TIP 399: Dynamic Locale Changing for msgcat

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Author:         Harald Oehlmann <[email protected]>
State:          Accepted
Type:           Project
Vote:           Done
Created:        27-Mar-2012
Post-History:   
Keywords:       Tcl,localization,msgcat
Tcl-Version:    8.6
Obsoleted-By:	412

Abstract

This TIP adds dynamic locale switching capabilities to the msgcat package.

Rationale

Within a multi-language application like a web-server, one may change the locale quite frequently, for example if users with different locales are requesting pages. Unfortunately, this does not fit well with the model adopted by the msgcat package, which assumes that all code follows this sequence:

1. Set locale list: mclocale locale

2. Load language files with other package load: mcload msg-folder

3. Translate strings: mc key args...

Note that if the locale should be changed after other packages are loaded, one must restart at step 2. This requires reloading all packages which is mostly not practical. The key issue is that mcload only loads language files included in the current locale (mcpreferences) and does not load any others.

The aim of this TIP is to extend mcload to load additional language files. Then mclocale may be called to change the locale on runtime without the need to re-execute mcload (which would normally imply to reinitialise or reload the package).

Specification

This TIP proposes to add a new command:

msgcat::mcconfig -pattern ?patternlist?

This command may get or set package options. There is currently one option "-pattern".

Options may be set using

msgcat::mcconfig option value ?option? ?value?

Current option values may be read using:

msgcat::mcconfig option

Option -pattern

The option -pattern consists of a list of language file name patterns like fr*, *, or fr_ch.

Any mcload command executed after this setting will consider this list in addition to the current locale list. Files are searched using a glob command per element on the specified pattern plus the string ".msg". If "fr*" is specified within the pattern list, the file search pattern is "fr*.msg".

The default option value is the empty list {}. In consequence, only files covered by the current locale list are sourced.

Example Usage

Imagine an application which supports the current user language and French, German and English. An external package tp is used. The package uses msgcat and performes within the package require tp call:

package require msgcat
msgcat::mcload [file join [file dirname [info script]] msgs]

An implementation of the application with the current msgcat 1.4.4 would require the following initialisation sequence:

package require msgcat
package require np

and the following code to change the locale to French:

package forget np
msgcat::mclocale fr
package require np

Using the extension of this tip, the required code for initialisation is:

package require msgcat
msgcat::mcconfig -pattern {fr* de* en*}
package require np

and to change to french locale:

msgcat::mclocale fr

Within this modification, locale change is a cheap operation. Before, it was computational expensive (if possible, as many packages are not reloadable or a reload may disturb current processing, e.g., by forcing the closing of sockets, etc.).

Reference Implementation

See Tcl Feature Request 3511941. http://sourceforge.net/support/tracker.php/?aid=3511941

Compatibility

No incompatibilities are introduced.

Issues

Packages might not be aware of a locale change and may buffer translations outside of msgcat. Packages should not buffer msgcat messages if they are used in a dynamic locale application (like tklib tooltip does for example).

Alternatives

This implementation requires the setting of the pattern before any package with msgcat is loaded. To avoid this, msgcat must store all paths passed by any mcload call. When a locale change happens, any currently missing files are loaded. This requires much more housekeeping and may lead to side effects, especially if packages are not aware of the fact that their package files are loaded outside of the mcload command.

Copyright

This document has been placed in the public domain.