# locale-fr.m4 serial 17 dnl Copyright (C) 2003, 2005-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc. dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. dnl From Bruno Haible. dnl Determine the name of a french locale with traditional encoding. AC_DEFUN([gt_LOCALE_FR], [ AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST]) AC_REQUIRE([AM_LANGINFO_CODESET]) AC_CACHE_CHECK([for a traditional french locale], [gt_cv_locale_fr], [ AC_LANG_CONFTEST([AC_LANG_SOURCE([ changequote(,)dnl #include <locale.h> #include <time.h> #if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET # include <langinfo.h> #endif #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> struct tm t; char buf[16]; int main () { /* Check whether the given locale name is recognized by the system. */ #if (defined _WIN32 || defined __WIN32__) && !defined __CYGWIN__ /* On native Windows, setlocale(category, "") looks at the system settings, not at the environment variables. Also, when an encoding suffix such as ".65001" or ".54936" is specified, it succeeds but sets the LC_CTYPE category of the locale to "C". */ if (setlocale (LC_ALL, getenv ("LC_ALL")) == NULL || strcmp (setlocale (LC_CTYPE, NULL), "C") == 0) return 1; #else if (setlocale (LC_ALL, "") == NULL) return 1; #endif /* Check whether nl_langinfo(CODESET) is nonempty and not "ASCII" or "646". On Mac OS X 10.3.5 (Darwin 7.5) in the fr_FR locale, nl_langinfo(CODESET) is empty, and the behaviour of Tcl 8.4 in this locale is not useful. On OpenBSD 4.0, when an unsupported locale is specified, setlocale() succeeds but then nl_langinfo(CODESET) is "646". In this situation, some unit tests fail. On MirBSD 10, when an unsupported locale is specified, setlocale() succeeds but then nl_langinfo(CODESET) is "UTF-8". */ #if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET { const char *cs = nl_langinfo (CODESET); if (cs[0] == '\0' || strcmp (cs, "ASCII") == 0 || strcmp (cs, "646") == 0 || strcmp (cs, "UTF-8") == 0) return 1; } #endif #ifdef __CYGWIN__ /* On Cygwin, avoid locale names without encoding suffix, because the locale_charset() function relies on the encoding suffix. Note that LC_ALL is set on the command line. */ if (strchr (getenv ("LC_ALL"), '.') == NULL) return 1; #endif /* Check whether in the abbreviation of the second month, the second character (should be U+00E9: LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE) is only one byte long. This excludes the UTF-8 encoding. */ t.tm_year = 1975 - 1900; t.tm_mon = 2 - 1; t.tm_mday = 4; if (strftime (buf, sizeof (buf), "%b", &t) < 3 || buf[2] != 'v') return 1; #if !defined __BIONIC__ /* Bionic libc's 'struct lconv' is just a dummy. */ /* Check whether the decimal separator is a comma. On NetBSD 3.0 in the fr_FR.ISO8859-1 locale, localeconv()->decimal_point are nl_langinfo(RADIXCHAR) are both ".". */ if (localeconv () ->decimal_point[0] != ',') return 1; #endif return 0; } changequote([,])dnl ])]) if AC_TRY_EVAL([ac_link]) && test -s conftest$ac_exeext; then case "$host_os" in # Handle native Windows specially, because there setlocale() interprets # "ar" as "Arabic" or "Arabic_Saudi Arabia.1256", # "fr" or "fra" as "French" or "French_France.1252", # "ge"(!) or "deu"(!) as "German" or "German_Germany.1252", # "ja" as "Japanese" or "Japanese_Japan.932", # and similar. mingw*) # Test for the native Windows locale name. if (LC_ALL=French_France.1252 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr=French_France.1252 else # None found. gt_cv_locale_fr=none fi ;; *) # Setting LC_ALL is not enough. Need to set LC_TIME to empty, because # otherwise on Mac OS X 10.3.5 the LC_TIME=C from the beginning of the # configure script would override the LC_ALL setting. Likewise for # LC_CTYPE, which is also set at the beginning of the configure script. # Test for the usual locale name. if (LC_ALL=fr_FR LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr=fr_FR else # Test for the locale name with explicit encoding suffix. if (LC_ALL=fr_FR.ISO-8859-1 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr=fr_FR.ISO-8859-1 else # Test for the AIX, OSF/1, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD locale name. if (LC_ALL=fr_FR.ISO8859-1 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr=fr_FR.ISO8859-1 else # Test for the HP-UX locale name. if (LC_ALL=fr_FR.iso88591 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr=fr_FR.iso88591 else # Test for the Solaris 7 locale name. if (LC_ALL=fr LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr=fr