16.5.15.7 Preparing Shell Scripts for the printf_gettext approach

Preparing a shell script for internationalization is conceptually similar to the steps described in Preparing Program Sources. The concrete steps for shell scripts with this approach are as follows.

  1. Set and export the TEXTDOMAIN and TEXTDOMAINDIR environment variables. Usually TEXTDOMAIN is the package or program name, and TEXTDOMAINDIR is the absolute pathname corresponding to $prefix/share/locale, where $prefix is the installation location.
    TEXTDOMAIN=@PACKAGE@
    export TEXTDOMAIN
    TEXTDOMAINDIR=@LOCALEDIR@
    export TEXTDOMAINDIR
    
  2. Prepare the strings for translation, as described in Preparing Translatable Strings.
  3. Simplify translatable strings so that they don’t contain command substitution ("`...`" or "$(...)"), variable access with defaulting (like ${variable-default}), access to positional arguments (like $0, $1, ...) or highly volatile shell variables (like $?). This can always be done through simple local code restructuring. For example,
    echo "Usage: $0 [OPTION] FILE..."
    

    becomes

    program_name=$0
    echo "Usage: $program_name [OPTION] FILE..."
    

    Similarly,

    echo "Remaining files: `ls | wc -l`"
    

    becomes

    filecount="`ls | wc -l`"
    echo "Remaining files: $filecount"
    
  4. For each translatable string, change the output command ‘echo’ or ‘$echo’ to ‘gettext’ (if the string contains no references to shell variables) or to ‘printf_gettext’ (if it refers to shell variables), followed by a no-argument ‘echo’ command (to account for the terminating newline). Similarly, for cases with plural handling, replace a conditional ‘echo’ command with an invocation of ‘ngettext’ or ‘printf_ngettext’, followed by a no-argument ‘echo’ command.

    When doing this, you also need to replace the references to shell variables with format string directives (see Shell Format Strings), so that the ‘eval_gettext’ function receives the translatable string before the variable values are substituted into it. For example,

    echo "Remaining files: $filecount"
    

    becomes

    printf_gettext "Remaining files: %u." "$filecount"; echo
    

    If the output command is not ‘echo’, you can make it use ‘echo’ nevertheless, through the use of backquotes. However, note that inside backquotes, backslashes must be doubled to be effective (because the backquoting eats one level of backslashes). For example, assuming that ‘error’ is a shell function that signals an error,

    error "file not found: $filename"
    

    is first transformed into

    error "`echo \"file not found: \$filename\"`"
    

    which then becomes

    error "`printf_gettext \"file not found: %s\" \"\$filename\"`"