#! /bin/sh # Spot malformed string replacement patterns in Android localization files. # First install Lint from the Android SDK VALUES=app/src/main/res/values grep -R "%1$ s" $VALUES* grep -R "%1$ d" $VALUES* grep -R "%1" $VALUES* | grep -v "%1\\$" grep -RH '%' $VALUES* | sed -e 's/%/\n%/g' | # Split lines that contain several expressions grep '%' | # Filter out lines that do not contain expressions grep -v ' % ' | # Lone % character, not a variable grep -v '%<' | # Same, at the end of the string #grep -v '% ' | # Same, at the beginning of the string grep -v '%で' | # Same, no spaces in Japanese grep -v '%s' | # Single string variable grep -v '%d' | # Single decimal variable grep -v '%[0-9][0-9]\?$s' | # Multiple string variable grep -v '%[0-9][0-9]\?$d' | # Multiple decimal variable grep -v '%1$.1f' | # ? grep -v '%.1f' | grep -v '%\\n' | grep -v '%20' # Ignore URL whitespace exit # Double-width percent sign grep -R '%' $VALUES* # Broken CDATA syntax grep -R "CDATA " $VALUES* # Android SDK Lint (does not detect most syntax errors) lint --check StringFormatInvalid commons