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gettext
OperationsThe initialization of locale data should be done with more or less the same code in every program, as demonstrated below:
int main (argc, argv) int argc; char argv; { ... setlocale (LC_ALL, ""); bindtextdomain (PACKAGE, LOCALEDIR); textdomain (PACKAGE); ... }
PACKAGE and LOCALEDIR should be provided either by
`config.h' or by the Makefile. For now consult the gettext
sources for more information.
The use of LC_ALL
might not be appropriate for you.
LC_ALL
includes all locale categories and especially
LC_CTYPE
. This later category is responsible for determining
character classes with the isalnum
etc. functions from
`ctype.h' which could especially for programs, which process some
kind of input language, be wrong. For example this would mean that a
source code using the @,{c} (c-cedilla character) is runnable in
France but not in the U.S.
Some systems also have problems with parsing number using the
scanf
functions if an other but the LC_ALL
locale is used.
The standards say that additional formats but the one known in the
"C"
locale might be recognized. But some systems seem to reject
numbers in the "C"
locale format. In some situation, it might
also be a problem with the notation itself which makes it impossible to
recognize whether the number is in the "C"
locale or the local
format. This can happen if thousands separator characters are used.
Some locales define this character accordfing to the national
conventions to '.'
which is the same character used in the
"C"
locale to denote the decimal point.
So it is sometimes necessary to replace the LC_ALL
line in the
code above by a sequence of setlocale
lines
{ ... setlocale (LC_TIME, ""); setlocale (LC_MESSAGES, ""); ... }
or to switch for and back to the character class in question. On all
POSIX conformant systems the locale categories LC_CTYPE
,
LC_COLLATE
, LC_MONETARY
, LC_NUMERIC
, and
LC_TIME
are available. On some modern systems there is also a
locale LC_MESSAGES
which is called on some old, XPG2 compliant
systems LC_RESPONSES
.
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