbers all the time. When we start
539 writing a program we have to replace all appearances of translatable
540 strings with something like
541
542 @smallexample
543 catgets (catdesc, set, msg, "string")
544 @end smallexample
545
546 @noindent
547 @var{catgets} is retrieved from a call to @code{catopen} which is
548 normally done once at the program start. The @code{"string"} is the
549 string we want to translate. The problems start with the set and
550 message numbers.
551
552 In a bigger program several programmers usually work at the same time on
553 the program and so coordinating the number allocation is crucial.
554 Though no two different strings must be indexed by the same tuple of
555 numbers it is highly desirable to reuse the numbers for equal strings
556 with equal translations (please note that there might be strings which
557 are equal in one language but have different translations due to
558 difference contexts).
559
560 The allocation process can be relaxed a bit by different set numbers for
561 different parts of the program. So the number of developers who have to
562 coordinate the allocation can be reduced. But still lists must be keep
563 track of the allocation and errors can easily happen. These errors
564 cannot be discovered by the compiler or the @code{catgets} functions.
565 Only the user of the program might see wrong messages printed. In the
566 worst cases the messages are so irritating that they cannot be
567 recognized as wrong. Think about the translations for @code{"true"} and
568 @code{"false"} being exchanged. This could result in a disaster.
569
570
571 @subsubsection Using symbolic names
572
573 The problems mentioned in the last section derive from the fact that:
574
575 @enumerate
576 @item
577 the numbers are allocated once and due to the possibly frequent use of
578 them it is difficult to change a number later.
579 @item
580 the numbers do not allow to guess anything about the string and
581 therefore collisions can easily happen.
582 @end enumerate
583
584 By constantly using symbolic names and by providing a method which maps
585 the string content to a symbolic name (however this will happen) one can
586 prevent both problems above. The cost of this is that the programmer
587 has to write a complete message catalog file while s/he is writing the
588 program itself.
589
590 This is necessary since the symbolic names must be mapped to numbers
591 before the program sources can be compiled. In the last section it was
592 described how to generate a header containing the mapping of the names.
593 E.g., for the example message file given in the last section we could
594 call the @code{gencat} program as follow (assume @file{ex.msg} contains
595 the sources).
596
597 @smallexample
598 gencat -H ex.h -o ex.cat ex.msg
599 @end smallexample
600
601 @noindent
602 This generates a header file with the following content:
603
604 @smallexample
605 #define SetTwoSet 0x2 /* ex.msg:8 */
606
607 #define SetOneSet 0x1 /* ex.msg:4 */
608 #define SetOnetwo 0x2 /* ex.msg:6 */
609 @end smallexample
610
611 As can be seen the various symbols given in the source file are mangled
612 to generate unique identifiers and these identifiers get numbers
613 assigned. Reading the source file and knowing about the rules will
614 allow to predict the content of the header file (it is deterministic)
615 but this is not necessary. The @code{gencat} program can take care for
616 everything. All the programmer has to do is to put the generated header
617 file in the dependency list of the source files of her/his project and
618 to add a rules to regenerate the header of any of the input files
619 change.
620
621 One word about the symbol mangling. Every symbol consists of two parts:
622 the name of the message set plus the name of the message or the special
623 string @code{Set}. So @code{SetOnetwo} means this macro can be used to
624 access the translation with identifier @code{two} in the message set
625 @code{SetOne}.
626
627 The other names denote the names of the message sets. The special
628 string @code{Set} is used in the place of the message identifier.
629
630 If in the code the second string of the set @code{SetOne} is used the C
631 code should look like this:
632
633 @smallexample
634 catgets (catdesc, SetOneSet, SetOnetwo,
635 " Message with ID \"two\", which gets the value 2 assigned")
636 @end smallexample
637
638 Writing the function this way will allow to change the message number
639 and even the set number without requiring any change in the C source
640 code. (The text of the string is normally not the same; this is only
641 for this example.)
642
643
644 @subsubsection How does to this allow to develop
645
646 To illustrate the usual way to work with the symbolic version numbers
647 here is a little example. Assume we want to write the very complex and
648 famous greeting program. We start by writing the code as usual:
649
650 @smallexample
651 #include <stdio.h>
652 int
653 main (void)
654 @{
655 printf ("Hello, world!\n");
656 return 0;
657 @}
658 @end smallexample
659
660 Now we want to internationalize the message and therefore replace the
661 message with whatever the user wants.
662
663 @smallexample
664 #include <nl_types.h>
665 #include <stdio.h>
666 #include "msgnrs.h"
667 int
668 main (void)
669 @{
670 nl_catd catdesc = catopen ("hello.cat", NL_CAT_LOCALE);
671 printf (catgets (catdesc, SetMainSet, SetMainHello,
672 "Hello, world!\n"));
673 catclose (catdesc);
674 return 0;
675 @}
676 @end smallexample
677
678 We see how the catalog object is opened and the returned descriptor used
679 in the other function calls. It is not really necessary to check for
680 failure of any of the functions since even in these situations the
681 functions will behave reasonable. They simply will be return a
682 translation.
683
684 What remains unspecified here are the constants @code{SetMainSet} and
685 @code{SetMainHello}. These are the symbolic names describing the
686 message. To get the actual definitions which match the information in
687 the catalog file we have to create the message catalog source file and
688 process it using the @code{gencat} program.
689
690 @smallexample
691 $ Messages for the famous greeting program.
692 $quote "
693
694 $set Main
695 Hello "Hallo, Welt!\n"
696 @end smallexample
697
698 Now we can start building the program (assume the message catalog source
699 file is named @file{hello.msg} and the program source file @file{hello.c}):
700
701 @smallexample
702 @cartouche
703 % gencat -H msgnrs.h -o hello.cat hello.msg
704 % cat msgnrs.h
705 #define MainSet 0x1 /* hello.msg:4 */
706 #define MainHello 0x1 /* hello.msg:5 */
707 % gcc -o hello hello.c -I.
