问题
I have an android app and I want to translate to Serbian and I want both variants of the language: with Latin letters and with Cyrillic letters.
I tried this variants: value-sr-rRS-Latn , value-sr-Latn , value-sr-rRS-Cyrl , value-sr-Cyrl
but not of that is working.
I get this error: android-apt-compiler: [NAMEOFAPP] invalid resource directory name: [path]\res/value-sr-rRS-Latn
On Android documentation about res dirs and Locale I can't find this option.
Can I make 2 dirs with 2 variants of the language? And how?
Thank you
回答1:
I just tested Android localization and I found out that you can use any arbitrary region and it will work.
Add a folder to the project with name like values-sr-rZZ
where ZZ is a fictitious region which never existed.
Then add the following code to the Application class, I got it from here and slightly changed:
public class MainApplication extends Application {
@Override
public void onCreate() {
super.onCreate();
Resources res = this.getResources();
Configuration conf = res.getConfiguration();
boolean isLatinAlphabet = PreferenceManager.getDefaultSharedPreferences(this)... // get a value from the application settings
if(conf.locale.getLanguage().equals("sr") && isLatinAlphabet) {
conf.locale = new Locale("sr", "ZZ");
res.updateConfiguration(conf, res.getDisplayMetrics());
}
}
}
In this code the locale will be changed only if the user has chosen the serbian language as the default (conf.locale.getLanguage().equals("sr")
) and also checked some checkbox in the app preferences (isLatinAlphabet
).
You can use a different condition and change it as you like.
Also such dynamic way of changing language can have bugs with menu items on older devices, but it isn't reproduced on newer devices.
回答2:
Since Android 7.0, Serbian with Latin script has officially been included. values-sr
is still used for the Cyrillic script, and values-b+sr+Latn
is used for the Latin script.
values-sr
for Cyrillicvalues-b+sr+Latn
for Latin
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15518597/how-to-include-2-variants-of-serbian-language-with-latin-letters-and-with-cyril