Re: Date Format with month names in genitive case - your opinions?



In the Italian and French languages the nominative form is used in the full context date too.

In languages where the genitive form is used in full context, it is often written in nominative form (as an abbreviation) and generally in these cases it can't be considered an error (it won't break the application) whereas, using the genitive form for the month name is certainly a bad thing (we can say that it'll break the application).

So I agree with fios: I think that it is better to use the "O" modifier (%OB) for the genitive form (in the languages that uses it) while we should keep the %B for the nominative form.


David
-------- Original Message --------
On 19 apr 2017, 11:06, Fòram na Gàidhlig < fios foramnagaidhlig net> wrote:

From my language's point of view. The CLDR approach is what looks the
most sensible. Displaying "of April" as a standalone date would look
very weird in my language, and having the 'genitive' form displayed as
nominative would be the lesser of two evils.

For example:

June = An t-Ògmhios
18 June = 18mh dhen Ògmhios

So, depending on how it's coded, that would give us "dhen Ògmhios" or
"mh dhen Ògmhios" if the 'genitive' was used as a standalone date.



Sgrìobh Rafal Luzynski na leanas 18/04/2017 aig 23:19:
> Hello,
>
> I was told that GNOME i18n is the right place to discuss this issue
> because it gathers translators from more languages than any other
> place in this part of the net. The problem has been reported to GNOME
> bugzilla as bug 749206 [1] but in fact it's not a GNOME bug but glibc
> bug. [2]
>
> What is the issue: in many languages, mostly from eastern Europe,
> including my native language, a correct grammatical form of the month
> name when used in the full date context is genitive. A literal
> translation to English applying the same rule would be "18 of April".
> Also we still need the nominative case when the month name appears
> standalone (for example sometimes we just want to say "April").
>
> The proposed solution is to change strftime() function and anything
> that is backed by or compatible with strftime(): in glib2 the
> functions are g_date_time_format() and g_date_strftime(). These
> functions besides "%B" (full month name) should start supporting
> "%OB" (alternative month name). Also nl_langinfo() function would
> be modified: as now MON_1, MON_2, ..., MON_12 return the data to
> be used as the result of "%B" format specifiers the new set of
> constants ALTMON_1, ALTMON_2, ..., ALTMON_12 would be introduced
> to provide the data for "%OB" format specifier.
>
> This exact solution:
>
> - has been implemented in *BSD systems (FreeBSD, OpenBSD etc.) in
> 1990s;
> - is also supported in Apple systems (OS X and iOS) except exposing
> ALTMON_n constants in nl_langinfo();
> - has been accepted by POSIX as the future change of the
> specification but has not yet released it. [3]
>
> Now the controversial part: in all those solutions nl_langinfo(MON_n)
> and strftime("%B") return the genitive case of the month name and
> the newly introduced nl_langinfo(ALTMON_n) and strftime("%OB") return
> the nominative form. It's controversial because now in Linux
> nl_langinfo(MON_n) and strftime("%B") return the nominative case
> while the other case is simply not supported. This would require
> somehow incompatible change. (Note: the backward compatibility feature
> can be introduced.)
>
> Also it should be emphasized that "genitive and nominative" is
> a little unprecise misleading. Correctly it should be named "the
> correct form when using the month in the full date context, together
> with the day number" vs. "standalone, without the day number".
> For example, the languages which have the genitive form but don't
> use it in the full date context would use their own proper form
> instead.
>
> Why did BSD, Apple, and POSIX choose that counterintuitive approach?
> One should make a bigger survey before answering this question but
> I believe that it's because the date formats are more often used to
> format the date with the day of the month number than to format the
> month name standalone. This change would fix all applications which
> display the dates without any change in their source code so I think
> it is good even if it would break those few applications which
> display the month names standalone. By "break" I mean "they would
> start displaying the month names in an incorrect form (similarly
> as all other applications display the month names incorrectly now)".
>
> Note that a similar approach has been chosen by ICU and CLDR with
> their own date formats: MMMM represents the month name in a genitive
> case while LLLL is used when they need a nominative case explicitly.
>
> glibc maintainers hesitate to accept this solution. I believe they
> need some feedback from the people who actually are going to use this
> feature. So far they agreed [4] to accept this solution but only if
> it is documented as the new experimental feature and if it is not
> yet documented which of "%B" and "%OB" is genitive (full date format)
> and which is nominative (standalone). The idea was that it should
> be decided by the language communities which is which. Also sometimes
> they suggest that BSD implementation is wrong and should be switched.
>
> So, language communities, what is your opinion about it?
>
> GNOME is a multiplatform project, it is intended to work correctly
> on Linux but also Windows, OS X, BSD and many other platforms. I think
> it will be easier for the application developers if Linux follows
> other platforms as well as the future POSIX specification.
>
> You may be also interested in seeing my slides about the issue: [5]
>
> Best regards,
>
> Rafal
>
>
> [1] https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749206
> [2] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10871
> [3] http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=258
> [4] https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2016-12/msg01103.html
> [5]
> https://rluzynski.fedorapeople.org/slides/2017-01-27-DevConf.cz/GenitiveMonths-updated.pdf
> _______________________________________________
> gnome-i18n mailing list
> gnome-i18n gnome org
> https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-i18n
>

--
-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (MingW32)
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=fcOW
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
_______________________________________________
gnome-i18n mailing list
gnome-i18n gnome org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-i18n


[Date Prev][Date Next]   [Thread Prev][Thread Next]   [Thread Index] [Date Index] [Author Index]