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Loidhne 85: Loidhne 85:
  
 
One word of advice - if you're a tiny team or pressed for time otherwise, I'd get an account on .com and work off the most important strings first.
 
One word of advice - if you're a tiny team or pressed for time otherwise, I'd get an account on .com and work off the most important strings first.
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===VLC - VideoLAN===
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Neat little multimedia program, plays just about anything under the sun on just about any platform. Translating it into a new language is surprisingly easy, for once a project I'd give an A rating. So what's the best way?
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#Unless you're working with a big team, it's a big file. There's over 30,000 words to do, plus about 400 for the main page of the website, if you want that in your language. But here's a trick: sign up to [http://pootle.locamotion.org Locamotion], a Pootle server and grab the Minimal VLC file. It's a little out of date but not much. It's only 3,400 words or so but covers 95% of the interface that most people will ever see (I've been using it for years and that would certainly cover most of what I might see of the interface). Translate that.
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#Sign up to the [http://mailman.videolan.org/listinfo/translators VLC mailing list] and ask someone to merge your Minimal VLC file with the main po file. [https://www.transifex.net Transifex] seems to be the platform of choice for VLC at the moment for languages which want a low-tech approach, so they'll probably put it up there and getting an account will make sense.
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#Once you've checked them in live (hang on, coming up below), tell them you want to be included in the next release, whenever that is.
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#At least for some time you'll be wanting to update your translations regularly. Once you've done a chunk, upload them to Transifex and post to the list to let them know you've update there (or that you've uploaded the latest po file somewhere elese).
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Now, testing - there's a neat trick that's not obvious in the help stuff (probably the only shortfall of the VLC translation project, it's a bit thin in general).
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{{l10n}}

Mùthadh on 13:38, 25 dhen Chèitean 2012

I'm writing these in reverse order in the sense that I've done a dozen or so projects now but I'm starting with the ones I'm currently working on first.

Adaptxt

A neat open-source project for predictive texting. Given how much people text, you should really consider this for you language if no such thing exists currently. The product site is here but the hard work happens here. You might as well bookmark both.

You'll most likely need someone who can do a little bit of Unix style code and probably a Linux system or at least an emulator.

Basics

You'll need to following ingredients:

  • an inclusion.txt file
  • a corpus.txt file
  • an xml file

The inclusion file is a long text file containing all the words in your language you want in the program. If a spellchecker exists for your language, that can be a good starting point.

The corpus file is used to give statistical weighting to each word. For example, thimble and thing both begin with thi. But thing is way more common than thimble and the corpus file contains the raw data which will add that info. Before you moan that your language doesn't have a corpus - Adaptxt will work reasonably well even if you can't provide such statistical data, not least of all because it learns as you use it. But it works better straight off if you do.

The xml file is fairly easy. Contains data about the codes for your language (for example, Irish Gaelic is gleie (gle for Irish, ie for Ireland) and so on.

The inclusion file

Checklist:

  • each word once, followed by a space and a comma
  • encoding must be Unicode (UCS 2 Little Endian to be precise)
  • number initial list of items
  • www initial list of items
  • each letter used in your language
  • any letter you may be using for elision once with and once without the eliding character (more on that in the Elision section)

The list doesn't have to be alphabetical. I find it helpful to have the numbers in one section, the words in the next, the www stuff and the letters of the alphabet and the elision characters at the end.

So mine starts with
0:00 ,
0:30 ,
and so on, then
AE ,
Abar ,
Aden ,
Adhamhnan ,
Afganastan ,
Afraga ,
Ailean ,
and so on, then
www ,
www.aa.com ,
www.adaptxt.com ,
www.adobe.com ,
and then finally
a ,
à ,
á ,
b ,

The corpus file

The corpus file contains at least one thing. At the very basic level, it needs to contain the same entries as your inclusion file but if you do that, remember that the prediction won't be very smart. To have smarter prediction, what you need a separate corpus (basically a load of text in your language). You analyse that for word frequencies. Let's say were' working on Gaelic and you used the following mini-corpus:

Tha cù aig mo mhàthair. Tha cù aig mo bhràthair cuideachd. Ach chan eil cù agamsa.

If you analyse that for word frequencies, you get the following:

Ach 1
Tha 2
agamsa 1
aig 2
bhràthair 1
chan 1
cuideachd 1
cù 3
eil 1
mhàthair 1
mo 2

Firefox

If you're a good translator but not great shakes at code, your best bet is the Locamotion project. It's essentially a Pootle server (a server which handles those po files) where you grab the po files and translate them, either online or using a translation memory, whatever - and then admins deal with most of the black magic to put them where they need to be on Mozilla. Gaelic and Welsh are on there, as are a lot of African languages. [More to come...]

WordPress

Nice project. DUH setup. If you're thinking of localizing WordPress, the first question you actually have to ask is - which one? There are two. There's WordPress.org, which is the one you install yourself on your own hosting package. Has the advantage of being add-free. Then there's WordPress.com where you just sign up and WordPress hosts your blog. Easier to set up but unless you pay, you get a small amount of advertising. Yes, I know, really clear naming convention. Anyway. They have also, in their inscrutable wisdom, split the translation projects into two (for .org and .com), so your entry points are different. You should really use a translation memory if you're wanting to do both because there are hundreds, if not thousands, of strings which are the same.

WordPress.org

In short (more to follow) this is the overview page which lists all the versions which are (being) localized and if you drill down (i.e. click around) you will get the full list of what you have to translate. To get permissions (if you're a new locale) your entry point is WP Polyglotts, which confusingly is hosted on WordPress.com. See what I mean? Anyway, get an account and post that you need a new locale set up. Take a note of the tagging policy cause otherwise you might wait a long time before anyone answers.

WordPress.com

All the current languages are listed here. Yup, it's a large file but there's two bits of good news. Once you reach about 30%, they will activate your language, so you can go live or at least proofread before you've done them all. You update the po files yourself and about twice a week someone does some black magic at the WordPress end to make them go live. It's not instantaneous.

The support site for WordPress.com is - yes, you guessed it - different from .org. <sigh> They call it GlotPress Support.

One word of advice - if you're a tiny team or pressed for time otherwise, I'd get an account on .com and work off the most important strings first.

VLC - VideoLAN

Neat little multimedia program, plays just about anything under the sun on just about any platform. Translating it into a new language is surprisingly easy, for once a project I'd give an A rating. So what's the best way?

  1. Unless you're working with a big team, it's a big file. There's over 30,000 words to do, plus about 400 for the main page of the website, if you want that in your language. But here's a trick: sign up to Locamotion, a Pootle server and grab the Minimal VLC file. It's a little out of date but not much. It's only 3,400 words or so but covers 95% of the interface that most people will ever see (I've been using it for years and that would certainly cover most of what I might see of the interface). Translate that.
  2. Sign up to the VLC mailing list and ask someone to merge your Minimal VLC file with the main po file. Transifex seems to be the platform of choice for VLC at the moment for languages which want a low-tech approach, so they'll probably put it up there and getting an account will make sense.
  3. Once you've checked them in live (hang on, coming up below), tell them you want to be included in the next release, whenever that is.
  4. At least for some time you'll be wanting to update your translations regularly. Once you've done a chunk, upload them to Transifex and post to the list to let them know you've update there (or that you've uploaded the latest po file somewhere elese).

Now, testing - there's a neat trick that's not obvious in the help stuff (probably the only shortfall of the VLC translation project, it's a bit thin in general).


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