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Full Discussion: bash and languages
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting bash and languages Post 302202907 by era on Friday 6th of June 2008 03:23:59 AM
Old 06-06-2008
That's the idea, yes. Many of the standard Unix tools only have machine-readable output in the first place, so the effects should be minor. Mainly, anything to do with sort order, currency formatting, human-readable number formatting, date and time formats, measurements etc. is sensitive to locale settings, but many scripts don't touch these things much.

Globally clobbering the user's locale is not such a great idea, actually, so it might be better if you use LC_ALL=C only for those commands which actually require it (so grep "$regex" "$file" | LC_ALL=C sort | uniq >file for example). That way, they still see output in their own language if there is an error message from grep, for instance (provided of course that their copy of grep actually has a localized message catalog).

Google a bit for i18n if you need more information about internationalization and localization.

Last edited by era; 06-06-2008 at 04:34 AM.. Reason: Maybe don't clobber LC_ALL globally after all
 

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LIBBASH(7)							  libbash Manual							LIBBASH(7)

NAME
libbash -- A bash shared libraries package. DESCRIPTION
libbash is a package that enables bash dynamic-like shared libraries. Actually its a tool for managing bash scripts whose functions you may want to load and use in scripts of your own. It contains a 'dynamic loader' for the shared libraries ( ldbash(1)), a configuration tool (ldbashconfig(8)), and some libraries. Using ldbash(1) you are able to load loadable bash libraries, such as getopts(1) and hashstash(1). A bash shared library that can be loaded using ldbash(1) must answer 4 requirments: 1. It must be installed in $LIBBASH_PREFIX/lib/bash (default is /usr/lib/bash). 2. It must contain a line that begins with '#EXPORT='. That line will contain (after the '=') a list of functions that the library exports. I.e. all the function that will be usable after loading that library will be listed in that line. 3. It must contain a line that begins with '#REQUIRE='. That line will contain (after the '=') a list of bash libraries that are required for our library. I.e. every bash library that is in use in our bash library must be listed there. 4. The library must be listed (For more information, see ldbashconfig(8)). Basic guidelines for writing library of your own: 1. Be aware, that your library will be actually sourced. So, basically, it should contain (i.e define) only functions. 2. Try to declare all variables intended for internal use as local. 3. Global variables and functions that are intended for internal use (i.e are not defined in '#EXPORT=') should begin with: __<library_name>_ For example, internal function myfoosort of hashstash library should be named as __hashstash_myfoosort This helps to avoid conflicts in global name space when using libraries that come from different vendors. 4. See html manual for full version of this guide. AUTHORS
Hai Zaar <haizaar@haizaar.com> Gil Ran <ril@ran4.net> SEE ALSO
ldbash(1), ldbashconfig(8), getopts(1), hashstash(1) colors(1) messages(1) urlcoding(1) locks(1) Linux Epoch Linux
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