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73 lines
2.5 KiB
Plaintext
73 lines
2.5 KiB
Plaintext
OpenTTD and strgen
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Last updated: 2009-06-30
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Table of contents
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-----------------
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1.0) strgen usage
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* 1.1) Examples
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* 1.2) strgen command switches
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1.0) strgen usage
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---- ------------
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This guide is only interesting for people who want to alter something
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themselves without access to translator.openttd.org. Please note that
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your compiled language file will only be compatible with the OpenTTD version
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you have downloaded english.txt, the master language file, for. While this is
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not always true, namely when changes in the code have not touched language
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files, your safest bet is to assume this 'limitation'.
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As a first step you need to compile strgen. This is as easy as typing
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'make strgen'. You can download the precompile strgen from:
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http://www.openttd.org/download-strgen
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strgen takes as argument a txt file and translates it to a lng file, allowing
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it to be used inside OpenTTD. strgen needs the master language file
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english.txt to work. Below are some examples of strgen usage.
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1.1) Examples
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---- --------
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Example 1:
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if you are in the root of your working copy (svn code), you should type
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strgen/strgen -s lang lang/english.txt
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to compile englist.txt into english.lng. It will be placed in the lang dir
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Example 2:
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you only have the strgen executable (no working copy) and you want to compile
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a txt file in the same directory. You should type
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./strgen english.txt
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and you will get and english.lng in the same dir
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Example 3:
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you have strgen somewhere, english.txt in /usr/openttd/lang and you want the
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resulting language file to go to /tmp. Use
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./strgen -s /usr/openttd/lang -d /tmp english.txt
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You can interchange english.txt to whichever language you want to generate a
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.lng file for.
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1.2) strgen command switches
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---- -----------------------
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-v | --version
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strgen will tell what svn revision it was last modified
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-t | --todo
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strgen will add <TODO> to any untranslated/missing strings and use the english
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strings while compiling the language file
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-w | --warning
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strgen will print any missing strings or wrongly translated (bad format)
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to standard error output(stderr)
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-h | --help | -?
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Print out a summarized help message explaining these switches
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-s | --source_dir
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strgen will search for the master file english.txt in the directory specified
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by this switch instead of the current directory
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-d | --dest_dir
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strgen will put <language>.lng in the directory specified by this switch; if
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no dest_dir is given, output is the same as source_dir
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