kitchen/po/kitchen.pot

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# Translations template for PROJECT.
# Copyright (C) 2014 ORGANIZATION
# This file is distributed under the same license as the PROJECT project.
# FIRST AUTHOR <EMAIL@ADDRESS>, 2014.
#
#, fuzzy
msgid ""
msgstr ""
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"POT-Creation-Date: 2014-11-13 10:14-0500\n"
"PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n"
"Last-Translator: FULL NAME <EMAIL@ADDRESS>\n"
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#: kitchen2/kitchen/release.py:9 kitchen3/kitchen/release.py:9
msgid "Kitchen contains a cornucopia of useful code"
msgstr ""
#: kitchen2/kitchen/release.py:10 kitchen3/kitchen/release.py:10
msgid ""
"\n"
"We've all done it. In the process of writing a brand new application "
"we've\n"
"discovered that we need a little bit of code that we've invented before.\n"
"Perhaps it's something to handle unicode text. Perhaps it's something to"
" make\n"
"a bit of python-2.5 code run on python-2.3. Whatever it is, it ends up "
"being\n"
"a tiny bit of code that seems too small to worry about pushing into its "
"own\n"
"module so it sits there, a part of your current project, waiting to be "
"cut and\n"
"pasted into your next project. And the next. And the next. And since "
"that\n"
"little bittybit of code proved so useful to you, it's highly likely that "
"it\n"
"proved useful to someone else as well. Useful enough that they've "
"written it\n"
"and copy and pasted it over and over into each of their new projects.\n"
"\n"
"Well, no longer! Kitchen aims to pull these small snippets of code into "
"a few\n"
"python modules which you can import and use within your project. No more"
" copy\n"
"and paste! Now you can let someone else maintain and release these small"
"\n"
"snippets so that you can get on with your life.\n"
msgstr ""