708 % cp hello.cat /usr/share/locale/de/LC_MESSAGES
709 % echo $LC_ALL
710 de
711 % ./hello
712 Hallo, Welt!
713 %
714 @end cartouche
715 @end smallexample
716
717 The call of the @code{gencat} program creates the missing header file
718 @file{msgnrs.h} as well as the message catalog binary. The former is
719 used in the compilation of @file{hello.c} while the later is placed in a
720 directory in which the @code{catopen} function will try to locate it.
721 Please check the @code{LC_ALL} environment variable and the default path
722 for @code{catopen} presented in the description above.
723
724
725 @node The Uniforum approach
726 @section The Uniforum approach to Message Translation
727
728 Sun Microsystems tried to standardize a different approach to message
729 translation in the Uniforum group. There never was a real standard
730 defined but still the interface was used in Sun's operation systems.
731 Since this approach fits better in the development process of free
732 software it is also used throughout the GNU package and the GNU
733 @file{gettext} package provides support for this outside the GNU C
734 Library.
735
736 The code of the @file{libintl} from GNU @file{gettext} is the same as
737 the code in the GNU C Library. So the documentation in the GNU
738 @file{gettext} manual is also valid for the functionality here. The
739 following text will describe the library functions in detail. But the
740 numerous helper programs are not described in this manual. Instead
741 people should read the GNU @file{gettext} manual
742 (@pxref{Top,,GNU gettext utilities,gettext,Native Language Support Library and Tools}).
743 We will only give a short overview.
744
745 Though the @code{catgets} functions are available by default on more
746 systems the @code{gettext} interface is at least as portable as the
747 former. The GNU @file{gettext} package can be used wherever the
748 functions are not available.
749
750
751 @menu
752 * Message catalogs with gettext:: The @code{gettext} family of functions.
753 * Helper programs for gettext:: Programs to handle message catalogs
754 for @code{gettext}.
755 @end menu
756
757
758 @node Message catalogs with gettext
759 @subsection The @code{gettext} family of functions
760
761 The paradigms underlying the @code{gettext} approach to message
762 translations is different from that of the @code{catgets} functions the
763 basic functionally is equivalent. There are functions of the following
764 categories:
765
766 @menu
767 * Translation with gettext:: What has to be done to translate a message.
768 * Locating gettext catalog:: How to determine which catalog to be used.
769 * Advanced gettext functions:: Additional functions for more complicated
770 situations.
771 * GUI program problems:: How to use @code{gettext} in GUI programs.
772 * Using gettextized software:: The possibilities of the user to influence
773 the way @code{gettext} works.
774 @end menu
775
776 @node Translation with gettext
777 @subsubsection What has to be done to translate a message?
778
779 The @code{gettext} functions have a very simple interface. The most
780 basic function just takes the string which shall be translated as the
781 argument and it returns the translation. This is fundamentally
782 different from the @code{catgets} approach where an extra key is
783 necessary and the original string is only used for the error case.
784
785 If the string which has to be translated is the only argument this of
786 course means the string itself is the key. I.e., the translation will
787 be selected based on the original string. The message catalogs must
788 therefore contain the original strings plus one translation for any such
789 string. The task of the @code{gettext} function is it to compare the
790 argument string with the available strings in the catalog and return the
791 appropriate translation. Of course this process is optimized so that
792 this process is not more expensive than an access using an atomic key
793 like in @code{catgets}.
794
795 The @code{gettext} approach has some advantages but also some
796 disadvantages. Please see the GNU @file{gettext} manual for a detailed
797 discussion of the pros and cons.
798
799 All the definitions and declarations for @code{gettext} can be found in
800 the @file{libintl.h} header file. On systems where these functions are
801 not part of the C library they can be found in a separate library named
802 @file{libintl.a} (or accordingly different for shared libraries).
803
804 @comment libintl.h
805 @comment GNU
806 @deftypefun {char *} gettext (const char *@var{msgid})
807 The @code{gettext} function searches the currently selected message
808 catalogs for a string which is equal to @var{msgid}. If there is such a
809 string available it is returned. Otherwise the argument string
810 @var{msgid} is returned.
811
812 Please note that all though the return value is @code{char *} the
813 returned string must not be changed. This broken type results from the
814 history of the function and does not reflect the way the function should
815 be used.
816
817 Please note that above we wrote ``message catalogs'' (plural). This is
818 a specialty of the GNU implementation of these functions and we will
819 say more about this when we talk about the ways message catalogs are
820 selected (@pxref{Locating gettext catalog}).
821
822 The @code{gettext} function does not modify the value of the global
823 @var{errno} variable. This is necessary to make it possible to write
824 something like
825
826 @smallexample
827 printf (gettext ("Operation failed: %m\n"));
828 @end smallexample
829
830 Here the @var{errno} value is used in the @code{printf} function while
831 processing the @code{%m} format element and if the @code{gettext}
832 function would change this value (it is called before @code{printf} is
833 called) we would get a wrong message.
834
835 So there is no easy way to detect a missing message catalog beside
836 comparing the argument string with the result. But it is normally the
837 task of the user to react on missing catalogs. The program cannot guess
838 when a message catalog is really necessary since for a user who s peaks
839 the language the program was developed in does not need any translation.
840 @end deftypefun
841
842 The remaining two functions to access the message catalog add some
843 functionality to select a message catalog which is not the default one.
844 This is important if parts of the program are developed independently.
845 Every part can have its own message catalog and all of them can be used
846 at the same time. The C library itself is an example: internally it
847 uses the @code{gettext} functions but since it must not depend on a
848 currently selected default message catalog it must specify all ambiguous
849 information.
