Many thanks for the feedback guys. We wont be using a splash page but I
have taken the other points on board and will look into them. The quirks
mode issue, should not be there, we think the system is putting that in
place for us!!
Paul
PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, 14 June 2008 6:42 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] Multiple Language Domains
Hi Paul,
one way is to ask the user to choose a Locale on the landing page such en_EN or
en_US , where en is the language chosen by the user and EN would represent
Hi Paul,
one way is to ask the user to choose a *Locale* on the landing page such *
en_EN* or *en_US* , where en is the language chosen by the user and EN would
represent the country.
For instance in countries like Belgium and Switzerland, most of the websites
ask the user to choose their locale
Hi Guys,
I am currently in the middle of building a site which has to be
bi-lingual. We have two domains for the site www.ourwales.org.uk and
www.cymruni.org.uk
I am looking for suggestions/help on how to handle the two domains.
Currently ourwales is the prominant/main domain and the one to
Paul McCann wrote:
I am currently in the middle of building a site which has to be
bi-lingual.
Currently ourwales is the prominant/main domain and the one to which the
IP details of the site are set. We are then using an alias within apache
to also point cymruni to the same site.
I have
Paul McCann wrote:
I have a few worries though, currently both domains point to the english
language version of the site, this will be changed so cymruni goes to
the Welsh language side. Although the language is the same and its
possible for people to flip between the two languages is it