Callers and definition were out of sync.
Change-Id: Icda26887cb64c61c7e373766f25559b0d450d112
Reviewed-by: Cristian Maureira-Fredes <cristian.maureira-fredes@qt.io>
Python helpfully uses a sensible locale when stdout is a tty but uses
the system (not the filesystem) default encoding, which may be ascii
and unable to encode some of the data we need to save. So brute force
kludge it to ensure emit.encoding is UTF-8 when writing the output
we'll read as UTF-8 anyway.
(This matches dev's commit 0ef79d94f6
for the reworked version of the script.)
Task-number: QTBUG-79902
Change-Id: I60ddc896a308c06e01fa87e8e18e112faa17d601
Reviewed-by: Cristian Maureira-Fredes <cristian.maureira-fredes@qt.io>
Move the code out to a CldrReader class in cldr.py, expand CldrAccess
with facilities that needs, expand ldml.py to include support for more
features, finally making xpathlite.py redundant. This initial commit
aims, though, to be bug-for-bug compatible with xpathlite in its
reading of the CLDR data.
It turns out we've been using draftier data than we were aware of
(which might not be a bad thing). The xpathlite code appeared to check
for draft attributes, but these only appear on leaf nodes and most
data were fetched by finding a parent and then scanning its children
without the draft check; only am/pm data was actually being excluded
based on draft values. (We allowed contributed, for am/pm, in
addition to approved, which is all the xpathlite code allows
otherwise.) There are also some less equivocal bugs; I'll deal with
these in later commits.
Simplified number-system data look-ups; the old get_number_in_system()
was taking care of old LDML versions' placement of the number system
attribute; this is no longer needed. (It was also being used for a
currency value to which it was not appropriate, which is now handled
separately; this is one of the bugs mentioned above.) Ditched a
fall-back to nativeZeroDigit, which no longer exists in CLDR.
Change the command-line to take the root of the CLDR data tree, rather
than its common/main/ sub-directory. Support naming the file to which
to write output, as a second command-line argument, instead of always
writing to stdout (which remains the default) and leaving whoever runs
the script to redirect stdout.
Support (internally for now, while adding TODOs to give main() more
command-line options) separating the stderr output into its more and
less interesting parts; for now, continue producing both, but suppress
the least interesting entirely.
Task-number: QTBUG-81344
Change-Id: Ie611b47403a9452b51feaeeaaa0fbc8f7e84dc71
Reviewed-by: Cristian Maureira-Fredes <cristian.maureira-fredes@qt.io>
The time-zone script was importing two functions from the locale data
generation script. Move them to a separate module, to which I'll
shortly add some more shared utilities. Cleaned up some imports in the
process.
Combined qlocalexml2cpp's and xpathlit's error classes into a new
Error class in the new module and made it a bit more like a proper
python error class.
Task-number: QTBUG-81344
Change-Id: Idbe0139ba9aaa2f823b8f7216dee1d2539c18b75
Reviewed-by: Cristian Maureira-Fredes <cristian.maureira-fredes@qt.io>
Delegate the output of XML to a helper class provided by qlocalexml.py
and restructure the driver script so that it can be imported without
running anything. It now has a minimal __name__ == '__main__' block
that calls a main() function. This, for the moment, requires a global
via which it shares the CLDR directory with various other functions;
that shall go away in a later commit.
Task-number: QTBUG-81344
Change-Id: Ica2d3ec09f2d38ba42fd930258cc765283f29a71
Reviewed-by: Cristian Maureira-Fredes <cristian.maureira-fredes@qt.io>
It implements interaction with the QLocaleXML file format type, so
rename it to match.
Task-number: QTBUG-81344
Change-Id: I46302d4ac1038cdfc5929e73b554b6d793814c56
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
All other members had camelCase names, but the endonyms had
prefix_endonym names, requiring munging where they were emitted to
XML. So just do that munging upstream in the attribute name of the
Locale objects. Makes no change to the data output by the scripts, not
even to the intermediate QLocaleXML file.
