kopia lustrzana https://github.com/hholzgra/maposmatic/
e2ba92f014
so the Transifex related sync scripts are no longer needed |
||
---|---|---|
.tx | ||
ci-scripts@4c472b586f | ||
documentation | ||
scripts | ||
support | ||
talks | ||
www | ||
.bowerrc | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
AUTHORS | ||
COPYING | ||
INSTALL | ||
README | ||
bower.json | ||
manage.py |
README
MapOSMatic is a web application to generate maps of cities or towns, including index of streets, from OpenStreetMap data. It is made of two components: * maposmatic, the web front-end. An application written using the Django framework allows to submit and visualize map rendering jobs. The rendering is done in the background by a daemon; * ocitysmap, the back-end that generates the map. It is available as a Python module, used both by the maposmatic daemon (above) and by a sample command line application. This source tree contains maposmatic, the web front-end. It is licensed under under GNU AGPLv3 (GNU Affero General Public License 3.0). Translation =========== The .po files are stored in www/locale/<locale>/LC_MESSAGES/. To generate or update a .po file: cd www/ ./manage.py makemessages --no-wrap -a # for all locales or cd www/ ./manage.py makemessages --no-wrap -l xx_XX # for one locale Note: Django 1.3 is needed for the --no-wrap option. Then, edit the .po file manually, or using a graphical tool such as poedit (available in the Debian/Ubuntu package of the same name). Once done, don't forget to compile the .po file into an .mo file using: ./manage.py compilemessages WARNING: There is a known bug in Django makemessages 1.2.x (and maybe other versions are affected as well): percent (%) signs in {%blocktrans%} tags are doubled (%%). This defeats the matching of a msgid against source code. As a workaround, %% signs in .po files must be replaced by single % signs. This is typically needed for the Wikipedia URL pointing to the Hacker culture. In order to workaround this bug, we recommend running: find locale/ -name 'django.po' | xargs sed -i 's/%%/%/g' after the execution of the makemessages command.