On 01/10/16 19:16, Olivier Brunel wrote:
On Sat, 1 Oct 2016 17:41:51 +1000 Allan McRae <allan@archlinux.org> wrote:
On 30/09/16 22:14, Dave Reisner wrote:
On Fri, Sep 30, 2016 at 01:48:01PM +0200, Gordian Edenhofer wrote:
Export TEXTDOMAIN and TEXTDOMAINDIR in order for the strings to be translatable with gettext. --- contrib/bacman.sh.in | 28 ++++++++++++++++++++++------ 1 file changed, 22 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
diff --git a/contrib/bacman.sh.in b/contrib/bacman.sh.in index 39fbe99..cc243c9 100644 --- a/contrib/bacman.sh.in +++ b/contrib/bacman.sh.in @@ -32,6 +32,17 @@ QUIET=0 # Required for fakeroot because options are shifted off the array. ARGS=("$@")
+# gettext initialization +export TEXTDOMAIN='pacman' +export TEXTDOMAINDIR='@localedir@' + +# Determine whether we have gettext; make it a no-op if we do not +if ! type -p gettext >/dev/null; then + gettext() { + printf "%s\n" "$@"
Not sure if this is copypasted from somewhere, but it's wrong. Consider the output of:
printf '%s\n' 1 2 3
vs.
printf '%s\n' '1 2 3'
You probably wanted this to be: printf '%s\n' "$*"
Just because I am being dumb... Can someone explain the issue here:
# foo1() { printf "%s\n" "$@"; } # foo2() { printf "%s\n" "$*"; }
# foo1 "test string" test string
# foo2 "test string" test string
I don't see a difference.
Cause you never tested w/out quotes (multiple args):
# foo1 test string test string
# foo2 test string test string
Good thing all gettext calls require quotes then. A