Provided by: libdist-zilla-localetextdomain-perl_0.87-1_all bug

Name

       Dist::Zilla::Plugin::LocaleTextDomain - Compile Local::TextDomain language files

Synopsis

       In dist.ini:

         [ShareDir]
         [LocaleTextDomain]
         textdomain = My-App
         lang_dir = po
         share_dir = share

Description

       This plugin compiles GNU gettext language files and adds them into the distribution for
       use by Locale::TextDomain. This is useful if your distribution maintains gettext language
       files in a directory, with each file named for a language. The plugin uses "msgfmt" to
       compile each file and then adds it to the distribution's share directory. You can then use
       the ShareDir plugin to make sure it gets installed in the right place.

   Installation
       Ideally, Locale::TextDomain would search for language files in the shared directory for
       your distribution, as defined by File::ShareDir. A patch
       <https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=79461> has been submitted to add this support,
       after which the example code from the "Synopsis" should just work.

       Until that time, however, Locale::TextDomain searches for files in Perl's @INC
       directories, in which case the use of the ShareDir plugin will not work. You will have to
       install the compiled language files into the lib directory in your distribution. To do so,
       simply set the "share_dir" attribute to "lib":

         [LocaleTextDomain]
         textdomain = My-App
         lang_dir = po
         share_dir = lib

       If your distribution uses ExtUtils::MakeMaker to do the installation, the files will now
       be installed in the proper location. If it relies on Module::Build, you will have to do a
       bit of additional work. First, subclass Module::Build by creating
       inc/Module/Build/MyApp.pm with this code:

         package Module::Build::MyApp;
         use parent 'Module::Build';

         sub new {
             my ( $class, %p ) = @_;
             my $self = $class->SUPER::new(%p);
             $self->add_build_element('mo');
             return $self;
         }

       Then tell Dist::Zilla to use the subclass via the "mb_class" attribute in dist.ini:

         [ModuleBuild]
         mb_class = Module::Build::MyApp

       Now the .mo files will be installed where Locale::TextDomain can find them.

   Configuration
       Configuration attributes settable in dist.ini to change the plugin behavior.

       "textdomain"

       The textdomain to use for your language files, as defined by the Locale::TextDomain
       documentation. This should be the same value declared in each use of Locale::TextDomain in
       your module. For example, if such lines look like this:

         use LocaleText::Domain qw(com.example.myApp);

       Then set it to such in your dist.ini

         [LocaleTextDomain]
         textdomain = com.example.myApp

       Defaults to the name of your distribution, which is the value that Locale::TextDomain
       recommends you use.

       "lang_dir"

       The directory containing your language files. Defaults to po.

       "share_dir"

       The name of the distribution directory into which compiled language files should be added.
       Defaults to "share".

       "msgfmt"

       The location of the "msgfmt" program, which is distributed with GNU gettext
       <http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/>. Defaults to just "msgfmt", which should work if
       it's in your path.

       "language"

       A language to be compiled. May be specified more than once. If not specified, the default
       will be the list of files in "lang_dir" ending in "lange_file_suffix".

       "lang_file_suffix"

       Suffix used in the language file names. These are the files your translators maintain in
       your repository. Defaults to "po".

       "bin_file_suffix"

       Suffix to use for the compiled language file. Defaults to "mo".

Author

       David E. Wheeler <david@justatheory.com>

Copyright and License

       This software is copyright (c) 2012-2013 by David E. Wheeler.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.