--
These strings rear the Key generation edit prompts without the option
to change the comment of a user id. Module possible grammar bugs this
should a straightforward change.
GnuPG-bug-id: 2966
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* po/nl.po: Apply several minor manual cleanups to nl.po that were
previously applied to all the other localizations.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
* po/nl.po: Copy from 2.0 branch.
--
It's not clear to me why this didn't get transferred in
329ece46bf.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
--
Justus reported that the German translation for the key listing in
--edit-key does "usage: E" -> "Aufruf: E" which is clearly wrong. It
turnd out that this translation was once marked as fuzzy and
accidentally unfuzzied by me.
"Aufruf" (bug) -> "Nutzung"
"Leistungsfähigkeit" -> "Nutzung"
"Signaturfähigkeit" -> "Signaturnutzbarkeit" etc.
The last two are in the key generation menu. Also changed the key
code for "Umschalten der Signaturnutzbarkeit" from "U" to "S".
"Nutzung" is here better than "Fähigkeit" because the latter is more
connected to the property of the algorithm, where the former better
expresses an arbitrary choice.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
There were several different variant spellings of "passphrase". This
should fix them all for all English text.
I did notice that po/it.po contains multiple instances of
"passhprase", which also looks suspect to me, but i do not know
Italian, so i did not try to correct it.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
* README, agent/command.c, agent/keyformat.txt, common/i18n.c,
common/iobuf.c, common/keyserver.h, dirmngr/cdblib.c,
dirmngr/ldap-wrapper.c, doc/DETAILS, doc/TRANSLATE,
doc/announce-2.1.txt, doc/gpg.texi, doc/gpgsm.texi,
doc/scdaemon.texi, doc/tools.texi, doc/whats-new-in-2.1.txt,
g10/export.c, g10/getkey.c, g10/import.c, g10/keyedit.c, m4/ksba.m4,
m4/libgcrypt.m4, m4/ntbtls.m4, po/ca.po, po/cs.po, po/da.po,
po/de.po, po/el.po, po/eo.po, po/es.po, po/et.po, po/fi.po,
po/fr.po, po/gl.po, po/hu.po, po/id.po, po/it.po, po/ja.po,
po/nb.po, po/pl.po, po/pt.po, po/ro.po, po/ru.po, po/sk.po,
po/sv.po, po/tr.po, po/uk.po, po/zh_CN.po, po/zh_TW.po,
scd/app-p15.c, scd/ccid-driver.c, scd/command.c, sm/gpgsm.c,
sm/sign.c, tools/gpgconf-comp.c, tools/gpgtar.h: replace "Allow to"
with clearer text.
In standard English, the normal construction is "${XXX} allows ${YYY}
to" -- that is, the subject (${XXX}) of the sentence is allowing the
object (${YYY}) to do something. When the object is missing, the
phrasing sounds awkward, even if the object is implied by context.
There's almost always a better construction that isn't as awkward.
These changes should make the language a bit clearer.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
--
With commit b3378b3a56 from July 2014 we
use strconcat instead of sprintf for the string and thus we need to
remove one level of percent escaping.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>