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The functions to retrieve the translations for a given message have a remarkable simple interface. But to provide the user of the program still the opportunity to select exactly the translation s/he wants and also to provide the programmer the possibility to influence the way to locate the search for catalogs files there is a quite complicated underlying mechanism which controls all this. The code is complicated the use is easy.
Basically we have two different tasks to perform which can also be
performed by the catgets
functions:
There can be arbitrary many packages installed and they can follow different guidelines for the placement of their files.
This is the functionality required by the specifications for
gettext
and this is also what the catgets
functions are
able to do. But there are some problems unresolved:
de
, german
, or
deutsch
and the program should always react the same.
de_DE.ISO-8859-1
which means German, spoken in Germany,
coded using the ISO 8859-1 character set there is the possibility
that a message catalog matching this exactly is not available. But
there could be a catalog matching de
and if the character set
used on the machine is always ISO 8859-1 there is no reason why this
later message catalog should not be used. (We call this message
inheritance.)
We can divide the configuration actions in two parts: the one is performed by the programmer, the other by the user. We will start with the functions the programmer can use since the user configuration will be based on this.
As the functions described in the last sections already mention separate
sets of messages can be selected by a domain name. This is a
simple string which should be unique for each program part with uses a
separate domain. It is possible to use in one program arbitrary many
domains at the same time. E.g., the GNU C Library itself uses a domain
named libc
while the program using the C Library could use a
domain named foo
. The important point is that at any time
exactly one domain is active. This is controlled with the following
function.
The
textdomain
function sets the default domain, which is used in all futuregettext
calls, to domainname. Please note thatdgettext
anddcgettext
calls are not influenced if the domainname parameter of these functions is not the null pointer.Before the first call to
textdomain
the default domain ismessages
. This is the name specified in the specification of thegettext
API. This name is as good as any other name. No program should ever really use a domain with this name since this can only lead to problems.The function returns the value which is from now on taken as the default domain. If the system went out of memory the returned value is
NULL
and the global variable errno is set toENOMEM
. Despite the return value type beingchar *
the return string must not be changed. It is allocated internally by thetextdomain
function.If the domainname parameter is the null pointer no new default domain is set. Instead the currently selected default domain is returned.
If the domainname parameter is the empty string the default domain is reset to its initial value, the domain with the name
messages
. This possibility is questionable to use since the domainmessages
really never should be used.
The
bindtextdomain
function can be used to specify the directory which contains the message catalogs for domain domainname for the different languages. To be correct, this is the directory where the hierarchy of directories is expected. Details are explained below.For the programmer it is important to note that the translations which come with the program have be placed in a directory hierarchy starting at, say, /foo/bar. Then the program should make a
bindtextdomain
call to bind the domain for the current program to this directory. So it is made sure the catalogs are found. A correctly running program does not depend on the user setting an environment variable.The
bindtextdomain
function can be used several times and if the domainname argument is different the previously bound domains will not be overwritten.If the program which wish to use
bindtextdomain
at some point of time use thechdir
function to change the current working directory it is important that the dirname strings ought to be an absolute pathname. Otherwise the addressed directory might vary with the time.If the dirname parameter is the null pointer
bindtextdomain
returns the currently selected directory for the domain with the name domainname.The
bindtextdomain
function returns a pointer to a string containing the name of the selected directory name. The string is allocated internally in the function and must not be changed by the user. If the system went out of core during the execution ofbindtextdomain
the return value isNULL
and the global variable errno is set accordingly.