c647837666
one one should use. * Add documentation for BDurationFormat. git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@42976 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
29 lines
1.4 KiB
Plaintext
29 lines
1.4 KiB
Plaintext
/*!
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\page locale_intro Introduction to the Locale Kit
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The Locale Kit provides a set of tools for internationalizing, localizing and
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translating your software. This includes not only replacing string with their
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translations at runtime, but also more complex tasks such as formatting numbers,
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dates, and times in a way that match the locale preferences of the user.
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The main way to access locale data is through the be_locale_roster. This is a
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global instance of the BLocaleRoster class, storing the data for localizing an
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application according to the user's preferred settings. Most of the time, you
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should be able to use the default BLocale object and its convenience methods to
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get things formatted according to the user preferences. However, you can also
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use the various formatter classes directly when you need a more advanced
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formatting. For example, you may need to format a date with a fixed format in
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english for including in an e-mail header, as it is the only format accepted
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there.
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Note that creating a new format is a costly operation. The idea is that you
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create your format object once and reuse it accross your application to format
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all the stuff that needs it.
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Unlike the other kits in Haiku, the Locale kit does not live in libbe. When
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building a localized application, you have to link it to liblocale.so. If you
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want to use the catalog macros, you also have to link each of your images
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(that is, applications, libraries and add-ons) to liblocalestub.a.
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*/
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