Hi Arthur,

I assume you are on 3.0 beta 2? There has been a bug in that version  
leading to loss of language tags in some input fields. The issue has  
been fixed for the final 3.0 release.

Holger


On Apr 29, 2009, at 2:11 PM, Arthur Keen wrote:

>
> Scott
>
> Thanks, that did the trick (without quotes) and I can switch between
> languages for property names that have a language tagged labels,
> however, after I hit return on the tagged format, the {...@lang}
> annotation disappears from the label input field, leaving the string
> without annotation, and the label icon goes from blank to "S" so one
> is left without a means to identify the language of the label by
> inspection, so it makes it difficult to audit language coverage,
> particularly with languages that have the same or similar words.  Is
> there a way to get Composer to display the language tag?  For example,
> if you are working with a number of languages could you tell which
> labels are in which language?
>
> Thanks
> Arthur
>
>
> On Apr 29, 2009, at 3:27 PM, Scott Henninger wrote:
>
>>
>> Arthur;  The syntax for a Composer form is "vin {...@fr}", which gets
>> turned into the rdfs:label statements you have below.  A bit more
>> comprehensible is the n3 source, which is:
>> rdfs:label "wine"@en , "vin"@fr ;
>>
>> -- Scott
>>
>> On Apr 29, 3:19 pm, Arthur Keen <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> Scott
>>>
>>> I cannot believe I am having to ask this question, but here goes:  
>>> How
>>> is the language tag for a label specified in Composer?  I thought  
>>> one
>>> simply added an @en or @fr at the end of the label in its input
>>> field,
>>> but this does not seem to have the desired effect.
>>>
>>> I loaded wine.rdf to see how <rdfs:label xml:lang="fr">vin</
>>> rdfs:label> and <rdfs:label xml:lang="en">wine</rdfs:label>  on Wine
>>> are displayed in Composer to see if I could figure this out.  They
>>> are
>>> both display without any language tag annotation ({Vin Wine}), so
>>> that
>>> did not help me either and I could not find an option for turning  
>>> the
>>> lang option on.  So this leads to another question:  When you are in
>>> composer, how can you identify the language of a label?
>>>
>>> A third question
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>>
>>> Arthur
>>>
>
>
> >


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