""" Localization """ import logging import os import time from bmconfigparser import BMConfigParser logger = logging.getLogger('default') DEFAULT_ENCODING = 'ISO8859-1' DEFAULT_LANGUAGE = 'en_US' DEFAULT_TIME_FORMAT = '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S' encoding = DEFAULT_ENCODING language = DEFAULT_LANGUAGE windowsLanguageMap = { "ar": "arabic", "cs": "czech", "da": "danish", "de": "german", "en": "english", "eo": "esperanto", "fr": "french", "it": "italian", "ja": "japanese", "nl": "dutch", "no": "norwegian", "pl": "polish", "pt": "portuguese", "ru": "russian", "sk": "slovak", "zh": "chinese", "zh_CN": "chinese-simplified", "zh_HK": "chinese-traditional", "zh_SG": "chinese-simplified", "zh_TW": "chinese-traditional" } try: import locale encoding = locale.getpreferredencoding(True) or DEFAULT_ENCODING language = locale.getlocale()[0] or locale.getdefaultlocale()[0] or DEFAULT_LANGUAGE except: logger.exception('Could not determine language or encoding') if BMConfigParser().has_option('bitmessagesettings', 'timeformat'): time_format = BMConfigParser().get('bitmessagesettings', 'timeformat') # Test the format string try: time.strftime(time_format) except: logger.exception('Could not format timestamp') time_format = DEFAULT_TIME_FORMAT else: time_format = DEFAULT_TIME_FORMAT # It seems some systems lie about the encoding they use so we perform # comprehensive decoding tests if time_format != DEFAULT_TIME_FORMAT: try: # Check day names for i in xrange(7): unicode(time.strftime(time_format, (0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, i, 0, 0)), encoding) # Check month names for i in xrange(1, 13): unicode(time.strftime(time_format, (0, i, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0)), encoding) # Check AM/PM unicode(time.strftime(time_format, (0, 0, 0, 11, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0)), encoding) unicode(time.strftime(time_format, (0, 0, 0, 13, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0)), encoding) # Check DST unicode(time.strftime(time_format, (0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1)), encoding) except: logger.exception('Could not decode locale formatted timestamp') time_format = DEFAULT_TIME_FORMAT encoding = DEFAULT_ENCODING def setlocale(category, newlocale): """Set the locale""" locale.setlocale(category, newlocale) # it looks like some stuff isn't initialised yet when this is called the # first time and its init gets the locale settings from the environment os.environ["LC_ALL"] = newlocale def formatTimestamp(timestamp=None, as_unicode=True): """Return a formatted timestamp""" # For some reason some timestamps are strings so we need to sanitize. if timestamp is not None and not isinstance(timestamp, int): try: timestamp = int(timestamp) except: timestamp = None # timestamp can't be less than 0. if timestamp is not None and timestamp < 0: timestamp = None if timestamp is None: timestring = time.strftime(time_format) else: # In case timestamp is too far in the future try: timestring = time.strftime(time_format, time.localtime(timestamp)) except ValueError: timestring = time.strftime(time_format) if as_unicode: return unicode(timestring, encoding) return timestring def getTranslationLanguage(): """Return the user's language choice""" userlocale = BMConfigParser().safeGet( 'bitmessagesettings', 'userlocale', 'system') return userlocale if userlocale and userlocale != 'system' else language def getWindowsLocale(posixLocale): """ Get the Windows locale Technically this converts the locale string from UNIX to Windows format, because they use different ones in their libraries. E.g. "en_EN.UTF-8" to "english". """ if posixLocale in windowsLanguageMap: return windowsLanguageMap[posixLocale] if "." in posixLocale: loc = posixLocale.split(".", 1) if loc[0] in windowsLanguageMap: return windowsLanguageMap[loc[0]] if "_" in posixLocale: loc = posixLocale.split("_", 1) if loc[0] in windowsLanguageMap: return windowsLanguageMap[loc[0]] if posixLocale != DEFAULT_LANGUAGE: return getWindowsLocale(DEFAULT_LANGUAGE) return None