po/POTFILES
po/mutt.pot
+po/stamp-po
.version
aclocal.m4
txt2c
neomutt-*.tar.gz
+neomutt-*/
# Stuff generated by autoreconf --install
ABOUT-NLS
m4/wchar_t.m4
m4/wint_t.m4
m4/xsize.m4
-neomutt-20170306/
po/Makevars.template
po/Rules-quot
po/remove-potcdate.sed
+po/boldquot.sed
+po/en@boldquot.header
+po/en@quot.header
+po/insert-header.sin
+po/quot.sed
+po/remove-potcdate.sin
+++ /dev/null
-s/"\([^"]*\)"/“\1”/g
-s/`\([^`']*\)'/‘\1’/g
-s/ '\([^`']*\)' / ‘\1’ /g
-s/ '\([^`']*\)'$/ ‘\1’/g
-s/^'\([^`']*\)' /‘\1’ /g
-s/“”/""/g
-s/“/“\e[1m/g
-s/”/\e[0m”/g
-s/‘/‘\e[1m/g
-s/’/\e[0m’/g
+++ /dev/null
-# All this catalog "translates" are quotation characters.
-# The msgids must be ASCII and therefore cannot contain real quotation
-# characters, only substitutes like grave accent (0x60), apostrophe (0x27)
-# and double quote (0x22). These substitutes look strange; see
-# http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/ucs/quotes.html
-#
-# This catalog translates grave accent (0x60) and apostrophe (0x27) to
-# left single quotation mark (U+2018) and right single quotation mark (U+2019).
-# It also translates pairs of apostrophe (0x27) to
-# left single quotation mark (U+2018) and right single quotation mark (U+2019)
-# and pairs of quotation mark (0x22) to
-# left double quotation mark (U+201C) and right double quotation mark (U+201D).
-#
-# When output to an UTF-8 terminal, the quotation characters appear perfectly.
-# When output to an ISO-8859-1 terminal, the single quotation marks are
-# transliterated to apostrophes (by iconv in glibc 2.2 or newer) or to
-# grave/acute accent (by libiconv), and the double quotation marks are
-# transliterated to 0x22.
-# When output to an ASCII terminal, the single quotation marks are
-# transliterated to apostrophes, and the double quotation marks are
-# transliterated to 0x22.
-#
-# This catalog furthermore displays the text between the quotation marks in
-# bold face, assuming the VT100/XTerm escape sequences.
-#
+++ /dev/null
-# All this catalog "translates" are quotation characters.
-# The msgids must be ASCII and therefore cannot contain real quotation
-# characters, only substitutes like grave accent (0x60), apostrophe (0x27)
-# and double quote (0x22). These substitutes look strange; see
-# http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/ucs/quotes.html
-#
-# This catalog translates grave accent (0x60) and apostrophe (0x27) to
-# left single quotation mark (U+2018) and right single quotation mark (U+2019).
-# It also translates pairs of apostrophe (0x27) to
-# left single quotation mark (U+2018) and right single quotation mark (U+2019)
-# and pairs of quotation mark (0x22) to
-# left double quotation mark (U+201C) and right double quotation mark (U+201D).
-#
-# When output to an UTF-8 terminal, the quotation characters appear perfectly.
-# When output to an ISO-8859-1 terminal, the single quotation marks are
-# transliterated to apostrophes (by iconv in glibc 2.2 or newer) or to
-# grave/acute accent (by libiconv), and the double quotation marks are
-# transliterated to 0x22.
-# When output to an ASCII terminal, the single quotation marks are
-# transliterated to apostrophes, and the double quotation marks are
-# transliterated to 0x22.
-#
+++ /dev/null
-# Sed script that inserts the file called HEADER before the header entry.
-#
-# At each occurrence of a line starting with "msgid ", we execute the following
-# commands. At the first occurrence, insert the file. At the following
-# occurrences, do nothing. The distinction between the first and the following
-# occurrences is achieved by looking at the hold space.
-/^msgid /{
-x
-# Test if the hold space is empty.
-s/m/m/
-ta
-# Yes it was empty. First occurrence. Read the file.
-r HEADER
-# Output the file's contents by reading the next line. But don't lose the
-# current line while doing this.
-g
-N
-bb
-:a
-# The hold space was nonempty. Following occurrences. Do nothing.
-x
-:b
-}
+++ /dev/null
-s/"\([^"]*\)"/“\1”/g
-s/`\([^`']*\)'/‘\1’/g
-s/ '\([^`']*\)' / ‘\1’ /g
-s/ '\([^`']*\)'$/ ‘\1’/g
-s/^'\([^`']*\)' /‘\1’ /g
-s/“”/""/g
+++ /dev/null
-# Sed script that remove the POT-Creation-Date line in the header entry
-# from a POT file.
-#
-# The distinction between the first and the following occurrences of the
-# pattern is achieved by looking at the hold space.
-/^"POT-Creation-Date: .*"$/{
-x
-# Test if the hold space is empty.
-s/P/P/
-ta
-# Yes it was empty. First occurrence. Remove the line.
-g
-d
-bb
-:a
-# The hold space was nonempty. Following occurrences. Do nothing.
-x
-:b
-}