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Bram Moolenaarfff2bee2010-05-15 13:56:02 +02001*mlang.txt* For Vim version 7.3a. Last change: 2008 Jun 08
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
5
6
7Multi-language features *multilang* *multi-lang*
8
9This is about using messages and menus in various languages. For editing
10multi-byte text see |multibyte|.
11
12The basics are explained in the user manual: |usr_45.txt|.
13
141. Messages |multilang-messages|
152. Menus |multilang-menus|
163. Scripts |multilang-scripts|
17
18Also see |help-translated| for multi-language help.
19
20{Vi does not have any of these features}
21{not available when compiled without the |+multi_lang| feature}
22
23==============================================================================
241. Messages *multilang-messages*
25
26Vim picks up the locale from the environment. In most cases this means Vim
27will use the language that you prefer, unless it's not available.
28
29To see a list of supported locale names on your system, look in one of these
30directories (for Unix):
31 /usr/lib/locale ~
32 /usr/share/locale ~
33Unfortunately, upper/lowercase differences matter. Also watch out for the
34use of "-" and "_".
35
36 *:lan* *:lang* *:language* *E197*
37:lan[guage]
38:lan[guage] mes[sages]
39:lan[guage] cty[pe]
40:lan[guage] tim[e]
41 Print the current language (aka locale).
42 With the "messages" argument the language used for
43 messages is printed. Technical: LC_MESSAGES.
44 With the "ctype" argument the language used for
45 character encoding is printed. Technical: LC_CTYPE.
46 With the "time" argument the language used for
47 strftime() is printed. Technical: LC_TIME.
48 Without argument all parts of the locale are printed
49 (this is system dependent).
50 The current language can also be obtained with the
51 |v:lang|, |v:ctype| and |v:lc_time| variables.
52
53:lan[guage] {name}
54:lan[guage] mes[sages] {name}
55:lan[guage] cty[pe] {name}
56:lan[guage] tim[e] {name}
57 Set the current language (aka locale) to {name}.
58 The locale {name} must be a valid locale on your
59 system. Some systems accept aliases like "en" or
60 "en_US", but some only accept the full specification
61 like "en_US.ISO_8859-1".
62 With the "messages" argument the language used for
63 messages is set. This can be different when you want,
64 for example, English messages while editing Japanese
65 text. This sets $LC_MESSAGES.
66 With the "ctype" argument the language used for
67 character encoding is set. This affects the libraries
68 that Vim was linked with. It's unusual to set this to
69 a different value from 'encoding'. This sets
70 $LC_CTYPE.
71 With the "time" argument the language used for time
72 and date messages is set. This affects strftime().
73 This sets $LC_TIME.
74 Without an argument both are set, and additionally
75 $LANG is set.
Bram Moolenaara7241f52008-06-24 20:39:31 +000076 When compiled with the |+float| feature the LC_NUMERIC
77 value will always be set to "C", so that floating
78 point numbers use '.' as the decimal point.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000079 This will make a difference for items that depend on
80 the language (some messages, time and date format).
81 Not fully supported on all systems
82 If this fails there will be an error message. If it
83 succeeds there is no message. Example: >
84 :language
85 Current language: C
86 :language de_DE.ISO_8859-1
87 :language mes
88 Current messages language: de_DE.ISO_8859-1
89 :lang mes en
90<
91
92MS-WINDOWS MESSAGE TRANSLATIONS *win32-gettext*
93
94If you used the self-installing .exe file, message translations should work
95already. Otherwise get the libintl.dll file if you don't have it yet:
96
97 http://sourceforge.net/projects/gettext
98
99This also contains tools xgettext, msgformat and others.
100
101libintl.dll should be placed in same directory with (g)vim.exe, or some
102place where PATH environment value describe. Message files (vim.mo)
103have to be placed in "$VIMRUNTIME/lang/xx/LC_MESSAGES", where "xx" is the
104abbreviation of the language (mostly two letters).
105
106If you write your own translations you need to generate the .po file and
107convert it to a .mo file. You need to get the source distribution and read
108the file "src/po/README.txt".
109
110To overrule the automatic choice of the language, set the $LANG variable to
111the language of your choice. use "en" to disable translations. >
112
113 :let $LANG = 'ja'
114
115(text for Windows by Muraoka Taro)
116
117==============================================================================
1182. Menus *multilang-menus*
119
Bram Moolenaar9964e462007-05-05 17:54:07 +0000120See |45.2| for the basics, esp. using 'langmenu'.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000121
122Note that if changes have been made to the menus after the translation was
123done, some of the menus may be shown in English. Please try contacting the
124maintainer of the translation and ask him to update it. You can find the
125name and e-mail address of the translator in
126"$VIMRUNTIME/lang/menu_<lang>.vim".
127
128To set the font (or fontset) to use for the menus, use the |:highlight|
129command. Example: >
130
131 :highlight Menu font=k12,r12
132
133
134ALIAS LOCALE NAMES
135
136Unfortunately, the locale names are different on various systems, even though
137they are for the same language and encoding. If you do not get the menu
138translations you expected, check the output of this command: >
139
140 echo v:lang
141
142Now check the "$VIMRUNTIME/lang" directory for menu translation files that use
143a similar language. A difference in a "-" being a "_" already causes a file
144not to be found! Another common difference to watch out for is "iso8859-1"
145versus "iso_8859-1". Fortunately Vim makes all names lowercase, thus you
146don't have to worry about case differences. Spaces are changed to
147underscores, to avoid having to escape them.
148
149If you find a menu translation file for your language with a different name,
150create a file in your own runtime directory to load that one. The name of
151that file could be: >
152
153 ~/.vim/lang/menu_<v:lang>.vim
154
155Check the 'runtimepath' option for directories which are searched. In that
156file put a command to load the menu file with the other name: >
157
158 runtime lang/menu_<other_lang>.vim
159
160
161TRANSLATING MENUS
162
163If you want to do your own translations, you can use the |:menutrans| command,
164explained below. It is recommended to put the translations for one language
165in a Vim script. For a language that has no translation yet, please consider
166becoming the maintainer and make your translations available to all Vim users.
167Send an e-mail to the Vim maintainer <maintainer@vim.org>.
168
169 *:menut* *:menutrans* *:menutranslate*
170:menut[ranslate] clear
171 Clear all menu translations.
172
173:menut[ranslate] {english} {mylang}
174 Translate menu name {english} to {mylang}. All
175 special characters like "&" and "<Tab>" need to be
176 included. Spaces and dots need to be escaped with a
177 backslash, just like in other |:menu| commands.
178
179See the $VIMRUNTIME/lang directory for examples.
180
181To try out your translations you first have to remove all menus. This is how
182you can do it without restarting Vim: >
183 :source $VIMRUNTIME/delmenu.vim
184 :source <your-new-menu-file>
185 :source $VIMRUNTIME/menu.vim
186
187Each part of a menu path is translated separately. The result is that when
188"Help" is translated to "Hilfe" and "Overview" to "Überblick" then
189"Help.Overview" will be translated to "Hilfe.Überblick".
190
191==============================================================================
1923. Scripts *multilang-scripts*
193
194In Vim scripts you can use the |v:lang| variable to get the current language
195(locale). The default value is "C" or comes from the $LANG environment
196variable.
197
198The following example shows how this variable is used in a simple way, to make
199a message adapt to language preferences of the user, >
200
201 :if v:lang =~ "de_DE"
202 : echo "Guten Morgen"
203 :else
204 : echo "Good morning"
205 :endif
206<
207
208 vim:tw=78:sw=4:ts=8:ft=help:norl: