bionic (3) Log::Report::Translator.3pm.gz

Provided by: liblog-report-perl_1.26-1_all bug

NAME

       Log::Report::Translator - base implementation for translating messages

INHERITANCE

        Log::Report::Translator is extended by
          Log::Report::Translator::Gettext
          Log::Report::Translator::POT

SYNOPSIS

        # internal infrastructure
        my $msg = Log::Report::Message->new(_msgid => "Hello World\n");
        print Log::Report::Translator->new(...)->translate($msg);

        # normal use
        textdomain 'my-domain'
          , translator => Log::Report::Translator->new;  # default
        print __"Hello World\n";

DESCRIPTION

       A module (or distribution) has a certain way of translating messages, usually "gettext".  The translator
       is based on some "textdomain" for the message, which can be specified as option per text element, but
       usually is package scoped.

       This base class does not translate at all: it will use the MSGID (and MSGID_PLURAL if available).  It's a
       nice fallback if the language packs are not installed.

METHODS

   Constructors
       Log::Report::Translator->new(%options)

   Accessors
   Translating
       $obj->load($domain, $locale)
           Load the translation information in the text $domain for the indicated $locale.  Multiple calls to
           load() should not cost significant performance: the data must be cached.

       $obj->translate( $message, [$language, $ctxt] )
           Returns the translation of the $message, a "Log::Report::Message" object, based on the current
           locale.

           Translators are permitted to peek into the internal HASH of the message object, for performance
           reasons.

SEE ALSO

       This module is part of Log-Report distribution version 1.26, built on January 23, 2018. Website:
       http://perl.overmeer.net/CPAN/

LICENSE

       Copyrights 2007-2018 by [Mark Overmeer]. For other contributors see ChangeLog.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
       itself.  See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/