LRM html Support

From Lingoport Wiki
Revision as of 22:59, 31 August 2017 by Llawson (talk | contribs) (Example .html or .htm File or a file extension that uses the html parser type)
Jump to: navigation, search

Example .html or .htm File or a file extension that uses the html parser type

<html>
  <p>This is some text in an html file</p>
</html>

html parser type

valid html syntax

Files that use the html are expected to have valid html syntax

htm/html uses the html parser type

When defining a project with .html or .htm extension, there is no need to define a <parser-type> as the html parser will always be used.

unique file extension needs to define html parser type

If a unique file extension is a valid html file, then the <parser-type> should be html

LRM interaction with html parser type files

Prep kit files are always full file

If the checksum of the base file has changed then the file will be sent out in the next prep kit for all target locales.

Number of keys in file is 1

All files that are parsed using the html parser have only 1 key called key1. The value that corresponds to this key is the entire html type file.

Example Project Definition File

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"?>
<lrmconf>
 <model-version>2.0.11</model-version>
 <project-name>DemoRxml</project-name>
 <project-desc>This is a sample LRM Project definition file, configured for Globalyzer Rxml resource files</project-desc>
 <group-name>acme</group-name>
 <top-level-dir>C:\acme\source</top-level-dir>
 <detect-errors>
   <missed-trans-error>0</missed-trans-error>
   <parameter-mismatch-error>1</parameter-mismatch-error>
 </detect-errors>
 <track-back-locale>br</track-back-locale>
 <pseudo-locale>eo</pseudo-locale>
 <target-locales>
   <locale>es_MX</locale>
   <locale>fr_CA</locale>
   <locale>fr_FR</locale>
 </target-locales>
 <default-locale>en_US</default-locale>
 <resource-extensions>
   <resource-extension>
     <!-- parser-type not needed since .html is a standard LRM extension that maps to the html parser type -->
     <extension>html</extension>
     <file-name-pattern>*-l_c_v</file-name-pattern>
     <use-pattern-on-dflt-locale>0</use-pattern-on-dflt-locale>
     <file-location-pattern>l_c_v</file-location-pattern>
     <use-location-pattern-on-dflt-locale>1</use-location-pattern-on-dflt-locale>
     <base-file-encoding>UTF-8</base-file-encoding>
     <localized-file-encoding>UTF-8</localized-file-encoding>
     <parameter-regex-pattern></parameter-regex-pattern>
   </resource-extension>
   <resource-extension>
     <!-- parser-type not needed since .htm is a standard LRM extension that maps to the html parser type -->
     <extension>htm</extension>
     <file-name-pattern>*-l_c_v</file-name-pattern>
     <use-pattern-on-dflt-locale>0</use-pattern-on-dflt-locale>
     <file-location-pattern>l_c_v</file-location-pattern>
     <use-location-pattern-on-dflt-locale>1</use-location-pattern-on-dflt-locale>
     <base-file-encoding>UTF-8</base-file-encoding>
     <localized-file-encoding>UTF-8</localized-file-encoding>
     <parameter-regex-pattern></parameter-regex-pattern>
   </resource-extension>
   <resource-extension>
     <!-- parser-type is required because .myext is not a standard LRM extension -->
     <extension>myext</extension>
     <parser-type>html</parser-type>
     <file-name-pattern>*-l_c_v</file-name-pattern>
     <use-pattern-on-dflt-locale>0</use-pattern-on-dflt-locale>
     <file-location-pattern>l_c_v</file-location-pattern>
     <use-location-pattern-on-dflt-locale>1</use-location-pattern-on-dflt-locale>
     <base-file-encoding>UTF-8</base-file-encoding>
     <localized-file-encoding>UTF-8</localized-file-encoding>
     <parameter-regex-pattern></parameter-regex-pattern>
   </resource-extension>
 </resource-extensions>
 <dirset>
  <includes>
    <include-dir-file>**/**</include-dir-file>
  </includes>
   <excludes>
    <exclude-dir-file>**/source/bin/**</exclude-dir-file>
  </excludes>
 </dirset>
</lrmconf>