Since we switched to Template Toolkit we don't need to stick with the
sufix we used for HTML::Template::Pro.
This patch changes the occurences of '.tmpl' in favour of '.tt'.
To test:
- Apply the patch
- Install koha, and verify that every page can be accesed
Regards
To+
P.S. a followup will remove the glue code.
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chrisc@catalyst.net.nz>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Druart <jonathan.druart@biblibre.com>
Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@gmail.com>
Fix syntax errors preventing the scripts misc/translator/text-extract2.pl
and misc/cronjobs/thirdparty/TalkingTech_itiva_inbound.pl from compiling.
Remove misc/migration_tools/build6xx.pl entirely since it refers to
columns that no longer exist in the Koha database, and has seemingly
had broken encoding since Koha switched from CVS to git (or before!).
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chris@bigballofwax.co.nz>
Signed-off-by: Paul Poulain <paul.poulain@biblibre.com>
word order is too different than the word order of the target language to
yield meaningful translations.
The new scripts use a different translation file format (namely standard
gettext-style PO files).
This seems to reasonably work (e.g., producing an empty en_GB translation
then installing seems to not corrupt the "translated" files), but it likely
will still contain some bugs. There is also little documentation, but try
to run perldoc on the .p[lm] files to see what's there. There are also some
spurious warnings (both from bugs in the new scripts and from buggy third-
party Locale::PO module).
warnings aren't pedantic because (1) if it's a templating directive, it
might expand into something containing a real < and/or >, and (2) if it
contains >, the browser will close the current tag, and (3) if it contains
< and the browser knows what "SGML closed start tags" are (e.g., Mozilla),
the browser will also close the current tag.
tags like "<b foo" at the end of the file seems to be discarded silently by
Mozilla, even in quirks mode. We now display a warning for these (in case
these ever come up by accident).