850
851 @comment libintl.h
852 @comment GNU
853 @deftypefun {char *} dgettext (const char *@var{domainname}, const char *@var{msgid})
854 The @code{dgettext} functions acts just like the @code{gettext}
855 function. It only takes an additional first argument @var{domainname}
856 which guides the selection of the message catalogs which are searched
857 for the translation. If the @var{domainname} parameter is the null
858 pointer the @code{dgettext} function is exactly equivalent to
859 @code{gettext} since the default value for the domain name is used.
860
861 As for @code{gettext} the return value type is @code{char *} which is an
862 anachronism. The returned string must never be modified.
863 @end deftypefun
864
865 @comment libintl.h
866 @comment GNU
867 @deftypefun {char *} dcgettext (const char *@var{domainname}, const char *@var{msgid}, int @var{category})
868 The @code{dcgettext} adds another argument to those which
869 @code{dgettext} takes. This argument @var{category} specifies the last
870 piece of information needed to localize the message catalog. I.e., the
871 domain name and the locale category exactly specify which message
872 catalog has to be used (relative to a given directory, see below).
873
874 The @code{dgettext} function can be expressed in terms of
875 @code{dcgettext} by using
876
877 @smallexample
878 dcgettext (domain, string, LC_MESSAGES)
879 @end smallexample
880
881 @noindent
882 instead of
883
884 @smallexample
885 dgettext (domain, string)
886 @end smallexample
887
888 This also shows which values are expected for the third parameter. One
889 has to use the available selectors for the categories available in
890 @file{locale.h}. Normally the available values are @code{LC_CTYPE},
891 @code{LC_COLLATE}, @code{LC_MESSAGES}, @code{LC_MONETARY},
892 @code{LC_NUMERIC}, and @code{LC_TIME}. Please note that @code{LC_ALL}
893 must not be used and even though the names might suggest this, there is
894 no relation to the environments variables of this name.
895
896 The @code{dcgettext} function is only implemented for compatibility with
897 other systems which have @code{gettext} functions. There is not really
898 any situation where it is necessary (or useful) to use a different value
899 but @code{LC_MESSAGES} in for the @var{category} parameter. We are
900 dealing with messages here and any other choice can only be irritating.
901
902 As for @code{gettext} the return value type is @code{char *} which is an
903 anachronism. The returned string must never be modified.
904 @end deftypefun
905
906 When using the three functions above in a program it is a frequent case
907 that the @var{msgid} argument is a constant string. So it is worth to
908 optimize this case. Thinking shortly about this one will realize that
909 as long as no new message catalog is loaded the translation of a message
910 will not change. I.e., the algorithm to determine the translation is
911 deterministic.
912
913 Exactly this is what the optimizations implemented in the
914 @file{libintl.h} header will use. Whenever a program is compiler with
915 the GNU C compiler, optimization is selected and the @var{msgid}
916 argument to @code{gettext}, @code{dgettext} or @code{dcgettext} is a
917 constant string the actual function call will only be done the first
918 time the message is used and then always only if any new message catalog
919 was loaded and so the result of the translation lookup might be
920 different. See the @file{libintl.h} header file for details. For the
921 user it is only important to know that the result is always the same,
922 independent of the compiler or compiler options in use.
923
924
925 @node Locating gettext catalog
926 @subsubsection How to determine which catalog to be used
927
928 The functions to retrieve the translations for a given message have a
929 remarkable simple interface. But to provide the user of the program
930 still the opportunity to select exactly the translation s/he wants and
931 also to provide the programmer the possibility to influence the way to
932 locate the search for catalogs files there is a quite complicated
933 underlying mechanism which controls all this. The code is complicated
934 the use is easy.
935
936 Basically we have two different tasks to perform which can also be
937 performed by the @code{catgets} functions:
938
939 @enumerate
940 @item
941 Locate the set of message catalogs. There are a number of files for
942 different languages and which all belong to the package. Usually they
943 are all stored in the filesystem below a certain directory.
944
945 There can be arbitrary many packages installed and they can follow
946 different guidelines for the placement of their files.
947
948 @item
949 Relative to the location specified by the package the actual translation
950 files must be searched, based on the wishes of the user. I.e., for each
951 language the user selects the program should be able to locate the
952 appropriate file.
953 @end enumerate
954
955 This is the functionality required by the specifications for
956 @code{gettext} and this is also what the @code{catgets} functions are
957 able to do. But there are some problems unresolved:
958
959 @itemize @bullet
960 @item
961 The language to be used can be specified in several different ways.
962 There is no generally accepted standard for this and the user always
963 expects the program understand what s/he means. E.g., to select the
964 German translation one could write @code{de}, @code{german}, or
965 @code{deutsch} and the program should always react the same.
966
967 @item
968 Sometimes the specification of the user is too detailed. If s/he, e.g.,
969 specifies @code{de_DE.ISO-8859-1} which means German, spoken in Germany,
970 coded using the @w{ISO 8859-1} character set there is the possibility
971 that a message catalog matching this exactly is not available. But
972 there could be a catalog matching @code{de} and if the character set
973 used on the machine is always @w{ISO 8859-1} there is no reason why this
974 later message catalog should not be used. (We call this @dfn{message
975 inheritance}.)
976
977 @item
978 If a catalog for a wanted language is not available it is not always the
979 second best choice to fall back on the language of the developer and
980 simply not translate any message. Instead a user might be better able
981 to read the messages in another language and so the user of the program
982 should be able to define an precedence order of languages.
983 @end itemize
984
985 We can divide the configuration actions in two parts: the one is
986 performed by the programmer, the other by the user. We will start with
987 the functions the programmer can use since the user configuration will
988 be based on this.
989
990 As the functions described in the last sections already mention separate
991 sets of messages can be selected by a @dfn{domain name}. This is a
992 simple string which should be unique for each program part with uses a
993 separate domain. It is possible to use in one program arbitrary many
994 domains at the same time. E.g., the GNU C Library itself uses a domain
995 named @code{libc} while the program using the C Library could use a
996 domain named @code{foo}. The important point is that at any time
997 exactly one domain is active. This is controlled with the following
998 function.
