Hi Craig,
Thank you for your response.
I'm able to submit issues in JIRA. However, how can I become a
committer of JSPWiki? I did not find any guide information about this
on JSPWiki site.
David
-------- Original Message --------
Hi David,
On Feb 18, 2008, at 6:44 PM, David Gao wrote:
Another stupid question is: how can I submit my files to JSPWiki, via
JIRA or simply in CVS?
We are now using Apache's svn repository, and I don't see you on the
committer list, so the best way is to create a JIRA and attach the
patch to it.
If you are a committer and I simply missed you, you can directly
update the svn.
Regards,
Craig
David Gao ( [EMAIL PROTECTED])
-------- Original Message --------
Yes
... but it also took me a while to realize that what's inside
<JSPWiki-Home>/WEB-INF/i18n is useless
within Tomcat (unless moved under classes ...).
Maybe it would be better to move it away from there in the standard
distro.
As for the 1/n jars ... in similar situations I use to have a separate
jar for all 'standard supported' languages
to avoid cluttering .... which does not prevent one to add a new
language just by adding under classes or,
if things should grow too much (hope so!) to simply substitute the
languages jar with what's really needed.
Choice to you but let me know as I will provide in a while an Italian
version :-) ..
Luca
Janne Jalkanen wrote:
My questions are:
Does the folder "<JSPWiki-Home>/WEB-INF/i18n" really work in
running environment in terms of internationalization support?
Nope!
Do I have to add my localization resources to
"<JSPWiki-Home>/WEB-INF/classes/" directory in order to have i18n feature?
Is there any information about how i18n works in current JSPWiki
design?
The easiest way is to create a JAR file of your property files, and
drop that into WEB-INF/lib. Putting them in classes directory is a
bit suspect, as it creates clutter.
It does not matter where you put the files, as long as they are
somewhere in the classpath.
Though, this reminds me that we should probably create separate JAR
files for each localization (except for default English). It would be
a bit cleaner, though it would add clutter, too.
/Janne
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