Hey Pierre!
I'd like to test your approach for the German language also. How exactly did you split the files? Did you use an existing program/script or can you provide a script for doing this? Thanks! Hendrik Am 19.12.2012 15:58, schrieb Pierre Slamich: > Yes, although we might be finished by then ;-) > Thanks to the method we're reviewing and correcting around 1000 > strings per day at the moment. > > sincerely, > Pierre > > On Tue, Dec 18, 2012 at 4:06 PM, Hannie Dumoleyn > <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: > > Hi Pierre, Redmar, and all who are interested, > Would it be an idea to brainstorm on this in #ubuntu-translators? > Perhaps in January 2013? > I agree with Redmar that the msgmerge is a good method, especially > for huge documents. The only snag is that you still have to > approve the fuzzies offline before uploading the file back to > Launchpad. We use this method for the Ubuntu Manual "Getting > started with Ubuntu" (Lucid > Maverick > ....> Raring) and with > success. > Redmar, sorry for not yet having tested your popsort :( > Regards, > Hannie > > Op 18-12-12 00:51, Pierre Slamich schreef: >> Hi Hannie, Hi Redmar, >> Thanks a lot for the tips: we're interested in using your >> approach, and more generally it might be interesting expending >> the msmerge approach to all teams that are already underway for >> the DDTP, and the Google one to the teams that need to get started. >> >> - For the Google Translator Kit approach, I guess we >> could extend the mock project we did for fr_FR to other languages >> (and streamlining our process by using Bazaar) by creating a >> global team responsible for the DDTP Mock project and including >> in this team one member from each language team responsible for >> uploading the machine translated po for his or her language. >> >> - For the msmerge approach, do you already have a project to >> handle this ? Is there any advantage in msmerging raring against >> releases older than quantal to get more modified strings ? How >> many strings have you been able to recover using that approach >> ? It might be neat to generate the msmerged po for all languages >> ? Importing them as actual translations (not fuzzy) into a mock >> project like the Google Translate one would show them as >> suggestions for the actual DDTP as well. >> The translator would thus be able to pick the human translated >> one when available or to build on the machine translated one >> otherwise. >> >> Can we try to schedule some time to coordinate on this so that we >> can use both approaches and try to onboard all the other >> languages teams once we have a rock-solid process ? >> >> Pierre >> >> Pierre Slamich >> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >> >> >> On Mon, Dec 17, 2012 at 10:30 PM, Redmar <[email protected] >> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: >> >> Hi Pierre, >> >> I've actually tried a similar approach for Dutch using >> msgmerge, which >> might also be worth checking out. When you merge the >> translations of an >> older version of ubuntu into the current version (msgmerge >> quantal_ddtp.po raring_ddtp.po -o merged_ddtp.po, for >> example), there >> will be a lot of 'fuzzy' translations for strings that are >> similar (for >> example, meta packages for different programs, debugging >> symbols etc). >> These fuzzy often only need a few small changes (eg program >> name) to be >> accepted, which can really speed up translations. And you >> don't have to >> worry about google putting in a weird translation, since it >> is all based >> on earlier translations done by a human. >> >> On a related note, if any of you work on ddtp-translations >> offline, I >> have written a python program that can sort entries in ddtp >> po-files >> based on the popularity of the package. This way, the most >> popular >> packages will be at the top of the po file, and you are >> always sure you >> are working on the most important packages first. >> >> You can get the code here: >> bzr branch lp:~redmar/+junk/ddtp_popsort >> >> It has a small readme file, please let me know if something >> is unclear >> or not working for you. >> >> Regards, >> Redmar >> -- >> Ubuntu Dutch Translators >> >> >> Hannie Dumoleyn schreef op ma 17-12-2012 om 17:58 [+0100]: >> > Hello Pierre, >> > This is a very good idea! I have just uploaded the first >> part of the >> > incomplete Dutch translation (900kb) to GTT. >> > Thanks, >> > Hannie >> > >> > Op 17-12-12 12:55, Pierre Slamich schreef: >> > >> > > The DDTP represent around 50 000 strings to translate * 140 >> > > languages. On very good weeks, a typical translation team >> translates >> > > 500 strings (see UWN for examples weekly figures). >> > > >> > > >> > > Would take a lot of weeks (years?) with highly motivated >> volunteers >> > > of a large translation team, working non-stop, at their >> best to get >> > > done with it. >> > > Thus we had the idea to delegate initial translation >> suggestions to >> > > Google Translator Kit and review translations with humans >> to speed >> > > the process. >> > > >> > > We successfully did an import for circa 40 000 French >> strings (yup >> > > you read that right) this week-end in a mock project >> called DDTP >> > > Automation >> (https://translations.launchpad.net/ddtpautomation). >> > > To keep it short, the translations from this project >> appear as >> > > suggestions in the French DDTP, and can be reviewed by actual >> > > translators. >> > > We've started using them, and it turns out that a lot of >> them are >> > > actually useful and are speeding up the translation >> process a lot. >> > > >> > > We detailed the (somewhat) tedious process in English at >> > > http://lite.framapad.org/p/ddtpUbuntu >> > > Questions and inquiries welcome. >> > > >> > > Pierre >> > > >> > > >> > > --- >> > > [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >> > > >> > > >> > >> >> >> -- >> ubuntu-translators mailing list >> [email protected] >> <mailto:[email protected]> >> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-translators >> >> > > > >
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