999
1000 @comment libintl.h
1001 @comment GNU
1002 @deftypefun {char *} textdomain (const char *@var{domainname})
1003 The @code{textdomain} function sets the default domain, which is used in
1004 all future @code{gettext} calls, to @var{domainname}. Please note that
1005 @code{dgettext} and @code{dcgettext} calls are not influenced if the
1006 @var{domainname} parameter of these functions is not the null pointer.
1007
1008 Before the first call to @code{textdomain} the default domain is
1009 @code{messages}. This is the name specified in the specification of
1010 the @code{gettext} API. This name is as good as any other name. No
1011 program should ever really use a domain with this name since this can
1012 only lead to problems.
1013
1014 The function returns the value which is from now on taken as the default
1015 domain. If the system went out of memory the returned value is
1016 @code{NULL} and the global variable @var{errno} is set to @code{ENOMEM}.
1017 Despite the return value type being @code{char *} the return string must
1018 not be changed. It is allocated internally by the @code{textdomain}
1019 function.
1020
1021 If the @var{domainname} parameter is the null pointer no new default
1022 domain is set. Instead the currently selected default domain is
1023 returned.
1024
1025 If the @var{domainname} parameter is the empty string the default domain
1026 is reset to its initial value, the domain with the name @code{messages}.
1027 This possibility is questionable to use since the domain @code{messages}
1028 really never should be used.
1029 @end deftypefun
1030
1031 @comment libintl.h
1032 @comment GNU
1033 @deftypefun {char *} bindtextdomain (const char *@var{domainname}, const char *@var{dirname})
1034 The @code{bindtextdomain} function can be used to specify the directory
1035 which contains the message catalogs for domain @var{domainname} for the
1036 different languages. To be correct, this is the directory where the
1037 hierarchy of directories is expected. Details are explained below.
1038
1039 For the programmer it is important to note that the translations which
1040 come with the program have be placed in a directory hierarchy starting
1041 at, say, @file{/foo/bar}. Then the program should make a
1042 @code{bindtextdomain} call to bind the domain for the current program to
1043 this directory. So it is made sure the catalogs are found. A correctly
1044 running program does not depend on the user setting an environment
1045 variable.
1046
1047 The @code{bindtextdomain} function can be used several times and if the
1048 @var{domainname} argument is different the previously bounded domains
1049 will not be overwritten.
1050
1051 If the program which wish to use @code{bindtextdomain} at some point of
1052 time use the @code{chdir} function to change the current working
1053 directory it is important that the @var{dirname} strings ought to be an
1054 absolute pathname. Otherwise the addressed directory might vary with
1055 the time.
1056
1057 If the @var{dirname} parameter is the null pointer @code{bindtextdomain}
1058 returns the currently selected directory for the domain with the name
1059 @var{domainname}.
1060
1061 The @code{bindtextdomain} function returns a pointer to a string
1062 containing the name of the selected directory name. The string is
1063 allocated internally in the function and must not be changed by the
1064 user. If the system went out of core during the execution of
1065 @code{bindtextdomain} the return value is @code{NULL} and the global
1066 variable @var{errno} is set accordingly.
1067 @end deftypefun
1068
1069
1070 @node Advanced gettext functions
1071 @subsubsection Additional functions for more complicated situations
1072
1073 The functions of the @code{gettext} family described so far (and all the
1074 @code{catgets} functions as well) have one problem in the real world
1075 which have been neglected completely in all existing approaches. What
1076 is meant here is the handling of plural forms.
1077
1078 Looking through Unix source code before the time anybody thought about
1079 internationalization (and, sadly, even afterwards) one can often find
1080 code similar to the following:
1081
1082 @smallexample
1083 printf ("%d file%s deleted", n, n == 1 ? "" : "s");
1084 @end smallexample
1085
1086 @noindent
1087 After the first complains from people internationalizing the code people
1088 either completely avoided formulations like this or used strings like
1089 @code{"file(s)"}. Both look unnatural and should be avoided. First
1090 tries to solve the problem correctly looked like this:
1091
1092 @smallexample
1093 if (n == 1)
1094 printf ("%d file deleted", n);
1095 else
1096 printf ("%d files deleted", n);
1097 @end smallexample
1098
1099 But this does not solve the problem. It helps languages where the
1100 plural form of a noun is not simply constructed by adding an `s' but
1101 that is all. Once again people fell into the trap of believing the
1102 rules their language is using are universal. But the handling of plural
1103 forms differs widely between the language families. There are two
1104 things we can differ between (and even inside language families);
1105
1106 @itemize @bullet
1107 @item
1108 The form how plural forms are build differs. This is a problem with
1109 language which have many irregularities. German, for instance, is a
1110 drastic case. Though English and German are part of the same language
1111 family (Germanic), the almost regular forming of plural noun forms
1112 (appending an `s') is hardly found in German.
1113
1114 @item
1115 The number of plural forms differ. This is somewhat surprising for
1116 those who only have experiences with Romanic and Germanic languages
1117 since here the number is the same (there are two).
1118
1119 But other language families have only one form or many forms. More
1120 information on this in an extra section.
1121 @end itemize
1122
1123 The consequence of this is that application writers should not try to
1124 solve the problem in their code. This would be localization since it is
1125 only usable for certain, hardcoded language environments. Instead the
1126 extended @code{gettext} interface should be used.
1127
1128 These extra functions are taking instead of the one key string two
1129 strings and an numerical argument. The idea behind this is that using
1130 the numerical argument and the first string as a key, the implementation
1131 can select using rules specified by the translator the right plural
1132 form. The two string arguments then will be used to provide a return
1133 value in case no message catalog is found (similar to the normal
1134 @code{gettext} behavior). In this case the rules for Germanic language
1135 is used and it is assumed that the first string argument is the singular
1136 form, the second the plural form.
