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Application Development with Qt Creator - Second Edition

You're reading from   Application Development with Qt Creator - Second Edition Design and build dazzling cross-platform applications using Qt and Qt Quick

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784398675
Length 264 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Qt Creator FREE CHAPTER 2. Building Applications with Qt Creator 3. Designing Your Application with Qt Designer 4. Qt Foundations 5. Developing Applications with Qt Widgets 6. Drawing with Qt 7. Doing More with Qt Quick 8. Multimedia and Qt Quick 9. Sensors and Qt Quick 10. Localizing Your Application with Qt Linguist 11. Optimizing Performance with Qt Creator 12. Developing Mobile Applications with Qt Creator 13. Qt Tips and Tricks Index

Localizing your application with QLinguist


Once you've marked your strings using tr or qsTr, you need to generate a table of those strings for Qt Linguist to localize. You can do this using the lupdate command, which takes your .pro file and walks your sources to look for strings to localize and creates an XML file of the strings you need to translate for Qt Linguist. You need to do this once for each language you want to support. When doing this, it's best to name the resulting files systematically; one way to do this is to use the name of the project file, followed by a dash, followed by the ISO-639-2 language code for the language.

A concrete example is in order. This chapter makes use of QtLinguistExample; we can run lupdate using a command such as this to create a list of strings that we'll translate to Esperanto (ISO-639-2 language code EPO):

% lupdate -pro .\QtLinguistExample.pro –ts .\QtLinguistExample-epo.ts

Don't forget that the % character is the command prompt, which might differ...

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