Task-number: QTBUG-81344
Change-Id: I01c15a822216281dc669b3e7ebda096d18b04f9b
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Cristian Maureira-Fredes <cristian.maureira-fredes@qt.io>
On macOS it's possible to configure the system locale to not do digit
grouping (separating "thousands", in most western locales); it then
returns an empty string when asked for the grouping character, which
QLocale's system-configuration then ignored, falling back on using the
base UI locale's grouping separator. This could lead to the same
separator being used for decimal and grouping, which should never
happen, least of all when configured to not group at all.
In order to notice when this happens, query() must take care to return
an empty QString (as a QVariant, which is then non-null) when it *has*
a value for the locale property, and that value is empty, as opposed
to a null QVariant when it doesn't find a configured value. The caller
can then distinguish the two cases.
Furthermore, the group and decimal separators need to be distinct, so
we need to take care to avoid cases where the system overrides one
with what the CLDR has given for the other and doesn't over-ride that
other.
Only presently implemented for macOS and MS-Win, since the (other)
Unix implementation of the system locale returns single QChar values
for the numeric tokens - see QTBUG-69324, QTBUG-81053.
Fixes: QTBUG-80459
Change-Id: Ic3fbb0fb86e974604a60781378b09abc13bab15d
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
This has its own locale data, extracted from CLDR. This data may
potentially be shared with other variants on the Islamic calendar, so
is handled by a separate base-class, QHijriCalendar, on which such
variants may base their implementations.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QCalendar] Added support for the Islamic Civil
calendar, controlled by feature islamiccivilcalendar, with locale data
that can be shared with other implementations, controlled by feature
hijricalendar.
Fixes: QTBUG-56675
Change-Id: Idf32d3da7034baa8ec5e66ef847e59a8a2f31cbd
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
This has its own locale data, extracted from CLDR.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QCalendar] Added support for the Jalali (Persian
or Solar Hijri) calendar, controlled by feature jalalicalendar.
Fixes: QTBUG-58404
Change-Id: Id5c56a10db05a4fd612aafc01615273db81ec743
Reviewed-by: Paul Wicking <paul.wicking@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Add QCalendarBackend as a base class for calendar implementations and
QCalendar as a facade via which to access it.
QDate's implicit implementation of the Gregorian calendar becomes
QGregorianCalendar and QDate methods now support choice of calendar.
Convert QLocale's CLDR data for month names to a locale-data component
of each supported calendar and relevant QLocale methods now support
choice of calendar. Adapt Python scripts for locale data generation to
extract month name data from CLDR (keeping on version v35.1) into the
new calendar-locale files. The locale data for the Gregorian calendar
is held in a Roman calendar base, for sharing with other calendars.
Add tests for basic uses of the new API.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QCalendar] Added QCalendar to support diverse
calendars, supported by implementing QCalendarBackend.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QDate] Allow choice of calendar in various
operations, with Gregorian remaining the default.
Done-with: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Done-with: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Fixes: QTBUG-17110
Fixes: QTBUG-950
Change-Id: I9d6278f394269a183aee8156e990cec4d5198ab8
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
It wasn't mentioned in cldr2qlocalexml.py's instructions, so I didn't
know to run it. The data it used in an illustration was out of date.
Two tests could be combined with no loss.
Change-Id: I26e619e6210ea5b1258326fc4bc2b6aee9d6a999
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
When parsing the CLDR data, we only handle language, script and
territory (which we call country) codes if they are known to our
enumdata.py tables. When reporting the rest as unknown, in the
content of an actual locale definition (not the likely subtag data),
check whether en.xml can resolve the code for us; if it can, report
the full name it provides, as a hint to whoever's running the script
that an update to enumdata.py may be in order.
Change-Id: I9ca1d6922a91d45bc436f4b622e5557261897d7f
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Ritt <ritt.ks@gmail.com>
It was misnamed local_database, quite missing the point of its name.
Change-Id: I73a4fdf24f53daac12304de1f443636d89afacb2
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Ritt <ritt.ks@gmail.com>