1137
1138 This has the consequence that programs without language catalogs can
1139 display the correct strings only if the program itself is written using
1140 a Germanic language. This is a limitation but since the GNU C library
1141 (as well as the GNU @code{gettext} package) are written as part of the
1142 GNU package and the coding standards for the GNU project require program
1143 being written in English, this solution nevertheless fulfills its
1144 purpose.
1145
1146 @comment libintl.h
1147 @comment GNU
1148 @deftypefun {char *} ngettext (const char *@var{msgid1}, const char *@var{msgid2}, unsigned long int @var{n})
1149 The @code{ngettext} function is similar to the @code{gettext} function
1150 as it finds the message catalogs in the same way. But it takes two
1151 extra arguments. The @var{msgid1} parameter must contain the singular
1152 form of the string to be converted. It is also used as the key for the
1153 search in the catalog. The @var{msgid2} parameter is the plural form.
1154 The parameter @var{n} is used to determine the plural form. If no
1155 message catalog is found @var{msgid1} is returned if @code{n == 1},
1156 otherwise @code{msgid2}.
1157
1158 An example for the us of this function is:
1159
1160 @smallexample
1161 printf (ngettext ("%d file removed", "%d files removed", n), n);
1162 @end smallexample
1163
1164 Please note that the numeric value @var{n} has to be passed to the
1165 @code{printf} function as well. It is not sufficient to pass it only to
1166 @code{ngettext}.
1167 @end deftypefun
1168
1169 @comment libintl.h
1170 @comment GNU
1171 @deftypefun {char *} dngettext (const char *@var{domain}, const char *@var{msgid1}, const char *@var{msgid2}, unsigned long int @var{n})
1172 The @code{dngettext} is similar to the @code{dgettext} function in the
1173 way the message catalog is selected. The difference is that it takes
1174 two extra parameter to provide the correct plural form. These two
1175 parameters are handled in the same way @code{ngettext} handles them.
1176 @end deftypefun
1177
1178 @comment libintl.h
1179 @comment GNU
1180 @deftypefun {char *} dcngettext (const char *@var{domain}, const char *@var{msgid1}, const char *@var{msgid2}, unsigned long int @var{n}, int @var{category})
1181 The @code{dcngettext} is similar to the @code{dcgettext} function in the
1182 way the message catalog is selected. The difference is that it takes
1183 two extra parameter to provide the correct plural form. These two
1184 parameters are handled in the same way @code{ngettext} handles them.
1185 @end deftypefun
1186
1187 @subsubheading The problem of plural forms
1188
1189 A description of the problem can be found at the beginning of the last
1190 section. Now there is the question how to solve it. Without the input
1191 of linguists (which was not available) it was not possible to determine
1192 whether there are only a few different forms in which plural forms are
1193 formed or whether the number can increase with every new supported
1194 language.
1195
1196 Therefore the solution implemented is to allow the translator to specify
1197 the rules of how to select the plural form. Since the formula varies
1198 with every language this is the only viable solution except for
1199 hardcoding the information in the code (which still would require the
1200 possibility of extensions to not prevent the use of new languages). The
1201 details are explained in the GNU @code{gettext} manual. Here only a a
1202 bit of information is provided.
1203
1204 The information about the plural form selection has to be stored in the
1205 header entry (the one with the empty (@code{msgid} string). There should
1206 be something like:
1207
1208 @smallexample
1209 nplurals=2; plural=n == 1 ? 0 : 1
1210 @end smallexample
1211
1212 The @code{nplurals} value must be a decimal number which specifies how
1213 many different plural forms exist for this language. The string
1214 following @code{plural} is an expression which is using the C language
1215 syntax. Exceptions are that no negative number are allowed, numbers
1216 must be decimal, and the only variable allowed is @code{n}. This
1217 expression will be evaluated whenever one of the functions
1218 @code{ngettext}, @code{dngettext}, or @code{dcngettext} is called. The
1219 numeric value passed to these functions is then substituted for all uses
1220 of the variable @code{n} in the expression. The resulting value then
1221 must be greater or equal to zero and smaller than the value given as the
1222 value of @code{nplurals}.
1223
1224 @noindent
1225 The following rules are known at this point. The language with families
1226 are listed. But this does not necessarily mean the information can be
1227 generalized for the whole family (as can be easily seen in the table
1228 below).@footnote{Additions are welcome. Send appropriate information to
1229 @email{bug-glibc-manual@@gnu.org}.}
1230
1231 @table @asis
1232 @item Only one form:
1233 Some languages only require one single form. There is no distinction
1234 between the singular and plural form. And appropriate header entry
1235 would look like this:
1236
1237 @smallexample
1238 nplurals=1; plural=0
1239 @end smallexample
1240
1241 @noindent
1242 Languages with this property include:
1243
1244 @table @asis
1245 @item Finno-Ugric family
1246 Hungarian
1247 @item Asian family
1248 Japanese
1249 @item Turkic/Altaic family
1250 Turkish
1251 @end table
1252
1253 @item Two forms, singular used for one only
1254 This is the form used in most existing programs sine it is what English
1255 is using. A header entry would look like this:
1256
1257 @smallexample
1258 nplurals=2; plural=n != 1
1259 @end smallexample
1260
1261 (Note: this uses the feature of C expressions that boolean expressions
1262 have to value zero or one.)
