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Fix Occitan's locale data plural function (#2957)
* Fix the pluralRuleFunction of the locale data. * Added more descriptions about how to write it.
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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ The locale data should support [Locale Data APIs](https://github.com/yahoo/react
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of the react-intl library.
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It is recommended to start your custom locale data from this sample English
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locale data:
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locale data ([*](#plural-rules)):
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```javascript
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/*eslint eqeqeq: "off"*/
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@ -127,3 +127,95 @@ export default [
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]
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```
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## Notes
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### Plural Rules
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The function `pluralRuleFunction()` should return the key to proper string of
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a plural form(s). The purpose of the function is to provide key of translate
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strings of correct plural form according. The different forms are described in
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[CLDR's Plural Rules][cldr-plural-rules],
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[cldr-plural-rules]: http://cldr.unicode.org/index/cldr-spec/plural-rules
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#### Quick Overview on CLDR Rules
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Let's take English as an example.
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When you describe a number, you can be either describe it as:
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* Cardinals: 1st, 2nd, 3rd ... 11th, 12th ... 21st, 22nd, 23nd ....
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* Ordinals: 1, 2, 3 ...
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In any of these cases, the nouns will reflect the number with singular or plural
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form. For example:
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* in 0 days
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* in 1 day
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* in 2 days
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The `pluralRuleFunction` receives 2 parameters:
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* `e`: a string representation of the number. Such as, "`1`", "`2`", "`2.1`".
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* `a`: `true` if this is "cardinal" type of description. `false` for ordinal and other case.
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#### How you should write `pluralRuleFunction`
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The first rule to write pluralRuleFunction is never translate the output string
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into your language. [Plural Rules][cldr-plural-rules] specified you should use
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these as the return values:
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* "`zero`"
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* "`one`" (singular)
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* "`two`" (dual)
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* "`few`" (paucal)
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* "`many`" (also used for fractions if they have a separate class)
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* "`other`" (required—general plural form—also used if the language only has a single form)
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Again, we'll use English as the example here.
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Let's read the `return` statement in the pluralRuleFunction above:
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```javascript
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return a ? 1 == t && 11 != r ? "one" : 2 == t && 12 != r ? "two" : 3 == t && 13 != r ? "few" : "other" : 1 == e && l ? "one" : "other"
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```
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This nested ternary is hard to read. It basically means:
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```javascript
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// e: the number variable to examine
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// a: "true" if cardinals
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// l: "true" if the variable e has nothin after decimal mark (e.g. "1.0" would be false)
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// o: "true" if the variable e is an integer
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// t: the "ones" of the number. e.g. "3" for number "9123"
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// r: the "ones" and "tens" of the number. e.g. "23" for number "9123"
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if (a == true) {
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if (t == 1 && r != 11) {
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return "one"; // i.e. 1st, 21st, 101st, 121st ...
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} else if (t == 2 && r != 12) {
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return "two"; // i.e. 2nd, 22nd, 102nd, 122nd ...
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} else if (t == 3 && r != 13) {
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return "few"; // i.e. 3rd, 23rd, 103rd, 123rd ...
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} else {
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return "other"; // i.e. 4th, 11th, 12th, 24th ...
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}
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} else {
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if (e == 1 && l) {
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return "one"; // i.e. 1 day
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} else {
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return "other"; // i.e. 0 days, 2 days, 3 days
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}
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}
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```
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If your language, like French, do not have complicated cardinal rules, you may
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use the French's version of it:
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```javascript
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function (e, a) {
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return a ? 1 == e ? "one" : "other" : e >= 0 && e < 2 ? "one" : "other";
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}
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```
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If your language, like Chinese, do not have any pluralization rule at all you
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may use the Chinese's version of it:
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```javascript
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function (e, a) {
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return "other";
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}
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```
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@ -3,13 +3,8 @@
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export default [{
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locale: "oc",
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pluralRuleFunction: function(e, a) {
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var n = String(e).split("."),
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l = !n[1],
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o = Number(n[0]) == e,
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t = o && n[0].slice(-1),
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r = o && n[0].slice(-2);
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return a ? 1 == t && 11 != r ? "un" : 2 == t && 12 != r ? "dos" : 3 == t && 13 != r ? "pauc" : "autre" : 1 == e && l ? "un" : "autre"
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pluralRuleFunction: function (e, a) {
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return a ? 1 == e ? "one" : "other" : e >= 0 && e < 2 ? "one" : "other";
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},
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fields: {
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year: {
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