else # None found. gt_cv_locale_fr=none fi fi fi fi fi ;; esac fi rm -fr conftest* ]) LOCALE_FR=$gt_cv_locale_fr AC_SUBST([LOCALE_FR]) ]) dnl Determine the name of a french locale with UTF-8 encoding. AC_DEFUN([gt_LOCALE_FR_UTF8], [ AC_REQUIRE([AM_LANGINFO_CODESET]) AC_CACHE_CHECK([for a french Unicode locale], [gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8], [ AC_LANG_CONFTEST([AC_LANG_SOURCE([ changequote(,)dnl #include <locale.h> #include <time.h> #if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET # include <langinfo.h> #endif #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> struct tm t; char buf[16]; int main () { /* On BeOS and Haiku, locales are not implemented in libc. Rather, libintl imitates locale dependent behaviour by looking at the environment variables, and all locales use the UTF-8 encoding. */ #if !(defined __BEOS__ || defined __HAIKU__) /* Check whether the given locale name is recognized by the system. */ # if (defined _WIN32 || defined __WIN32__) && !defined __CYGWIN__ /* On native Windows, setlocale(category, "") looks at the system settings, not at the environment variables. Also, when an encoding suffix such as ".65001" or ".54936" is specified, it succeeds but sets the LC_CTYPE category of the locale to "C". */ if (setlocale (LC_ALL, getenv ("LC_ALL")) == NULL || strcmp (setlocale (LC_CTYPE, NULL), "C") == 0) return 1; # else if (setlocale (LC_ALL, "") == NULL) return 1; # endif /* Check whether nl_langinfo(CODESET) is nonempty and not "ASCII" or "646". On Mac OS X 10.3.5 (Darwin 7.5) in the fr_FR locale, nl_langinfo(CODESET) is empty, and the behaviour of Tcl 8.4 in this locale is not useful. On OpenBSD 4.0, when an unsupported locale is specified, setlocale() succeeds but then nl_langinfo(CODESET) is "646". In this situation, some unit tests fail. */ # if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET { const char *cs = nl_langinfo (CODESET); if (cs[0] == '\0' || strcmp (cs, "ASCII") == 0 || strcmp (cs, "646") == 0) return 1; } # endif # ifdef __CYGWIN__ /* On Cygwin, avoid locale names without encoding suffix, because the locale_charset() function relies on the encoding suffix. Note that LC_ALL is set on the command line. */ if (strchr (getenv ("LC_ALL"), '.') == NULL) return 1; # endif /* Check whether in the abbreviation of the second month, the second character (should be U+00E9: LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE) is two bytes long, with UTF-8 encoding. */ t.tm_year = 1975 - 1900; t.tm_mon = 2 - 1; t.tm_mday = 4; if (strftime (buf, sizeof (buf), "%b", &t) < 4 || buf[1] != (char) 0xc3 || buf[2] != (char) 0xa9 || buf[3] != 'v') return 1; #endif #if !defined __BIONIC__ /* Bionic libc's 'struct lconv' is just a dummy. */ /* Check whether the decimal separator is a comma. On NetBSD 3.0 in the fr_FR.ISO8859-1 locale, localeconv()->decimal_point are nl_langinfo(RADIXCHAR) are both ".". */ if (localeconv () ->decimal_point[0] != ',') return 1; #endif return 0; } changequote([,])dnl ])]) if AC_TRY_EVAL([ac_link]) && test -s conftest$ac_exeext; then case "$host_os" in # Handle native Windows specially, because there setlocale() interprets # "ar" as "Arabic" or "Arabic_Saudi Arabia.1256", # "fr" or "fra" as "French" or "French_France.1252", # "ge"(!) or "deu"(!) as "German" or "German_Germany.1252", # "ja" as "Japanese" or "Japanese_Japan.932", # and similar. mingw*) # Test for the hypothetical native Windows locale name. if (LC_ALL=French_France.65001 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=French_France.65001 else # None found. gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=none fi ;; *) # Setting LC_ALL is not enough. Need to set LC_TIME to empty, because # otherwise on Mac OS X 10.3.5 the LC_TIME=C from the beginning of the # configure script would override the LC_ALL setting. Likewise for # LC_CTYPE, which is also set at the beginning of the configure script. # Test for the usual locale name. if (LC_ALL=fr_FR LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=fr_FR else # Test for the locale name with explicit encoding suffix. if (LC_ALL=fr_FR.UTF-8 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=fr_FR.UTF-8 else # Test for the Solaris 7 locale name. if (LC_ALL=fr.UTF-8 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=fr.UTF-8 else # None found. gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=none fi fi fi ;; esac fi rm -fr conftest* ]) LOCALE_FR_UTF8=$gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8 AC_SUBST([LOCALE_FR_UTF8]) ])