3.2 KiB
Translating NUSGet
To translate NUSGet into your language, first make sure that you have NUSGet's dependencies installed:
Step 1: Fork and Prepare the Repository
To fork the repository, either click the "Fork" button on the repository's main page, or click here.
Then, you'll need to clone your new fork locally and enter it:
git clone https://github.com/<your-username>/NUSGet
cd NUSGet/
Then, create and activate a venv (depending on your platform, you may need to specify python3
rather than python
):
python -m venv .venv
# Windows
.venv\Scripts\activate
# macOS, Linux, and other Unix-likes
source .venv/bin/activate
Finally, install NUSGet's dependencies:
pip install --upgrade -r requirements.txt
Step 2: Add Your Language
Open NUSGet.pyproject
in your editor of choice, and check for your language in it. If a line for your language doesn't exist, create a new entry following the format "./resources/translations/nusget_XX.ts"
, where XX
is the two-letter code that represents your language.
Step 3: Update Translation Files
To update the .ts
files that store the translations and to create them for any newly added languages, run:
python update_translations.py
This ensures that you're working on an up-to-date version of the strings in the app.
Step 4: Launch Qt Linguist and Load the Translations
Qt Linguist is included as part of the PySide6
package you installed during Step 1. To launch Qt Linguist, use the appropriate command for your platform, replacing <ver>
with the version of Python you installed (for example, 3.12
).
# Windows
.venv\lib\python<ver>\site-packages\PySide6\linguist.exe
# macOS
open .venv/lib/python<ver>/site-packages/PySide6/Linguist.app
# Linux and other Unix-likes
./.venv/lib/python<ver>/site-packages/PySide6/linguist
If you have Qt Linguist installed system-wide already, you can use that instead. These steps are included primarily for those who don't, since installing the Qt Platform Tools on Windows or macOS requires having a Qt account.
Once you've launched Qt Linguist, you can open the .ts
file for your language in it.
Step 5: Translate!
Step 6: Test Your Translations
If your current system language is the one you're NUSGet translating into, then you can just run:
python NUSGet.py
and the app should open in your language.
If your system language does not match the language you're translating to, you can specify a language override, like this:
LANG=xx_XX.UTF-8 python NUSGet.py
where xx
is the two-letter language code, such as ko
for Korean, and XX
is the country code, such as KR
for Korea. All together, that would give you:
LANG=ko_KR.UTF-8 python NUSGet.py
which would open NUSGet with the Korean translations loaded.
Step 7: Push and Merge Your Translations
When you're done translating, commit your translations and push them to GitHub. Then, open a pull request on the original repository, and you're all done!