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bug#30814: Please increase the value of MAX_MON_WIDTH in ls.c
From: |
Ruediger Meier |
Subject: |
bug#30814: Please increase the value of MAX_MON_WIDTH in ls.c |
Date: |
Fri, 16 Mar 2018 13:30:53 +0100 |
User-agent: |
KMail/1.9.10 |
On Wednesday 14 March 2018, Pádraig Brady wrote:
> On 13/03/18 17:06, Rafal Luzynski wrote:
> > As we have introduced the support of nominative and genitive
> > month names in glibc [1] and we are going to provide the updated
> > locale data for Catalan language [2] it has been discovered [3]
> > that the current limit of the maximum length of the abbreviated
> > month name as displayed by "ls -l" will not work with the new
> > data for Catalan. It is obligatory to precede the month name
> > with "de " (note: the space) so the abbreviated month names limited
> > to 5 characters will be ambiguous and therefore unreadable:
>
> It's a bit surprising that _abbreviations_ all need the "de " prefix,
> but fair enough.
Most used "abbreviations" in our locales do not follow the language
rules anyways. Even in english we would need to add dots and some month
abbreviations just do not exist.
Below 3 examples of the correct abbreviations for english, spanish, and
german:
Jan. enero Jan.
Feb. feb. Feb.
Mar. marzo März
Apr. abr. Apr.
May mayo Mai
June jun. Jun.
July jul. Jul.
Aug. agosto Aug.
Sept. set. Sept.
Oct. oct. Okt.
Nov. nov. Nov.
Dec. dic. Dez.
Thankfully all 3 locales just use the first three letters. Note in
spanish you would also need to add such genitive "de" but of course
nobody wants to see it when printing short dates to a terminal.
While I see a benefit of having the correct abbreviations *somewhere* in
the locale. I don't think they should be used in tools like ls by
default. The output should IMHO not longer than --time-style=long-iso
or --full-time.
> > de ma (should be "de mar" at least)
> > d’abr (correct)
> > de ma (should be "de mai" at least)
> > de ju (should be "de jun" at least)
> > de ju (should be "de jul" at least)
I don't speak Catalan, but I can't believe that "de jun" is a correct
abbreviation following the language rules.
> > Increasing the value of MAX_MON_WIDTH to 6 characters will fix
> > the problem. The location of the constant is here: [4]
> >
> > Although it has been also suggested in the same bug report that
> > there should be no additional limit for the month length.
> >
> > This bug may be related with the coreutils bug #29377. [5]
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > Rafal Luzynski
> >
> >
> > [1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10871
> > [2] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22848
> > [3] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22848#c6
> > [4]
> > http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/coreutils.git/tree/src/ls.c#n1099
> > [5] https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=29377
>
> Thanks for the careful analysis.
>
> 5 was chosen as a max width for abmon
> as that was seen to be unambiguous and
> also truncate overly long abbreviations.
>
> One can browse the abbreviations by length using:
>
> locale -a | grep utf8 |
> while read l; do LC_ALL=$l locale abmon; done |
> tr ';' '\n' | sort -u | grep '.\{5,\}' |
> while read mon; do
> printf '%02d %s\n' "$(echo "$mon" | wc -L)" "$mon"
> done |
> sort -n | less
>
> That shows a couple of existing issues with the limit of 5.
> ln_CD.utf8 (Democratic Republic of the Congo) needs a length of 7 to
> be unambiguous, while Arabic needs 12!
> I don't remember arabic being so long at the time I implemented
> the alignment/truncation in ls (9 years ago), but we should probably
> expand to account for that.
>
> $ LC_ALL=ln_CD.utf8 locale abmon
> sánzá1.;sánzá2.;sánzá3.;sánzá4.;sánzá5.;sánzá6.;sánzá7.;sánzá8.;sánzá
>9.;sánz10.;sánzá11.;sánzá12.
>
> $ LC_ALL=ar_SY.utf8 locale abmon | tr ';' '\n'
> كانون الثاني
> شباط
> آذار
> نيسان
> نوار
> حزيران
> تموز
> آب
> أيلول
> تشرين الأول
> تشرين الثاني
> كانون الأول
>
> Given the increase in supported size should only impact relatively
> few languages it probably makes sense to increase to 12. The attached
> does that and also augments the test to find ambiguous cases.
>
> cheers,
> Pádraig