From 45035413e9abf7f083474bbd04851df7dfc10968 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alexei Kotov Date: Sat, 18 May 2024 08:38:00 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] Shorten Swedish am/pm lines to make them less confusing --- files/data-mw/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml | 4 ++-- files/data/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml | 4 ++-- 2 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/files/data-mw/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml b/files/data-mw/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml index 1a168d1ad6..b78f445067 100644 --- a/files/data-mw/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml +++ b/files/data-mw/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml @@ -10,6 +10,6 @@ dateFormat: "dag {day} av {monthInGenitive} år {year, number, :: group-off}" # In Swedish, as with German, we don't use AM/PM but instead a 24h clock. # But instead of that, we could use "förmiddag" and "eftermiddag", which is basically "morning" and "afternoon" -am: "förmiddag" -pm: "eftermiddag" +am: "f.m." +pm: "e.m." day: "Dag" diff --git a/files/data/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml b/files/data/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml index 59807e41a9..c62837a875 100644 --- a/files/data/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml +++ b/files/data/l10n/Calendar/sv.yaml @@ -45,6 +45,6 @@ weekday7: "lördag" # In Swedish, as with German, we don't use AM/PM but instead a 24h clock. # But instead of that, we could use "förmiddag" and "eftermiddag", which is basically "morning" and "afternoon" -am: "förmiddag" -pm: "eftermiddag" +am: "f.m." +pm: "e.m." day: "Dag"