Get a string that is representative of the characters needed to render a particular language.
The sample text may be a pangram, but is not necessarily. It is chosen to be demonstrative of normal text in the language, as well as exposing font feature requirements unique to the language. It is suitable for use as sample text in a font selection dialog.
If language
is %NULL, the default language as found by
[funcPango
.Language.get_default] is used.
If Pango does not have a sample string for language,
the classic
"The quick brown fox..." is returned. This can be detected by
comparing the returned pointer value to that returned for (non-existent)
language code "xx". That is, compare to:
pango_language_get_sample_string (pango_language_from_string ("xx"))
Determines the scripts used to to write language
.
If nothing is known about the language tag language,
or if language
is %NULL, then %NULL is returned.
The list of scripts returned starts with the script that the
language uses most and continues to the one it uses least.
The value num_script
points at will be set to the number
of scripts in the returned array (or zero if %NULL is returned).
Most languages use only one script for writing, but there are some that use two (Latin and Cyrillic for example), and a few use three (Japanese for example). Applications should not make any assumptions on the maximum number of scripts returned though, except that it is positive if the return value is not %NULL, and it is a small number.
The [methodPango
.Language.includes_script] function uses this
function internally.
Note: while the return value is declared as PangoScript
, the
returned values are from the GUnicodeScript
enumeration, which
may have more values. Callers need to handle unknown values.
Determines if script
is one of the scripts used to
write language
.
The returned value is conservative; if nothing is known about
the language tag language,
%TRUE will be returned, since, as
far as Pango knows, script
might be used to write language
.
This routine is used in Pango's itemization process when determining if a supplied language tag is relevant to a particular section of text. It probably is not useful for applications in most circumstances.
This function uses [methodPango
.Language.get_scripts] internally.
Checks if a language tag matches one of the elements in a list of language ranges.
A language tag is considered to match a range in the list if the range is '*', the range is exactly the tag, or the range is a prefix of the tag, and the character after it in the tag is '-'.
a list of language ranges, separated by ';', ':', ',', or space characters. Each element must either be '*', or a RFC 3066 language range canonicalized as by [funcPango
.Language.from_string]
Gets the RFC-3066 format string representing the given language tag.
Returns (transfer none): a string representing the language tag
Convert a language tag to a PangoLanguage
.
The language tag must be in a RFC-3066 format. PangoLanguage
pointers
can be efficiently copied (copy the pointer) and compared with other
language tags (compare the pointer.)
This function first canonicalizes the string by converting it to lowercase, mapping '_' to '-', and stripping all characters other than letters and '-'.
Use [funcPango
.Language.get_default] if you want to get the
PangoLanguage
for the current locale of the process.
a string representing a language tag
Returns the PangoLanguage
for the current locale of the process.
On Unix systems, this is the return value is derived from
setlocale (LC_CTYPE, NULL)
, and the user can
affect this through the environment variables LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE or
LANG (checked in that order). The locale string typically is in
the form lang_COUNTRY, where lang is an ISO-639 language code, and
COUNTRY is an ISO-3166 country code. For instance, sv_FI for
Swedish as written in Finland or pt_BR for Portuguese as written in
Brazil.
On Windows, the C library does not use any such environment variables, and setting them won't affect the behavior of functions like ctime(). The user sets the locale through the Regional Options in the Control Panel. The C library (in the setlocale() function) does not use country and language codes, but country and language names spelled out in English. However, this function does check the above environment variables, and does return a Unix-style locale string based on either said environment variables or the thread's current locale.
Your application should call setlocale(LC_ALL, "")
for the user
settings to take effect. GTK does this in its initialization
functions automatically (by calling gtk_set_locale()).
See the setlocale() manpage for more details.
Note that the default language can change over the life of an application.
Also note that this function will not do the right thing if you use per-thread locales with uselocale(). In that case, you should just call pango_language_from_string() yourself.
Returns the list of languages that the user prefers.
The list is specified by the PANGO_LANGUAGE
or LANGUAGE
environment variables, in order of preference. Note that this
list does not necessarily include the language returned by
[funcPango
.Language.get_default].
When choosing language-specific resources, such as the sample
text returned by [methodPango
.Language.get_sample_string],
you should first try the default language, followed by the
languages returned by this function.
The
PangoLanguage
structure is used to represent a language.PangoLanguage
pointers can be efficiently copied and compared with each other.