2023-01-08 14:45:19 +02:00
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# Translations of Comprehensive Rust 🦀
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We would love to have your help with translating the course into other
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languages! We use the [Gettext] system for translations. This means that you
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don't modify the Markdown files directly: instead you modify `.po` files in a
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`po/` directory. The `.po` files are small text-based translation databases.
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There is a `.po` file for each language. They are named after the [ISO 639]
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language codes: Danish would go into `po/da.po`, Korean would go into
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`po/ko.po`, etc. The `.po` files contain all the English text plus the
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translations. They are initialized from a `messages.pot` file (a PO template)
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which contains only the English text.
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We will show how to update and manipulate the `.po` and `.pot` files using the
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GNU Gettext utilities below.
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[Gettext]: https://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/manual/html_node/index.html
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[ISO 639]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes
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## I18n Helpers
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We use two helpers for the translations:
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* `mdbook-xgettext`: This program extracts the English text. It is an mdbook
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renderer.
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* `mdbook-gettext`: This program translates the book into a target language. It
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is an mdbook preprocessor.
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Install both helpers with the following command from the root of the course:
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```shell
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$ cargo install --path i18n-helpers
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```
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## Creating and Updating Translations
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First, you need to know how to update the `.pot` and `.po` files.
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As a general rule, you should never touch the auto-generated `po/messages.pot`
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file. You should also not edit the `msgid` entries in a `po/xx.po` file. If you
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find mistakes, you need to update the original English text instead. The fixes
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to the English text will flow into the `.po` files the next time the translators
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update them.
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### Generating the PO Template
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To extract the original English text and generate a `messages.pot` file, you run
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`mdbook` with a special renderer:
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```shell
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$ MDBOOK_OUTPUT='{"xgettext": {"pot-file": "messages.pot"}}' \
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mdbook build -d po
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```
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You will find the generated POT file as `po/messages.pot`.
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### Initialize a New Translation
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To start a new translation, first generate the `po/messages.pot` file. Then use
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`msginit` to create a `xx.po` file for the fictional `xx` language:
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```shell
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$ msginit -i po/messages.pot -l xx -o po/xx.po
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```
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You can also simply copy `po/messages.pot` to `po/xx.po`. Then update the file
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header (the first entry with `msgid ""`) to the correct language.
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### Updating an Existing Translation
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As the English text changes, translations gradually become outdated. To update
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the `po/xx.po` file with new messages, first extract the English text into a
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`po/messages.pot` template file. Then run
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```shell
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$ msgmerge --update po/xx.po po/messages.pot
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```
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Unchanged messages will stay intact, deleted messages are marked as old, and
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updated messages are marked "fuzzy". A fuzzy entry will reuse the previous
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translation: you should then go over it and update it as necessary before you
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remove the fuzzy marker.
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## Using Translations
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This will show you how to use the translations to generate localized HTML
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output.
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## Building a Translation
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To use the `po/xx.po` file for your output, run the following command:
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```shell
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$ MDBOOK_BOOK__LANGUAGE='xx' \
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MDBOOK_PREPROCESSOR__GETTEXT__PO_FILE='po/xx.po' \
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MDBOOK_PREPROCESSOR__GETTEXT__RENDERERS='["html"]' \
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MDBOOK_PREPROCESSOR__GETTEXT__BEFORE='["svgbob"]' \
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mdbook build -d book/xx
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```
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This will update the book's language to `xx`, it will make the `mdbook-gettext`
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preprocessor become active and tell it to use the `po/xx.po` file, and finally
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it will redirect the output to `book/xx`.
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## Serving a Translation
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Like normal, you can use `mdbook serve` to view your translation as you work on
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it. You use the same command as with `mdbook build` above, but additionally
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we'll tell `mdbook` to watch the `po/` directory for changes:
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```shell
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$ MDBOOK_BOOK__LANGUAGE=xx \
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2023-01-25 19:26:58 +02:00
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MDBOOK_PREPROCESSOR__GETTEXT__PO_FILE=po/xx.po \
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2023-01-08 14:45:19 +02:00
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mdbook serve -d book/xx
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```
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