TxNative#fetchTranslations() and the CLI allow specifying a set
of tags so that only strings that have all these tags are fetched.
TxNative kept the original fetchTranslations() method without the "tags" argument for
backwards compatibility. A new fetchTranslations() method with the tags argument has been added.
All related CDSHandler methods accept a "tags" argument that is nullable.
If not null, getLocationForLocale() converts the set of tags to URL query parameters
and URL escapes them.
TranslationsDownloader#downloadTransations() can now accept a "tags" argument.
Utils#urlEncode method was introduced that use URLEncoder and further replaces the
escaped space with "%20" so that it's ok to use with URLS and not HTML forms, which is
what URLEncoder was designed for.
LocaleData#appendTags() accepts a set instead of a string array.
Readme now mentions the ability to filter the fetched strings by tag.
TxNative#fetchTranslations() and the CLI allow specifying a set of tags so that only strings that have all these tags are fetched.
TxNative kept the original fetchTranslations() method without the "tags" argument for backwards compatibility. A new fetchTranslations() method with the tags argument has been added.
All related CDSHandler methods accept a "tags" argument that is nullable. If not null, getLocationForLocale() converts the set of tags to URL query parameters and URL escapes them.
TranslationsDownloader#downloadTransations() can now accept a "tags" argument.
Utils#urlEncode method was introduced that use URLEncoder and further replaces the escaped space with "%20" so that it's ok to use with URLS and not HTML forms, which is what URLEncoder was designed for.
LocaleData#appendTags() accepts a set instead of a string array.
Readme now mentions the ability to filter the fetched strings by tag.
Unit tests have been added.