1263
1264 @noindent
1265 Languages with this property include:
1266
1267 @table @asis
1268 @item Germanic family
1269 Danish, Dutch, English, German, Norwegian, Swedish
1270 @item Finno-Ugric family
1271 Finnish
1272 @item Latin/Greek family
1273 Greek
1274 @item Semitic family
1275 Hebrew
1276 @item Romance family
1277 Italian, Spanish
1278 @item Artificial
1279 Esperanto
1280 @end table
1281
1282 @item Two forms, singular used for zero and one
1283 Exceptional case in the language family. The header entry would be:
1284
1285 @smallexample
1286 nplurals=2; plural=n>1
1287 @end smallexample
1288
1289 @noindent
1290 Languages with this property include:
1291
1292 @table @asis
1293 @item Romanic family
1294 French
1295 @end table
1296
1297 @item Three forms, special cases for one and two
1298 The header entry would be:
1299
1300 @smallexample
1301 nplurals=3; plural=n==1 ? 0 : n==2 ? 1 : 2
1302 @end smallexample
1303
1304 @noindent
1305 Languages with this property include:
1306
1307 @table @asis
1308 @item Celtic
1309 Gaeilge
1310 @end table
1311
1312 @item Three forms, special case for one and all numbers ending in 2, 3, or 4
1313 The header entry would look like this:
1314
1315 @smallexample
1316 nplurals=3; plural=n==1 ? 0 : n%10>=2 && n%10<=4 ? 1 : 2
1317 @end smallexample
1318
1319 @noindent
1320 Languages with this property include:
1321
1322 @table @asis
1323 @item Slavic family
1324 Russian
1325 @end table
1326
1327 @item Three forms, special case for one and some numbers ending in 2, 3, or 4
1328 The header entry would look like this:
1329
1330 @smallexample
1331 nplurals=3; plural=n==1 ? 0 : \
1332 n%10>=2 && n%10<=4 && (n%100<10 || n%100>=20) ? 1 : 2
1333 @end smallexample
1334
1335 (Continuation in the next line is possible.)
1336
1337 @noindent
1338 Languages with this property include:
1339
1340 @table @asis
1341 @item Slavic family
1342 Polish
1343 @end table
1344
1345 @item Four forms, special case for one and all numbers ending in 2, 3, or 4
1346 The header entry would look like this:
1347
1348 @smallexample
1349 nplurals=4; plural=n==1 ? 0 : n%10==2 ? 1 : n%10==3 || n%10==4 ? 2 : 3
1350 @end smallexample
1351
1352 @noindent
1353 Languages with this property include:
1354
1355 @table @asis
1356 @item Slavic family
1357 Slovenian
1358 @end table
1359 @end table
1360
1361
1362 @node GUI program problems
1363 @subsubsection How to use @code{gettext} in GUI programs
1364
1365 One place where the @code{gettext} functions if used normally have big
1366 programs is within programs with graphical user interfaces (GUIs). The
1367 problem is that many of the strings which have to be translated are very
1368 short. They have to appear in pull-down menus which restricts the
1369 length. But strings which are not containing entire sentences or at
1370 least large fragments of a sentence may appear in more than one
1371 situation in the program but might have different translations. This is
1372 especially true for the one-word strings which are frequently used in
1373 GUI programs.
1374
1375 As a consequence many people say that the @code{gettext} approach is
1376 wrong and instead @code{catgets} should be used which indeed does not
1377 have this problem. But there is a very simple and powerful method to
1378 handle these kind of problems with the @code{gettext} functions.
1379
1380 @noindent
1381 As as example consider the following fictional situation. A GUI program
1382 has a menu bar with the following entries:
1383
1384 @smallexample
1385 +------------+------------+--------------------------------------+
1386 | File | Printer | |
1387 +------------+------------+--------------------------------------+
1388 | Open | | Select |
1389 | New | | Open |
1390 +----------+ | Connect |
1391 +----------+
1392 @end smallexample
1393
1394 To have the strings @code{File}, @code{Printer}, @code{Open},
1395 @code{New}, @code{Select}, and @code{Connect} translated there has to be
1396 at some point in the code a call to a function of the @code{gettext}
1397 family. But in two places the string passed into the function would be
1398 @code{Open}. The translations might not be the same and therefore we
1399 are in the dilemma described above.
1400
1401 One solution to this problem is to artificially enlengthen the strings
1402 to make them unambiguous. But what would the program do if no
1403 translation is available? The enlengthened string is not what should be
1404 printed. So we should use a little bit modified version of the functions.
1405
1406 To enlengthen the strings a uniform method should be used. E.g., in the
1407 example above the strings could be chosen as
1408
1409 @smallexample
1410 Menu|File
1411 Menu|Printer
1412 Menu|File|Open
1413 Menu|File|New
1414 Menu|Printer|Select
1415 Menu|Printer|Open
1416 Menu|Printer|Connect
1417 @end smallexample
1418
1419 Now all the strings are different and if now instead of @code{gettext}
1420 the following little wrapper function is used, everything works just
1421 fine:
1422
1423 @cindex sgettext
1424 @smallexample
1425 char *
1426 sgettext (const char *msgid)
1427 @{
1428 char *msgval = gettext (msgid);
1429 if (msgval == msgid)
1430 msgval = strrchr (msgid, '|') + 1;
1431 return msgval;
1432 @}
1433 @end smallexample
1434
1435 What this little function does is to recognize the case when no
1436 translation is available. This can be done very efficiently by a
1437 pointer comparison since the return value is the input value. If there
1438 is no translation we know that the input string is in the format we used
1439 for the Menu entries and therefore contains a @code{|} character. We
1440 simply search for the last occurrence of this character and return a
1441 pointer to the character following it. That's it!
1442
1443 If one now consistently uses the enlengthened string form and replaces
1444 the @code{gettext} calls with calls to @code{sgettext} (this is normally
1445 limited to very few places in the GUI implementation) then it is
1446 possible to produce a program which can be internationalized.
1447
1448 With advanced compilers (such as GNU C) one can write the
1449 @code{sgettext} functions as an inline function or as a macro like this:
1450
1451 @cindex sgettext
1452 @smallexample
1453 #define sgettext(msgid) \
1454 (@{ const char *__msgid = (msgid); \
1455 char *__msgstr = gettext (__msgid); \
1456 if (__msgval == __msgid) \
1457 __msgval = strrchr (__msgid, '|') + 1; \
1458 __msgval; @})
1459 @end smallexample
1460
1461 The other @code{gettext} functions (@code{dgettext}, @code{dcgettext}
1462 and the @code{ngettext} equivalents) can and should have corresponding
1463 functions as well which look almost identical, except for the parameters
1464 and the call to the underlying function.
