Solved translation of button texts
-
Hi there and thanks for your time.
I codes this very early in my main. function:
QTranslator trans; QString translationFile = QDir::currentPath() + qsl("/translations/qt_de.qm"); if( trans.load(translationFile)) if( QCoreApplication::installTranslator(&trans)) { qInfo() << "Successfully installed language file " << translationFile; return; } qCritical() << "failed to load translations " << translationFile;
and expected, that Message box buttons and wizard buttons should be in german. But they are not. What did I wrong?
(the program logs support, of course ...)Best regards
Holger -
Hi all - and thanks a lot to all who wanted to help.
I write this as a final note, because I consider this as solved. My solution looks now like this:
QTranslator* pTrans = new QTranslator(); if( pTrans->load(translationFile, path)) if( QCoreApplication::installTranslator(pTrans)) { qInfo() << "Successfully installed language file " << translationFile; return; } qCritical() << "failed to load translations " << translationFile;
So the QTranslator, which is "installed" into the application does never run out of scope. One might consider this a leak - but as I do not intend to offer a switch of language I guess for me this is OK.
So the take away for everyone who has similar problems: let your QTranslate survive, then it will work for you!Best regards
HolgerPS: This will translate MessageBox buttons as well as Wizard buttons. It does not work for File dialogs which are provided from the OS.
-
Hi,
Can you show the code you use where the text is not translated ?
-
Well, showing a QMessageBox or a QWizard has no ui language specific code, right? So anyhow my expectation was that there is „abbrechen“ instead of „cancel“.
But if you think it could help I will post some code tomorrow.
Thx and regards
Holger -
A minimal buildable example is always a good idea.
You should also add the Qt version you are using as well as OS you are running.
-
@HoMa
You should read the following:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31533019/how-to-translate-the-buttons-in-qmessagebox
https://forum.qt.io/topic/84194/qmessagebox-buttons-translation-not-workingSeems to depend on your exact language.
-
@SGaist OK - so... I created a new QWidget project and in the Wizard to do so I chose German (Germany) as the desired language. With this code:
void MainWindow::on_pushButton_clicked() { QMessageBox::question(this, "Titel", "Eine Nachricht"); }
I get a message box with "yes" and "no" buttons- and not "Ja" and "Nein".
if I add the following code to main.cpp and main function, I get the correct message box:
QTranslator trans; QString translationFile = QDir::currentPath() + "/translations/qt_de.qm"; if( trans.load(translationFile)) if( QCoreApplication::installTranslator(&trans)) { qInfo() << "Successfully installed language file " << translationFile; } else { qCritical() << "failed to install translations " << translationFile; } else qCritical() << "failed to load translations " << translationFile;
However - in my program this does not work. Even with the code shown above running with success, the texts stay with "yes" etc.
A difference I found to the generated example was the following lines in the .pro file:
TRANSLATIONS += \ testGermanQt_de_DE.ts
However - this did nothing to my project :(
What else could it be?Best regards
Holger -
What does that file contain ?
Can you show the two main.cpp you have now ?
-
Hi!
Actually the file contains as good as nothing:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <!DOCTYPE TS> <TS version="2.1" language="testGermanQt_de_DE"></TS>
The main of the sample app looks like this
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { QApplication a(argc, argv); QTranslator trans; QString translationFile = QDir::currentPath() + "/translations/qt_de.qm"; if( trans.load(translationFile)) if( QCoreApplication::installTranslator(&trans)) { qInfo() << "Successfully installed language file " << translationFile; } else { qCritical() << "failed to install translations " << translationFile; } else qCritical() << "failed to load translations " << translationFile; MainWindow w; w.show(); return a.exec(); }
My own main.cpp is similar, with some app specific extra stuff:
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { QApplication a(argc, argv); a.setOrganizationName(qsl("xxx")); // used to store our settings a.setApplicationName(qsl("xxx")); QLocale locale(QLocale::German, QLocale::LatinScript, QLocale::Germany); QLocale::setDefault(locale); // do before starting the event loop setGermanUi(); initLogging(); LOG_CALL; qInfo() << "DKV2 started " << QDate::currentDate().toString(qsl("dd.MM.yyyy")) << qsl("-") << QTime::currentTime().toString(); init_DKDBStruct(); // let propose a db to mainwindow appConfig::setCurrentDb(getInitialDbFile()); #ifndef QT_DEBUG QSplashScreen* splash = doSplash(); // do only AFTER having an app. object splash->show(); QTimer::singleShot(3500, splash, &QWidget::close); #endif MainWindow w; w.show(); int ret = a.exec(); qInfo() << "app finished"; return ret; }
Do you have a glue?
Thx for your efforts and best regards
Holger
PS: setGermanUi() does the QTranslation stuff that is also in the first main.cpp
PPS: I now found, that the sample app, that show the right button texts for the "yes no" message box shows englisch buttons for the file open dialog. That is pretty strange as my system is german ... -
@JonB Thx for your reply. As described I have a working program and one where it does not. And I fail to see the difference. In both cases it is de_de - german for germany. :) this should be easier then the case from your link ;)
regards
Holger -
How do you expect that something gets translated when the ts file does not contain any translations at all?
-
@Christian-Ehrlicher You missed one thing: he is loading Qt's language file. The empty file here has no current role.
@HoMa said in translation of button texts:
QString translationFile = QDir::currentPath() + qsl("/translations/qt_de.qm");
I just noticed: what is that
qsl
? It looks like the main difference between the example that is working and your own application. -
@SGaist said in translation of button texts:
The empty file here has no current role.
Are we sure he loads the correct qt language file and not the one he posted?
-
@SGaist Sorry for not explaining or removing it. It is just a QStringLiteral makro... as the load is successfull this is probalby no problem.
Best regards
Holger -
@Christian-Ehrlicher The qm file comes with Qt: it is originally called qtbase_de.qm, I guess ...
-
How big is the qm file? Are you sure it contains any translations?
-
@Christian-Ehrlicher I had the same Idea ;) it is a bit more then 200k - and it is the same that you get when building Qt\5.15.1\Src\qttranslations in the distribution.
Best regards
Holger -
Ok, just wanted to be sure.
I would suggest you to create a small test example which loads the qm file from disk providing a full path. Then see if it works. A simple main.cpp would be enough.
Did you build Qt on your own? -
@Christian-Ehrlicher I actually did exactly that. I create an empty widget project, added two buttons to the form. In one I opened a Yes No Message box and found the texts to be OK (ja/nein). However: the file open dialog was a disapointment: this also has englisch texts. No Idea where to go from here...
best regards
Holger -
The file open dialog comes from the os (when you use the static versions) - there is nothing Qt can do against it.
-
@HoMa
I was going to say similar to @Christian-Ehrlicher : I don't think you've ever shown which call you are making for " the file open dialog " ? Though even the static ones seem to depend on which OS, which I don't think you've said either?
https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qfiledialog.html#getOpenFileNameOn Windows, and macOS, this static function will use the native file dialog and not a QFileDialog.
Depending on which call you want to use, you could try the corresponding Qt dialog, and see what you think of it, with a
QFileDialog
instance andQFileDialog::DontUseNativeDialog
set?EDIT I happened just now to come across https://forum.qt.io/topic/74854/change-qfiledialog-buttons-text/9 :
BTW: changing the cancel button works (on WIndows) if you do not use the native dialog:
OpenFile.setOption(QFileDialog::DontUseNativeDialog);
OpenFile.setLabelText(QFileDialog::Reject, tr("Cancell change"));