📄 maketext.pm
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# Time-stamp: "2001-06-21 23:09:33 MDT"require 5;package Locale::Maketext;use strict;use vars qw( @ISA $VERSION $MATCH_SUPERS $USING_LANGUAGE_TAGS $USE_LITERALS);use Carp ();use I18N::LangTags 0.21 ();#--------------------------------------------------------------------------BEGIN { unless(defined &DEBUG) { *DEBUG = sub () {0} } } # define the constant 'DEBUG' at compile-time$VERSION = "1.03";@ISA = ();$MATCH_SUPERS = 1;$USING_LANGUAGE_TAGS = 1; # Turning this off is somewhat of a security risk in that little or no # checking will be done on the legality of tokens passed to the # eval("use $module_name") in _try_use. If you turn this off, you have # to do your own taint checking.$USE_LITERALS = 1 unless defined $USE_LITERALS; # a hint for compiling bracket-notation things.my %isa_scan = ();###########################################################################sub quant { my($handle, $num, @forms) = @_; return $num if @forms == 0; # what should this mean? return $forms[2] if @forms > 2 and $num == 0; # special zeroth case # Normal case: # Note that the formatting of $num is preserved. return( $handle->numf($num) . ' ' . $handle->numerate($num, @forms) ); # Most human languages put the number phrase before the qualified phrase.}sub numerate { # return this lexical item in a form appropriate to this number my($handle, $num, @forms) = @_; my $s = ($num == 1); return '' unless @forms; if(@forms == 1) { # only the headword form specified return $s ? $forms[0] : ($forms[0] . 's'); # very cheap hack. } else { # sing and plural were specified return $s ? $forms[0] : $forms[1]; }}#--------------------------------------------------------------------------sub numf { my($handle, $num) = @_[0,1]; if($num < 10_000_000_000 and $num > -10_000_000_000 and $num == int($num)) { $num += 0; # Just use normal integer stringification. # Specifically, don't let %G turn ten million into 1E+007 } else { $num = CORE::sprintf("%G", $num); # "CORE::" is there to avoid confusion with the above sub sprintf. } while( $num =~ s/^([-+]?\d+)(\d{3})/$1,$2/s ) {1} # right from perlfaq5 # The initial \d+ gobbles as many digits as it can, and then we # backtrack so it un-eats the rightmost three, and then we # insert the comma there. $num =~ tr<.,><,.> if ref($handle) and $handle->{'numf_comma'}; # This is just a lame hack instead of using Number::Format return $num;}sub sprintf { no integer; my($handle, $format, @params) = @_; return CORE::sprintf($format, @params); # "CORE::" is there to avoid confusion with myself!}#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#=#use integer; # vroom vroom... applies to the whole rest of the modulesub language_tag { my $it = ref($_[0]) || $_[0]; return undef unless $it =~ m/([^':]+)(?:::)?$/s; $it = lc($1); $it =~ tr<_><->; return $it;}sub encoding { my $it = $_[0]; return( (ref($it) && $it->{'encoding'}) || "iso-8859-1" # Latin-1 );} #--------------------------------------------------------------------------sub fallback_languages { return('i-default', 'en', 'en-US') }sub fallback_language_classes { return () }#--------------------------------------------------------------------------sub fail_with { # an actual attribute method! my($handle, @params) = @_; return unless ref($handle); $handle->{'fail'} = $params[0] if @params; return $handle->{'fail'};}#--------------------------------------------------------------------------sub failure_handler_auto { # Meant to be used like: # $handle->fail_with('failure_handler_auto') my($handle, $phrase, @params) = @_; $handle->{'failure_lex'} ||= {}; my $lex = $handle->{'failure_lex'}; my $value; $lex->{$phrase} ||= ($value = $handle->_compile($phrase)); # Dumbly copied from sub maketext: { local $SIG{'__DIE__'}; eval { $value = &$value($handle, @_) }; } # If we make it here, there was an exception thrown in the # call to $value, and so scream: if($@) { my $err = $@; # pretty up the error message $err =~ s<\s+at\s+\(eval\s+\d+\)\s+line\s+(\d+)\.?\n?> <\n in bracket code [compiled line $1],>s; #$err =~ s/\n?$/\n/s; Carp::croak "Error in maketexting \"$phrase\":\n$err as used"; # Rather unexpected, but suppose that the sub tried calling # a method that didn't exist. } else { return $value; }}#==========================================================================sub new { # Nothing fancy! my $class = ref($_[0]) || $_[0]; my $handle = bless {}, $class; $handle->init; return $handle;}sub init { return } # no-op###########################################################################sub maketext { # Remember, this can fail. Failure is controllable many ways. Carp::croak "maketext requires at least one parameter" unless @_ > 1; my($handle, $phrase) = splice(@_,0,2); # Look up the value: my $value; foreach my $h_r ( @{ $isa_scan{ref($handle) || $handle} || $handle->_lex_refs } ) { print "* Looking up \"$phrase\" in $h_r\n" if DEBUG; if(exists $h_r->{$phrase}) { print " Found \"$phrase\" in $h_r\n" if DEBUG; unless(ref($value = $h_r->{$phrase})) { # Nonref means it's not yet compiled. Compile and replace. $value = $h_r->{$phrase} = $handle->_compile($value); } last; } elsif($phrase !