/******************************************************************************
* This is the template for generating language.doc.
* Edit manually this file, not the language.doc!
*
*
* Copyright (C) 1997-2001 by Dimitri van Heesch.
*
* Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its
* documentation under the terms of the GNU General Public License is hereby
* granted. No representations are made about the suitability of this software
* for any purpose. It is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty.
* See the GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* Documents produced by Doxygen are derivative works derived from the
* input used in their production; they are not affected by this license.
*
*/
/*! \page langhowto Internationalization
Support for multiple languages
Doxygen has support for multiple languages. This means
that the text fragments that doxygen generates can changed into languages
other than English (the default) at configuration time.
Currently (version $version), $numlang languages
are supported (sorted alphabetically):
$languages.
The table of information related to the supported languages follows.
It is sorted by language alphabetically. The Status column
was generated from sources and shows approximately the last version
when the translator was updated.
$information_table
Most people on the list have indicated that they were also busy
doing other things, so if you want to help to speed things up please
let them (or me) know.
If you want to add support for a language that is not yet listed
please see the next section.
Adding a new language to doxygen
This short HOWTO explains how to add support for a new language to Doxygen:
Just follow these steps:
- Tell me for which language you want to add support. If no one else
is already working on support for that language, you will be
assigned as the maintainer for the language.
- Create a copy of translator_en.h and name it
translator_.h
I'll use xx in the rest of this document.
- Edit language.cpp:
Add a
\verbatim
#include
\endverbatim
in
setTranslator()
add
\verbatim
else if (L_EQUAL("your_language_name"))
{
theTranslator = new TranslatorYourLanguage;
}
\endverbatim
after the if { ... }
- Edit libdoxygen.pro.in and add \c translator_xx.h to
the \c HEADERS line in the file doxygen.pro.
- Edit
translator_xx.h
:
- Rename
TRANSLATOR_EN_H
to TRANSLATOR_XX_H
twice.
- Rename TranslatorEnglish to TranslatorYourLanguage
- In the member
idLanguage()
change "english" into the
name of the your language (use lower case characters only). Depending
on the language you may also wish to change the member functions
latexLanguageSupportCommand() and idLanguageCharset().
- Edit all the strings that are returned by the member functions that
start with tr.
Try to match punctuation and capitals!
To enter special characters (with accents) you can:
- Enter them directly if your keyboard supports that and you are
using a Latin-1 font.
Doxygen will translate the characters to proper Latex and
leave the Html and man output for what it is (which is fine, if
idLanguageCharset() is set correctly).
- Use html codes like \ä for an a with an umlaut (i.e. ä).
See the HTML specification for the codes.
- Run configure and make again from the root of the distribution,
in order to regenerated the Makefiles.
- Now you can use
OUTPUT_LANGUAGE = your_language_name
in the config file to generate output in your language.
- Send
translator_xx.h
to me so I can add it to doxygen.
Maintaining a language
As new versions of doxygen appear, new sentences will be
added to the Translator interface class. Of course these need to be translated
as well (otherwise doxygen wouldn't even compile!).
Waiting until all language maintainers have translated these new sentences
and sent the results would not be very practical for me.
Instead, a new class TranslatorAdapter_x_y_z will be added to
translator_adapter.h (here x,y, and z correspond to the current
version of doxygen). And all translators that previous derived from
Translator will now derive from this adapter class.
The Adapter class contains the new sentences with
default translations using the English translator (which is always up to date).
Instead of deriving your TranslatorXX class directly from Translator it will
derive from the intermediate class TranslatorAdapter_x_y_z.
Thus, if a translator class inherits from a adapter class
maintenance is needed. By looking at the adapter class itself (and its base
classes) you can easily see which methods need to be updated.
To update a language simply make your translator class derive from
the abstract class Translator and provide translations for the methods that
were previously provided by the adapter class (and its base classes).
*/