view etc/HELLO @ 44604:4702b23921b4

Avoid doubly tagging parse.y when both parse.c and parse.y are given on the command line, in either order. * etags.c (find_entries): Delete tags previously obtained from file xxx.c's #line directives when parsing file xxx.y. This is generally done for automatically generated files containing #line directives. This handles the case when xxx.y is tagged before xxx.c, and the entries of xxx.c pointing to xxx.y should be discarded. (language): Added the metasource member. Initializers changed. (invalidate_nodes): New function. (readline): Discard lines after having found a #line directive pointing to an already tagged file. This handles the case when xxx.y is tagged before xxx.c, and the entries of xxx.c pointing to xxx.y should be discarded. (fdesc): New structure for keeping track of input files. (fdesc): Remove `file' member (a string) and use instead a pointer to a file description structure. (curfile, curfiledir, curtagfname, curlang, nocharno, forced_lang): Global variables removed in favor of fdhead and curfdp, pointers to file description strucures. (longopts, main, print_help): Use the CTAGS conditional to include or exclude options that work on etags or ctags only. (process_file, find_entries, pfnote, add_node, put_entries, readline): Use fdhead and curfdp. (process_file, find_entries): Do not take an arg string, all callers changed. * etags.c (longopts, print_help, main): Test CTAGS to disallow options that are not right for either etags or ctags. * etags.c (number_len, total_size_of_entries): Define them also in CTAGS mode, because gcc does not compile all refs away.
author Francesco Potortì <pot@gnu.org>
date Mon, 15 Apr 2002 14:18:47 +0000
parents 3c634255d649
children c242ad7faaa8 643cc054cb27
line wrap: on
line source

This is a list of ways to say hello in various languages.
Its purpose is to illustrate a number of scripts.

---------------------------------------------------------
Amharic	($(3"c!<!N"^(B)	$(3!A!,!>(B
Arabic			(38R(47d(3T!JSa(4W(3W(B
Czech (,Bh(Besky)		Dobr,B}(B den
Danish (Dansk)		Hej, Goddag
English			Hello
Esperanto		Saluton (E,C6(Bo,C~(Ban,Cx(Bo ,Cf(Biu,C<(Ba,C}(Bde)
Estonian		Tere, Tervist
FORTRAN			PROGRAM
Finnish (Suomi)		Hei
French (Fran,Ag(Bais)	Bonjour, Salut
German (Deutsch Nord)	Guten Tag
German (Deutsch S,A|(Bd)	Gr,A|_(B Gott
Greek (,FEkkgmij\(B)	,FCei\(B ,Fsar(B
Hebrew			,Hylem(B
Hindi			$(6!F!L4"Wv#!Bv%!a0"W!B!a1(B, $(6!F!L4"Wv#$(5!3v#$(6!Z0"W$(5!3$(6!Z1!O(B $(6!j(B
Italian (Italiano)	Ciao, Buon giorno
Lao((1>RJRERG(B)            (1JP:R-04U1(B, 0(1"m1c0Ki1b*!04U1(B
Maltese (Malti)		Bon,Cu(Bu, Sa,C11(Ba
Nederlands, Vlaams	Hallo, Dag
Norwegian (Norsk)	Hei, God dag
Polish			Dzie,Bq(B dobry! Cze,B6f(B!
Russian (,L@caaZXY(B)	,L7T`PRabRcYbU(B!
Slovak (slovensky)	Dobr,B}(B de,Br(B
Slovenian (sloven,B9h(Bina)	Pozdravljeni!
Spanish (Espa,Aq(Bol)	,A!(BHola!
Swedish (Svenska)	Hej, Goddag
Thai (,T@RIRd7B(B)		,TJ0GQ1J04U1$0CQ1:(B, ,TJ0GQ1J04U10$h1P(B
Tibetan (4$(7"7r'"]0"7"]14"20"21!;4%P0"G#!"Q14"20"21!;(B)	4$(7"70"714$P0"!#C"Q1!;4"Er'"S0"E"S14"G0"G1!;4"70"714"2r'"[0"2"[1!;4"Dr'"[0"D"[14"#0"#14"G0"G1!>(B
Tigrigna ($(3"8#r!N"^(B)	$(3!Q!,!<"8(B
Turkish (T,M|(Brk,Mg(Be)	Merhaba
Vietnamese (Ti,1*(Bng Vi,1.(Bt)	Ch,1`(Bo b,1U(Bn

Japanese ($BF|K\8l(B)		$B$3$s$K$A$O(B, (I:]FAJ(B
Chinese ($AVPND(B,$AFUM(;0(B,$A::So(B)	$ADc:C(B
Cantonese ($(0GnM$(B,$(0N]0*Hd(B)		$(0*/=((B, $(0+$)p(B
Korean ($(CGQ1[(B)			$(C>H3gGO<<?d(B, $(C>H3gGO=J4O1n(B

Difference among chinese characters in GB, JIS, KSC, BIG5:
	GB   -- $AT*Fx(B  $A?*7"(B
	JIS  -- $B855$(B  $B3+H/(B
	KSC  -- $(Cj*Q((B  $(CKR[!(B
	BIG5 -- $(0&x86(B  $(0DeBv(B

Just for a test of JISX0212: $BqV$(DiQ(B (the second character is of JISX0212)