晋太元中,武陵人捕鱼为业。缘溪行,忘路之远近。忽逢桃花林,夹岸数百步,中无杂树,芳草鲜美,落英缤纷。渔人甚异之,复前行,欲穷其林。 林尽水源,便得一山,山有小口,仿佛若有光。便舍船,从口入。初极狭,才通人。复行数十步,豁然开朗。土地平旷,屋舍俨然,有良田、美池、桑竹之属。阡陌交通,鸡犬相闻。其中往来种作,男女衣着,悉如外人。黄发垂髫,并怡然自乐。 见渔人,乃大惊,问所从来。具答之。便要还家,设酒杀鸡作食。村中闻有此人,咸来问讯。自云先世避秦时乱,率妻子邑人来此绝境,不复出焉,遂与外人间隔。问今是何世,乃不知有汉,无论魏晋。此人一一为具言所闻,皆叹惋。余人各复延至其家,皆出酒食。停数日,辞去。此中人语云:“不足为外人道也。”(间隔 一作:隔绝) 既出,得其船,便扶向路,处处志之。及郡下,诣太守,说如此。太守即遣人随其往,寻向所志,遂迷,不复得路。 南阳刘子骥,高尚士也,闻之,欣然规往。未果,寻病终。后遂无问津者。
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# This document contains text in Perl "POD" format.
# Use a POD viewer like perldoc or perlman to render it.
=encoding utf-8
=head1 NAME
Locale::Maketext::Cookbook - recipes for using Locale::Maketext
=head1 INTRODUCTION
This is a work in progress. Not much progress by now :-)
=head1 ONESIDED LEXICONS
I<Adapted from a suggestion by Dan Muey>
It may be common (for example at your main lexicon) that
the hash keys and values coincide. Like that
q{Hello, tell me your name}
=> q{Hello, tell me your name}
It would be nice to just write:
q{Hello, tell me your name} => ''
and have this magically inflated to the first form.
Among the advantages of such representation, that would
lead to
smaller files, less prone to mistyping or mispasting,
and handy to someone translating it which can simply
copy the main lexicon and enter the translation
instead of having to remove the value first.
That can be achieved by overriding C<init>
in your class and working on the main lexicon
with code like that:
package My::I18N;
...
sub init {
my $lh = shift; # a newborn handle
$lh->SUPER::init();
inflate_lexicon(\%My::I18N::en::Lexicon);
return;
}
sub inflate_lexicon {
my $lex = shift;
while (my ($k, $v) = each %$lex) {
$v = $k if !defined $v || $v eq '';
}
}
Here we are assuming C<My::I18N::en> to own the
main lexicon.
There are some downsides here: the size economy
will not stand at runtime after this C<init()>
runs. But it should not be that critical, since
if you don't have space for that, you won't have
space for any other language besides the main one
as well. You could do that too with ties,
expanding the value at lookup time which
should be more time expensive as an option.
=head1 DECIMAL PLACES IN NUMBER FORMATTING
I<After CPAN RT #36136 (https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=36136)>
The documentation of L<Locale::Maketext> advises that
the standard bracket method C<numf> is limited and that
you must override that for better results. It even
suggests the use of L<Number::Format>.
One such defect of standard C<numf> is to not be
able to use a certain decimal precision.
For example,
$lh->maketext('pi is [numf,_1]', 355/113);
outputs
pi is 3.14159292035398
Since pi ≈ 355/116 is only accurate
to 6 decimal places, you would want to say:
$lh->maketext('pi is [numf,_1,6]', 355/113);
and get "pi is 3.141592".
One solution for that could use C<Number::Format>
like that:
package Wuu;
use base qw(Locale::Maketext);
use Number::Format;
# can be overridden according to language conventions
sub _numf_params {
return (
-thousands_sep => '.',
-decimal_point => ',',
-decimal_digits => 2,
);
}
# builds a Number::Format
sub _numf_formatter {
my ($lh, $scale) = @_;
my @params = $lh->_numf_params;
if ($scale) { # use explicit scale rather than default
push @params, (-decimal_digits => $scale);
}
return Number::Format->new(@params);
}
sub numf {
my ($lh, $n, $scale) = @_;
# get the (cached) formatter
my $nf = $lh->{__nf}{$scale} ||= $lh->_numf_formatter($scale);
# format the number itself
return $nf->format_number($n);
}
package Wuu::pt;
use base qw(Wuu);
and then
my $lh = Wuu->get_handle('pt');
$lh->maketext('A [numf,_1,3] km de distância', 1550.2222);
would return "A 1.550,222 km de distância".
Notice that the standard utility methods of
C<Locale::Maketext> are irremediably limited
because they could not aim to do everything
that could be expected from them in different languages,
cultures and applications. So extending C<numf>,
C<quant>, and C<sprintf> is natural as soon
as your needs exceed what the standard ones do.