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OpenTTD-patches/docs/Howto_compile_lng_files_fro...

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This is a guide to compile strgen on gcc
All this is done in the makefile, so it's only interesting for people, who wants to alter something themselves (translators)
HOWTO compile lng files:
First you get strgen compiled (look below/download nightly build/run makefile)
strgen takes the argument of a txt file and translates it to a lng file and places that lng file in the same dir as the txt file.
Example 1:
if you are in the root of your working copy (svn code), you should type
strgen/strgen lang/english.txt
to compile englist.lng. It will be placed in the lang dir
Example 2:
you have strgen but not the source and you want to compile a txt file in the same dir. YOu should type
./strgen english.txt
and you will get english.lng in the same dir
You can change english to whatever language you want
Commands used by strgen
-v --version
strgen will tell what svn revision it is based on
-t
strgen will add <TODO> to the missing strings and use the english strings while compiling
this will need english.txt to be present
-w
strgen will print any missing strings to standard error output(stderr)
this will need english.txt to be present
here are a very useful tool for translators:
http://openttd.rulez.org/
HOWTO compile strgen:
(this should be useless as you can just type make)
Goto the main dir
Compile by typing
gcc strgen/strgen.c -o strgen/strgen -DUNIX
or if you want it to tell the revision too
gcc strgen/strgen.c rev.o -o strgen/strgen -DUNIX -DWITH_REV (this is the one the makefile uses)
you now have a program called strgen in the strgen directory