1465
1466 Now there is of course the question why such functions do not exist in
1467 the GNU C library? There are two parts of the answer to this question.
1468
1469 @itemize @bullet
1470 @item
1471 They are easy to write and therefore can be provided by the project they
1472 are used in. This is not an answer by itself and must be seen together
1473 with the second part which is:
1474
1475 @item
1476 There is no way the C library can contain a version which can work
1477 everywhere. The problem is the selection of the character to separate
1478 the prefix from the actual string in the enlenghtened string. The
1479 examples above used @code{|} which is a quite good choice because it
1480 resembles a notation frequently used in this context and it also is a
1481 character not often used in message strings.
1482
1483 But what if the character is used in message strings. Or if the chose
1484 character is not available in the character set on the machine one
1485 compiles (e.g., @code{|} is not required to exist for @w{ISO C}; this is
1486 why the @file{iso646.h} file exists in @w{ISO C} programming environments).
1487 @end itemize
1488
1489 There is only one more comment to make left. The wrapper function above
1490 require that the translations strings are not enlengthened themselves.
1491 This is only logical. There is no need to disambiguate the strings
1492 (since they are never used as keys for a search) and one also saves
1493 quite some memory and disk space by doing this.
1494
1495
1496 @node Using gettextized software
1497 @subsubsection User influence on @code{gettext}
1498
1499 The last sections described what the programmer can do to
1500 internationalize the messages of the program. But it is finally up to
1501 the user to select the message s/he wants to see. S/He must understand
1502 them.
1503
1504 The POSIX locale model uses the environment variables @code{LC_COLLATE},
1505 @code{LC_CTYPE}, @code{LC_MESSAGES}, @code{LC_MONETARY}, @code{NUMERIC},
1506 and @code{LC_TIME} to select the locale which is to be used. This way
1507 the user can influence lots of functions. As we mentioned above the
1508 @code{gettext} functions also take advantage of this.
1509
1510 To understand how this happens it is necessary to take a look at the
1511 various components of the filename which gets computed to locate a
1512 message catalog. It is composed as follows:
1513
1514 @smallexample
1515 @var{dir_name}/@var{locale}/LC_@var{category}/@var{domain_name}.mo
1516 @end smallexample
1517
1518 The default value for @var{dir_name} is system specific. It is computed
1519 from the value given as the prefix while configuring the C library.
1520 This value normally is @file{/usr} or @file{/}. For the former the
1521 complete @var{dir_name} is:
1522
1523 @smallexample
1524 /usr/share/locale
1525 @end smallexample
1526
1527 We can use @file{/usr/share} since the @file{.mo} files containing the
1528 message catalogs are system independent, so all systems can use the same
1529 files. If the program executed the @code{bindtextdomain} function for
1530 the message domain that is currently handled, the @code{dir_name}
1531 component is exactly the value which was given to the function as
1532 the second parameter. I.e., @code{bindtextdomain} allows overwriting
1533 the only system dependent and fixed value to make it possible to
1534 address files anywhere in the filesystem.
1535
1536 The @var{category} is the name of the locale category which was selected
1537 in the program code. For @code{gettext} and @code{dgettext} this is
1538 always @code{LC_MESSAGES}, for @code{dcgettext} this is selected by the
1539 value of the third parameter. As said above it should be avoided to
1540 ever use a category other than @code{LC_MESSAGES}.
1541
1542 The @var{locale} component is computed based on the category used. Just
1543 like for the @code{setlocale} function here comes the user selection
1544 into the play. Some environment variables are examined in a fixed order
1545 and the first environment variable set determines the return value of
1546 the lookup process. In detail, for the category @code{LC_xxx} the
1547 following variables in this order are examined:
1548
1549 @table @code
1550 @item LANGUAGE
1551 @item LC_ALL
1552 @item LC_xxx
1553 @item LANG
1554 @end table
1555
1556 This looks very familiar. With the exception of the @code{LANGUAGE}
1557 environment variable this is exactly the lookup order the
1558 @code{setlocale} function uses. But why introducing the @code{LANGUAGE}
1559 variable?
1560
1561 The reason is that the syntax of the values these variables can have is
1562 different to what is expected by the @code{setlocale} function. If we
1563 would set @code{LC_ALL} to a value following the extended syntax that
1564 would mean the @code{setlocale} function will never be able to use the
1565 value of this variable as well. An additional variable removes this
1566 problem plus we can select the language independently of the locale
1567 setting which sometimes is useful.
1568
1569 While for the @code{LC_xxx} variables the value should consist of
1570 exactly one specification of a locale the @code{LANGUAGE} variable's
1571 value can consist of a colon separated list of locale names. The
1572 attentive reader will realize that this is the way we manage to
1573 implement one of our additional demands above: we want to be able to
1574 specify an ordered list of language.
1575
1576 Back to the constructed filename we have only one component missing.
1577 The @var{domain_name} part is the name which was either registered using
1578 the @code{textdomain} function or which was given to @code{dgettext} or
1579 @code{dcgettext} as the first parameter. Now it becomes obvious that a
1580 good choice for the domain name in the program code is a string which is
1581 closely related to the program/package name. E.g., for the GNU C
1582 Library the domain name is @code{libc}.
1583
1584 @noindent
1585 A limit piece of example code should show how the programmer is supposed
1586 to work:
1587
1588 @smallexample
1589 @{
1590 textdomain ("test-package");
1591 bindtextdomain ("test-package", "/usr/local/share/locale");
1592 puts (gettext ("Hello, world!");
1593 @}
1594 @end smallexample
1595
1596 At the program start the default domain is @code{messages}. The
1597 @code{textdomain} call changes this to @code{test-package}. The
1598 @code{bindtextdomain} call specifies that the message catalogs for the
1599 domain @code{test-package} can be found below the directory
1600 @file{/usr/local/share/locale}.
