Fixed #8768 -- Clarified that ugettext_lazy() results are unicode proxies and

can't be used as bytestrings.

Still a number of markup changes to be made in this file (and in this
changeset). That's intentional for now, since I'm going to rewrite the file
later this week.


git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@9168 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Malcolm Tredinnick 2008-10-06 08:32:35 +00:00
parent fa63f1642d
commit 452ba4a8f7
1 changed files with 20 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -174,7 +174,26 @@ For example, to translate a model's ``help_text``, do the following::
In this example, ``ugettext_lazy()`` stores a lazy reference to the string -- In this example, ``ugettext_lazy()`` stores a lazy reference to the string --
not the actual translation. The translation itself will be done when the string not the actual translation. The translation itself will be done when the string
is used in a string context, such as template rendering on the Django admin site. is used in a string context, such as template rendering on the Django admin
site.
The result of a ``ugettext_lazy()`` call can be used wherever you would use a
unicode string (an object with type ``unicode``) in Python. If you try to use
it where a bytestring (a ``str`` object) is expected, things will not work as
expected, since a ``ugettext_lazy()`` object doesn't know how to convert
itself to a bytestring. You can't use a unicode string inside a bytestring,
either, so this is consistent with normal Python behavior. For example::
# This is fine: putting a unicode proxy into a unicode string.
u"Hello %s" % ugettext_lazy("people")
# This will not work, since you cannot insert a unicode object
# into a bytestring (nor can you insert our unicode proxy there)
"Hello %s" % ugettext_lazy("people")
If you ever see output that looks like ``"hello
<django.utils.functional...>"``, you have tried to insert the result of
``ugettext_lazy()`` into a bytestring. That's a bug in your code.
If you don't like the verbose name ``ugettext_lazy``, you can just alias it as If you don't like the verbose name ``ugettext_lazy``, you can just alias it as
``_`` (underscore), like so:: ``_`` (underscore), like so::