Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/i18n.py @ 15257:a8555f9908d1
mq: cleanup of lookup - handling of None is not relevant
Patch specifications in mq is passed around as a string or None. None is
generally used when no patch has been specified and there thus is nothing to
lookup and the calling code should do something else. One code path did however
pass None all the way to lookup. That case was handled in lookup, but there was
really need for that, it was undocumented, and it used to cause trouble back
when patches was specified as integers.
author | Mads Kiilerich <mads@kiilerich.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 14 Oct 2011 02:50:06 +0200 |
parents | b64538363dbe |
children | 2d47d81c79fb |
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# i18n.py - internationalization support for mercurial # # Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. import encoding import gettext, sys, os # modelled after templater.templatepath: if getattr(sys, 'frozen', None) is not None: module = sys.executable else: module = __file__ base = os.path.dirname(module) for dir in ('.', '..'): localedir = os.path.join(base, dir, 'locale') if os.path.isdir(localedir): break t = gettext.translation('hg', localedir, fallback=True) def gettext(message): """Translate message. The message is looked up in the catalog to get a Unicode string, which is encoded in the local encoding before being returned. Important: message is restricted to characters in the encoding given by sys.getdefaultencoding() which is most likely 'ascii'. """ # If message is None, t.ugettext will return u'None' as the # translation whereas our callers expect us to return None. if message is None: return message paragraphs = message.split('\n\n') # Be careful not to translate the empty string -- it holds the # meta data of the .po file. u = u'\n\n'.join([p and t.ugettext(p) or '' for p in paragraphs]) try: # encoding.tolocal cannot be used since it will first try to # decode the Unicode string. Calling u.decode(enc) really # means u.encode(sys.getdefaultencoding()).decode(enc). Since # the Python encoding defaults to 'ascii', this fails if the # translated string use non-ASCII characters. return u.encode(encoding.encoding, "replace") except LookupError: # An unknown encoding results in a LookupError. return message def _plain(): if 'HGPLAIN' not in os.environ and 'HGPLAINEXCEPT' not in os.environ: return False exceptions = os.environ.get('HGPLAINEXCEPT', '').strip().split(',') return 'i18n' not in exceptions if _plain(): _ = lambda message: message else: _ = gettext