Sorry, I'm late, but there is a best way of solving your issue.
The right way is not to manually translate those strings. Qt already includes translations in the translation
folder.
The idea is to load the translations (qm
files) included in Qt.
I'd like to show you a code to get the message translated according to your locale:
#include <QDebug>
#include <QtWidgets/QApplication>
#include <QMessageBox>
#include <QTranslator>
#include <QLibraryInfo>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QApplication app(argc, argv);
QTranslator qtTranslator;
if (qtTranslator.load(QLocale::system(),
"qt", "_",
QLibraryInfo::location(QLibraryInfo::TranslationsPath)))
{
qDebug() << "qtTranslator ok";
app.installTranslator(&qtTranslator);
}
QTranslator qtBaseTranslator;
if (qtBaseTranslator.load("qtbase_" + QLocale::system().name(),
QLibraryInfo::location(QLibraryInfo::TranslationsPath)))
{
qDebug() << "qtBaseTranslator ok";
app.installTranslator(&qtBaseTranslator);
}
QMessageBox::question(0, QObject::tr("Sure want to quit?"), QObject::tr("Sure to quit?"), QMessageBox::Yes | QMessageBox::No);
return app.exec();
}
Notes:
- You can load a different locate creating a new QLocale object and setting it using
void QLocale::setDefault(const QLocale & locale)
. Example.
- I'm loading
qt_*.qm
and qtbase_*.qm
because since Qt 5.3 the translations are splited in different files. In fact, for QMessageBox
the translated strings are in qtbase_*.qm
. Loading both is a good practice. More info. There are more qm
files like qtquickcontrols_*.qm
or qtmultimedia_*qm
. Load the required ones according to your requirements.
- Maybe you can find the text you're trying to translate is not translated yet by Qt. In this case, I recommend you to upgrade the Qt version to check if the translation exists in the most recent version or code yourself the change. Some useful links: here and here.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…