Mercurial > vim
view src/po/README_mingw.txt @ 14792:8eb8200a55b2 v8.1.0408
patch 8.1.0408: MSVC: cannot use the "x64" native compiler option
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/a87f8fd3fe8697d2b43da5c89e3079aaa0f1c9c7
Author: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Date: Tue Sep 18 22:58:41 2018 +0200
patch 8.1.0408: MSVC: cannot use the "x64" native compiler option
Problem: MSVC: cannot use the "x64" native compiler option.
Solution: Ignore case for %Platform%. Improve documentation. (Ken Takata)
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 18 Sep 2018 23:00:07 +0200 |
parents | 7e367104f6b6 |
children | 4027cefc2aab |
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TRANSLATING VIM MESSAGES This file explains how to create and maintain po files using gnu-gettext.win32, a MINGW32 Windows port of gettext by Franco Bez <franco.bez@gmx.de>. You can find it at: http://home.a-city.de/franco.bez/gettext/gettext_win32_en.html First read the README.txt file for the general remarks The file that does the work is Make_ming.mak in the po directory. It is an adaptation of the Unix Makefile, but it does NOT test the presence of any po, pot, or mo files, so use it at your own risk but with care: it could even kill your canary. It has been tested by me several times (and with different languages) with success. The make utility must be run from the po directory. First of all you must set the environment variable LANGUAGE to xx, where xx is the name of your language. You can do it from the command line or adding a line to your autoexec.bat file: set LANGUAGE=xx. You must also add your language to the Make_ming.mak file in the lines LANGUAGES, MOFILES, AND POFILES. If you don't have a xx.po file, you must create it with the command: make -f Make_ming.mak first_time This will produce a new brand xx.po file with all the messages in Vim ready for translation. Then you must source the cleanup.vim script from inside Vim; it will comment the untranslated messages (now, all). I recommend to use syntax highlighting so you can identify the untranslated messages easily. You also must remove the '..\' that prepends the name of the source files. (I don't no why, but make is unable to change the directory from po to src and back to po, so all the work must be done from the po dir, hence the '..\') Then you must go step (2) below. If you are updating a po file you must follow the next steps (they are nearly the same as in the Unix case, only the commands change): (1) Add new and changed messages from the Vim sources: make -f Make_ming.mak xx This will extract all the strings from Vim and merge them in with the existing translations. Requires the GNU gettext utilities. Also requires unpacking the extra archive. Your original xx.po file will be copied to xx.po.orig -- After you do this, you MUST do the next three steps! -- (2) Translate See the gettext documentation on how to do this. You can also find examples in the other po files. Search the po file for items that require translation: /\#\~ and also the fuzzy translations, /\#, fuzzy Remove "#~" and "#, fuzzy" after adding the translation. There is one special message: msgid "Messages maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>" You should include your name and E-mail address instead, for example: msgstr "Berichten übersetzt bei: John Doe <john@doe.org>" (3) Clean up This is very important to make sure the translation works on all systems. Comment-out all non-translated strings. There are two types: - items marked with "#, fuzzy" - items with an empty msgstr You can do this with the cleanup.vim script: :source cleanup.vim (4) Check: vim -S check.vim xx.po make -f Make_ming.mak xx.mo Look out for syntax errors and fix them. (5) This is an extra step, ;-). If you want the vim.mo file installed in your system you must run: make -f Make_ming.mak install This will create the xx\LC_MESSAGES directory (if it does not exist) and will copy vim.po to it. You can also use the following command to install all languages: make -f Make_ming.mak install-all (6) Another extra step ;-)). The command: make -f Make_ming.mak clean will delete the temp files created during the process. Suggestions will be welcomed. Eduardo F. Amatria <eferna1@platea.pntic.mec.es> Happy Vimming with NLS!! vim:tw=78: