On Wed, Sep 19, 2018 at 4:52 PM Anders Hovmöller <bo...@killingar.net> wrote: > > > > How about this: Have a script that runs over your code, looking for > > "translatable f-strings": > > > > _(f'Hi {user}') > > > > and replaces them with actually-translatable strings: > > > > _('Hi %s') % (user,) > > _('Hi {user}').format(user=user) > > > > Take your pick of which way you want to spell it. Either of these is > > easily able to be picked up by a standard translation package, is 100% > > legal Python code in today's interpreters, and doesn't require any > > bizarre markers and such saying that things need to be processed out > > of order (the parentheses specify the order for you). > > > I guess it wasn't clear before.. that's exactly what I was proposing :) > > I'd suggest using parso to do it. It's a really great library to write such > transformations.
Ah. It wasn't clear what your destination was, so I thought you were talking about doing the translation itself using parso. But yeah, grab one of these sorts of parsing libraries, do the transformation, save back, then use a standard translation library. Seems a lot easier than changing the language. ChrisA _______________________________________________ Python-ideas mailing list Python-ideas@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-ideas Code of Conduct: http://python.org/psf/codeofconduct/