by using QLocale in KLocale and separating the date, time and numbers
conversion from translation KLocale actually gets extended locale
support from QLocale (which uses CLDR data v43 currently). translation
remains unaffected. for comparison here is the result of two function
calls the result of which should explain the whole change:
KLocale::allLanguagesList().size() = 669
KLocale::installedLanguages().size() = 68
the first number is locales Katie supports, the second being the
number of languages Katana is translated into
KSwitchLanguageDialog needs a rewrite but that is on the TODO
also copyrighting KCatalog to me because I rewrote it, for reference:
881b47b8ea
KCalendarSystem gets the middle finger - batteries not included for date
and time. extra calendar systems can, but are unlikely to be, supported
in the future
Signed-off-by: Ivailo Monev <xakepa10@gmail.com>
interestingly QLocale is not used for many things but that is about to
change, Katie uses it a lot internally (e.g. for QDateTime formatting
and such) so instead of bolting a calendar system on top of KLocale
perhaps a QLocale wrapped around in KLocale will fit the general idea
of using QLocale in widgets when necessary (as does QCalendarWidget).
that however means no way to specify a calendar system (in general,
other than changing the widgets locale itself) but the QDateTime and
related classes are tied to gregorian calendar already - the system
time itself carries no information about the calendar and any
conversions from one calendar to another are basically made up stuff
(there is the time zone thing ofcourse but that is not a calendar)
another interesting thing to note is that KLocale was written such that
it is read-write - changing the date formats for example is possible
because there are public KLocale methods for that.
Signed-off-by: Ivailo Monev <xakepa10@gmail.com>