1601
1602 If now the user set in her/his environment the variable @code{LANGUAGE}
1603 to @code{de} the @code{gettext} function will try to use the
1604 translations from the file
1605
1606 @smallexample
1607 /usr/local/share/locale/de/LC_MESSAGES/test-package.mo
1608 @end smallexample
1609
1610 From the above descriptions it should be clear which component of this
1611 filename is determined by which source.
1612
1613 In the above example we assumed that the @code{LANGUAGE} environment
1614 variable to @code{de}. This might be an appropriate selection but what
1615 happens if the user wants to use @code{LC_ALL} because of the wider
1616 usability and here the required value is @code{de_DE.ISO-8859-1}? We
1617 already mentioned above that a situation like this is not infrequent.
1618 E.g., a person might prefer reading a dialect and if this is not
1619 available fall back on the standard language.
1620
1621 The @code{gettext} functions know about situations like this and can
1622 handle them gracefully. The functions recognize the format of the value
1623 of the environment variable. It can split the value is different pieces
1624 and by leaving out the only or the other part it can construct new
1625 values. This happens of course in a predictable way. To understand
1626 this one must know the format of the environment variable value. There
1627 are to more or less standardized forms:
1628
1629 @table @emph
1630 @item X/Open Format
1631 @code{language[_territory[.codeset]][@@modifier]}
1632
1633 @item CEN Format (European Community Standard)
1634 @code{language[_territory][+audience][+special][,[sponsor][_revision]]}
1635 @end table
1636
1637 The functions will automatically recognize which format is used. Less
1638 specific locale names will be stripped of in the order of the following
1639 list:
1640
1641 @enumerate
1642 @item
1643 @code{revision}
1644 @item
1645 @code{sponsor}
1646 @item
1647 @code{special}
1648 @item
1649 @code{codeset}
1650 @item
1651 @code{normalized codeset}
1652 @item
1653 @code{territory}
1654 @item
1655 @code{audience}/@code{modifier}
1656 @end enumerate
1657
1658 From the last entry one can see that the meaning of the @code{modifier}
1659 field in the X/Open format and the @code{audience} format have the same
1660 meaning. Beside one can see that the @code{language} field for obvious
1661 reasons never will be dropped.
1662
1663 The only new thing is the @code{normalized codeset} entry. This is
1664 another goodie which is introduced to help reducing the chaos which
1665 derives from the inability of the people to standardize the names of
1666 character sets. Instead of @w{ISO-8859-1} one can often see @w{8859-1},
1667 @w{88591}, @w{iso8859-1}, or @w{iso_8859-1}. The @code{normalized
1668 codeset} value is generated from the user-provided character set name by
1669 applying the following rules:
1670
1671 @enumerate
1672 @item
1673 Remove all characters beside numbers and letters.
1674 @item
1675 Fold letters to lowercase.
1676 @item
1677 If the same only contains digits prepend the string @code{"iso"}.
1678 @end enumerate
1679
1680 @noindent
1681 So all of the above name will be normalized to @code{iso88591}. This
1682 allows the program user much more freely choosing the locale name.
1683
1684 Even this extended functionality still does not help to solve the
1685 problem that completely different names can be used to denote the same
1686 locale (e.g., @code{de} and @code{german}). To be of help in this
1687 situation the locale implementation and also the @code{gettext}
1688 functions know about aliases.
1689
1690 The file @file{/usr/share/locale/locale.alias} (replace @file{/usr} with
1691 whatever prefix you used for configuring the C library) contains a
1692 mapping of alternative names to more regular names. The system manager
1693 is free to add new entries to fill her/his own needs. The selected
1694 locale from the environment is compared with the entries in the first
1695 column of this file ignoring the case. If they match the value of the
1696 second column is used instead for the further handling.
1697
1698 In the description of the format of the environment variables we already
1699 mentioned the character set as a factor in the selection of the message
1700 catalog. In fact, only catalogs which contain text written using the
1701 character set of the system/program can be used (directly; there will
1702 come a solution for this some day). This means for the user that s/he
1703 will always have to take care for this. If in the collection of the
1704 message catalogs there are files for the same language but coded using
1705 different character sets the user has to be careful.
1706
1707
1708 @node Helper programs for gettext
1709 @subsection Programs to handle message catalogs for @code{gettext}
1710
1711 The GNU C Library does not contain the source code for the programs to
1712 handle message catalogs for the @code{gettext} functions. As part of
1713 the GNU project the GNU gettext package contains everything the
1714 developer needs. The functionality provided by the tools in this
1715 package by far exceeds the abilities of the @code{gencat} program
1716 described above for the @code{catgets} functions.
1717
1718 There is a program @code{msgfmt} which is the equivalent program to the
1719 @code{gencat} program. It generates from the human-readable and
1720 -editable form of the message catalog a binary file which can be used by
1721 the @code{gettext} functions. But there are several more programs
1722 available.
1723
1724 The @code{xgettext} program can be used to automatically extract the
1725 translatable messages from a source file. I.e., the programmer need not
1726 take care for the translations and the list of messages which have to be
1727 translated. S/He will simply wrap the translatable string in calls to
1728 @code{gettext} et.al and the rest will be done by @code{xgettext}. This
1729 program has a lot of option which help to customize the output or do
1730 help to understand the input better.
1731
1732 Other programs help to manage development cycle when new messages appear
1733 in the source files or when a new translation of the messages appear.
1734 here it should only be noted that using all the tools in GNU gettext it
1735 is possible to @emph{completely} automize the handling of message
1736 catalog. Beside marking the translatable string in the source code and
1737 generating the translations the developers do not have anything to do
1738 themselves.