09-04-2009
You are right, this thread isn't about the standard and you indeed provided an interesting use case where quoting the curly braces has an effect.
It does because quotes are themselves quoted and thus propagated to the exec command.
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ecppl(1) Tntnet users guide ecppl(1)
NAME
ecppl - language-extractor for ecpp
SYNOPSIS
ecppl [-I dir] [-ln] [-o output-filename] ecpp-filename
DESCRIPTION
Ecppl is the language-extractor for ecpp. Ecpp - the template-language used with tntnet - supports internationalized applications. In
ecpp-templates a tag <i18n> changes the meaning of curly braces. A phrase, which is enclosed in curly braces, can be translated. At run-
time the phrase is looked up in a language-library. This mode can be quit with the tag </i18n>. Phrases must not have newlines or tabs.
Every phrase, which is marked as translatable, is extracted with ecppl and written to standard output or to a specified output-filename
line by line.
OPTIONS
-I dir Search include-files in directory. This option can be passed multiple times. All specified directories are searched in turn for
include-files.
-l Extract language-phrases (the default)
-n Extract non-language-phrases
-o filename
Specify output filename
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Tommi Makitalo <tommi@tntnet.org>.
SEE ALSO
tntnet(1), ecpp(7), ecppll(1).
Tntnet 2006-08-26 ecppl(1)