* Fix some typos in the API reference for BLocale and BCatalog.
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@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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/*!
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\class BCatalog
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\ingroup locale
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\brief class handling string localization.
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\brief Class handling string localization.
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BCatalog is the class that allows you to perform string localization. This means
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you give it a string in english, and it automatically returns the translation of
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@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ access to the catalog linked with your application. To access other catalogs
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(for example if you create a script interpreter and want to localize the
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scripts), you will have to open a catalog associated with your script.
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\section Using the macros
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\section macros Using the macros
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You don't have to do much in your program to handle catalogs. You must first
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set the B_TRANSLATE_CONTEXT define to a string that identifies which part of the
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application the strings you will translate are in. This allows the translators
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@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ it will allow your text to be replaced at run-time by the proper localized one,
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but it will also allow to build the base catalog, the one that you will send to
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the translator team, from your sourcecode.
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\section Chaining of catalogs
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\section chaining Chaining of catalogs
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The catalogs you get from the locale kit are designed to use a fallback system
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so that the user get strings in the language he's the more fluent with,
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depending onwhat isavailable.
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@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ of dates, times, and numbers, in the natural language of the user.
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*/
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/*!
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\fn const BLocale::BCollator* Collator() const
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\fn const BCollator* BLocale::Collator() const
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\brief Returns the collator associated to this locale.
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Returns the collator in use for this locale, allowing you to use it to sort a
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@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ set of strings.
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*/
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/*!
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\fn const BLocale::BCountry* Country() const
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\fn const BCountry* BLocale::Country() const
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\brief Returns the country associated to this locale.
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A locale is defined by the combination of a country and a language. This
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@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ data that is not language-dependant (such as the country flag).
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*/
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/*!
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\fn const BLocale::BLanguage* Language() const
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\fn const BLanguage* BLocale::Language() const
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\brief Returns the language associated to this locale.
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*/
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