NAME¶
Jifty::I18N - Internationalization framework for Jifty
SYNOPSIS¶
  # Whenever you need an internationalized string:
  print _('Hello, %1!', 'World');
In your Mason templates:
  <% _('Hello, %1!', 'World') %>
METHODS¶
"_"¶
This module provides a method named "_", which allows you to quickly
  and easily include localized strings in your application. The first argument
  is the string to be translated. If that string contains placeholders, the
  remaining arguments are used to replace the placeholders. The placeholders in
  the form of "%1" where the number is the number of the argument used
  to replace it:
  _('Welcome %1 to the %2', 'Bob', 'World');
This example would return the string "Welcome Bob to the World" if no
  translation is being performed.
new¶
Set up Jifty's internationalization for your application. This pulls in Jifty's
  PO files, your PO files and then exports the _ function into the wider world.
install_global_loc¶
available_languages¶
Return an array of available languages
_get_file_patterns¶
Get list of patterns for all PO files in the project. (Paths are gotten from the
  configuration variables and plugins).
get_language_handle¶
Get the language handle for this request.
get_current_language¶
Get the current language for this request, formatted as a Locale::Maketext
  subclass string (i.e., "zh_tw" instead of "zh-TW").
refresh¶
Used by Jifty::Handler in DevelMode to reload 
.po files whenever they are
  modified on disk.
promote_encoding STRING [CONTENT-TYPE]¶
Return STRING promoted to our best-guess of an appropriate encoding. STRING
  should 
not have the UTF-8 flag set when passed in.
Optionally, you can pass a MIME content-type string as a second argument. If it
  contains a charset= parameter, we will use that encoding. Failing that, we use
  Encode::Guess to guess between UTF-8 and iso-latin-1. If that fails, and the
  string validates as UTF-8, we assume that. Finally, we fall back on returning
  the string as is.
maybe_decode_utf8 STRING¶
Attempt to decode STRING as UTF-8. If STRING is not valid UTF-8, or already
  contains wide characters, return it undecoded.
N.B: In an ideal world, we wouldn't need this function, since we would know
  whether any given piece of input is UTF-8. However, the world is not
  ideal.