Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
umpirsky
bdada47fad [Translation] Added CsvFileLoader to support csv translation resources. 2011-01-08 15:24:01 +01:00
Jordi Boggiano
094d428e68 CS: Unified strict equality comparisons, put var on the right side 2010-12-21 08:51:21 +01:00
Fabien Potencier
48e30537c4 added exception when a loaded YAML resource is not an array 2010-12-12 08:39:37 +01:00
Fabien Potencier
944d91c1df made some method name changes to have a better coherence throughout the framework
When an object has a "main" many relation with related "things" (objects,
parameters, ...), the method names are normalized:

 * get()
 * set()
 * all()
 * replace()
 * remove()
 * clear()
 * isEmpty()
 * add()
 * register()
 * count()
 * keys()

The classes below follow this method naming convention:

 * BrowserKit\CookieJar -> Cookie
 * BrowserKit\History -> Request
 * Console\Application -> Command
 * Console\Application\Helper\HelperSet -> HelperInterface
 * DependencyInjection\Container -> services
 * DependencyInjection\ContainerBuilder -> services
 * DependencyInjection\ParameterBag\ParameterBag -> parameters
 * DependencyInjection\ParameterBag\FrozenParameterBag -> parameters
 * DomCrawler\Form -> FormField
 * EventDispatcher\Event -> parameters
 * Form\FieldGroup -> Field
 * HttpFoundation\HeaderBag -> headers
 * HttpFoundation\ParameterBag -> parameters
 * HttpFoundation\Session -> attributes
 * HttpKernel\Profiler\Profiler -> DataCollectorInterface
 * Routing\RouteCollection -> Route
 * Security\Authentication\AuthenticationProviderManager -> AuthenticationProviderInterface
 * Templating\Engine -> HelperInterface
 * Translation\MessageCatalogue -> messages

The usage of these methods are only allowed when it is clear that there is a
main relation:

 * a CookieJar has many Cookies;

 * a Container has many services and many parameters (as services is the main
   relation, we use the naming convention for this relation);

 * a Console Input has many arguments and many options. There is no "main"
   relation, and so the naming convention does not apply.

For many relations where the convention does not apply, the following methods
must be used instead (where XXX is the name of the related thing):

 * get()      -> getXXX()
 * set()      -> setXXX()
 * all()      -> getXXXs()
 * replace()  -> setXXXs()
 * remove()   -> removeXXX()
 * clear()    -> clearXXX()
 * isEmpty()  -> isEmptyXXX()
 * add()      -> addXXX()
 * register() -> registerXXX()
 * count()    -> countXXX()
 * keys()
2010-11-25 17:30:06 +01:00
Fabien Potencier
0131ff21c5 [Translation] removed unneeded assignement 2010-11-16 07:22:39 +01:00
Jordi Boggiano
3cbc99c180 [Translation] Added flatten method on ArrayLoader
This allows the translations to be deeply nested arrays that will be flattened, allowing for namespacing of translations easily.

The following:
  'key' => array('key2' => array('key3' => 'value'))
Becomes:
  'key.key2.key3' => 'value'

This isn't applied to Xliff since it does not make sense within the scope of the XLIFF standard
2010-11-16 07:20:57 +01:00
Jordi Boggiano
3813eecf17 [Translation] Added YamlFileLoader 2010-11-15 09:33:00 +01:00
Jordi Boggiano
f2107e4b3a [Translation] Explicitly mark methods as public 2010-11-15 09:29:18 +01:00
Kris Wallsmith
f79e23ffb5 Removed all those spaces after @author that were bothering me so… 2010-10-18 16:55:41 +02:00
Fabien Potencier
a7537906b4 [Translation] added the component 2010-09-27 09:45:29 +02:00