- The tests should be run in C locale, otherwise the plain get()
function uses the current locale, which will fail (e.g. running
LANG=nl ./libcalamareslocaletest returns the Dutch strings for
plain get, which isn't what we expect).
- sr@latin is still special.
- Require CMake 3.3 for the IN_LIST operator in if() statements
- It looks like Qt 5.12.2 (possibly earlier) supports a QLocale("eo")
so enable Esperanto if that Qt version or later is detected.
- While QObject::tr and gettext give us translations **most** of the
time via the translation mechanism, we sometimes have strings
embedded in configuration files that need to be shown to people
as well. Follow the .desktop style in handling this.
- A key's value **might** be translated; use `key[lang]` for the
translation into one of the languages that Calamares understands.
Code that expects a translated (human-readable) string in a configuration
file can use TranslatedString to collect all the translations of a
given key, so that it displays the right string from the configuration
when needed.
- Change to std::chrono::seconds wasn't tried against the (optional)
PythonQt bindings, leading to build failure. Reported by Phil (Manjaro).
FIXES#1210
- Need to create just one QApplication (subclass) with the right
parameters for the UI to work.
- If the UI is enabled and it's a View module, then show the widget
rather than running the jobs.
- The ViewManager needs branding information, which wasn't
initialized -- leading to crashes. Add -b option to give
a specific branding, and default to something take makes
sense when testing modules from the build directory.
- Allows the module to load; doesn't show the UI though.
- preservefiles generally needs to have the target filesystems
mounted, so that it can preserve to them; but you can also
configure it such that there is no need for mounted filesystems
(e.g. in OEM setup).
- Add an example line in CMakeLists.txt to show how that would be done.
- The mount module must happen before unpackfs because that (mount)
module sets up the root mount point (in /tmp) and some other
variables needed later.