Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> writes: > On Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 09:28:42AM -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote: > >> Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> > By the way, grepping for "remote error:" shows that when we get an error >> > over sideband 3 we produce the same message but _don't_ translate it. >> > That seems inconsistent. >> >> IOW >> >> die(_("remote error: %s"), buf + 1); >> >> in sideband.c? I think it makes sense. > > Yes. Patch is below so we don't forget about it. I'm not sure if we > ought to be going further, though. The "remote:" prefix for sideband 2 > isn't translated either. It would be easy to do so, but it's much more > lego-like. We don't have "remote: %s" ever as a string. We just have > "remote:", and then we maybe_colorize_sideband() the result. > > Would that be annoying for translators, especially with RTL languages? > Do people actually want to see "remote:" (or "remote error:" for that > matter) translated, or does mixing translated and untranslated messages > on one line end up more confusing? I'm out of my element here, as I > wouldn't ever use the translations myself. > >> IIRC, the current thinking is to let the remote side localize their >> message before sending them over the wire and we'll worry about how >> we let the receiving end tell what l10n it wants later. So "remote >> error:" prefix may have to be translated on receiving end and the >> remainder of the line, which is already localized, can just be >> interpolated. > > Yeah, that part makes sense. The local client shouldn't be translating > what it gets from the server (and won't, because it is filled in via the > %s). Adding a capability for preferred language would be easy, though I > imagine it might be irritating in practice. As a server admin, I want > to see everything in the C locale; but what gets shown to users and what > might get dumped into server logs is not well specified in Git. I have a > feeling that just setting LANG based on the user's request would be a > bit broad. > > Anyway, here's the patch. It doesn't seem to cause any test failures, > even with GETTEXT_POISON. :) ;-) Thanks. Queued.