~ m/^_/s and $h_r->{'_AUTO'}) { # it's an auto lex, and this is an autoable key! print " Automaking \"$phrase\" into $h_r\n" if DEBUG; $value = $h_r->{$phrase} = $handle->_compile($phrase); last; } print " Not found in $h_r, nor automakable\n" if DEBUG > 1; # else keep looking } unless(defined($value)) { print "! Lookup of \"$phrase\" in/under ", ref($handle) || $handle, " fails.\n" if DEBUG; if(ref($handle) and $handle->{'fail'}) { print "WARNING0: maketext fails looking for <$phrase>\n" if DEBUG; my $fail; if(ref($fail = $handle->{'fail'}) eq 'CODE') { # it's a sub reference return &{$fail}($handle, $phrase, @_); # If it ever returns, it should return a good value. } else { # It's a method name return $handle->$fail($phrase, @_); # If it ever returns, it should return a good value. } } else { # All we know how to do is this; Carp::croak("maketext doesn't know how to say:\n$phrase\nas needed"); } } return $$value if ref($value) eq 'SCALAR'; return $value unless ref($value) eq 'CODE'; { local $SIG{'__DIE__'}; eval { $value = &$value($handle, @_) }; } # If we make it here, there was an exception thrown in the # call to $value, and so scream: if($@) { my $err = $@; # pretty up the error message $err =~ s<\s+at\s+\(eval\s+\d+\)\s+line\s+(\d+)\.?\n?> <\n in bracket code [compiled line $1],>s; #$err =~ s/\n?$/\n/s; Carp::croak "Error in maketexting \"$phrase\":\n$err as used"; # Rather unexpected, but suppose that the sub tried calling # a method that didn't exist. } else { return $value; }}###########################################################################sub get_handle { # This is a constructor and, yes, it CAN FAIL. # Its class argument has to be the base class for the current # application's l10n files. my($base_class, @languages) = @_; $base_class = ref($base_class) || $base_class; # Complain if they use __PACKAGE__ as a project base class? unless(@languages) { # Calling with no args is magical! wooo, magic! if(length( $ENV{'REQUEST_METHOD'} || '' )) { # I'm a CGI my $in = $ENV{'HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'} || ''; # supposedly that works under mod_perl, too. $in =~ s<\([\)]*\)><>g; # Kill parens'd things -- just a hack. @languages = &I18N::LangTags::extract_language_tags($in) if length $in; # ...which untaints, incidentally. } else { # Not running as a CGI: try to puzzle out from the environment if(length( $ENV{'LANG'} || '' )) { push @languages, split m/[,:]/, $ENV{'LANG'}; # LANG can be only /one/ locale as far as I know, but what the hey. } if(length( $ENV{'LANGUAGE'} || '' )) { push @languages, split m/[,:]/, $ENV{'LANGUAGE'}; } print "Noting ENV LANG ", join(',', @languages),"\n" if DEBUG; # Those are really locale IDs, but they get xlated a few lines down. if(&_try_use('Win32::Locale')) { # If we have that module installed... push @languages, Win32::Locale::get_language() if defined &Win32::Locale::get_language; } } } #------------------------------------------------------------------------ print "Lgs1: ", map("<$_>", @languages), "\n" if DEBUG; if($USING_LANGUAGE_TAGS) { @languages = map &I18N::LangTags::locale2language_tag($_), @languages; # if it's a lg tag, fine, pass thru (untainted) # if it's a locale ID, try converting to a lg tag (untainted), # otherwise nix it. push @languages, map I18N::LangTags::super_languages($_), @languages if $MATCH_SUPERS; @languages = map { $_, I18N::LangTags::alternate_language_tags($_) } @languages; # catch alternation push @languages, I18N::LangTags::panic_languages(@languages) if defined &I18N::LangTags::panic_languages; push @languages, $base_class->fallback_languages; # You are free to override fallback_languages to return empty-list! @languages = # final bit of processing: map { my $it = $_; # copy $it =~ tr<-A-Z><_a-z>; # lc, and turn - to _ $it =~ tr<_a-z0-9><>cd; # remove all but a-z0-9_ $it; } @languages ; } print "Lgs2: ", map("<$_>", @languages), "\n" if DEBUG > 1; push @languages, $base_class->fallback_language_classes; # You are free to override that to return whatever. my %seen = (); foreach my $module_name ( map { $base_class . "::" . $_ } @languages ) { next unless length $module_name; # sanity next if $seen{$module_name}++ # Already been here, and it was no-go || !&_try_use($module_name); # Try to use() it, but can't it. return($module_name->new); # Make it! } return undef; # Fail!}############################################################################# This is where most people should stop reading.############################################################################sub _compile { # This big scarp routine compiles an entry. # It returns either a coderef if there's brackety bits in this, or # otherwise a ref to a scalar.
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