Hi!
Thank you so much for your quick response. I understand what you
mean, but I
have not been clear on what the real problem is. For every new version of
Ubuntu we rewrite/revise our manual. All translations of strings that have
changed, even if it was only a comma, will be lost in Launchpad. My idea
was: the smaller the msgid, the smaller the loss of translations.
Splitting into shorter strings sounds like a quite bad workaround,
while the problem is with how Launchpad translation tool works.
btw, with msgmerge I merged the translation file of the previous
version
(oneiric) with the new one (Precise). In Lokalize, a translation tool, the
strings that have undergone some kind of change, are shown as Fuzzies. I
only have to translate the small changes in these fuzzies.
So the question is really why the Launchpad tools don't use msgmerge this way?
Working in
Lokalize (offline) does not have the advantage of Launchpad, where more than
one translator can work on the same file online. But working in Launchpad
means all fuzzies from Lokalize have to be copied manually to Launchpad.
If nothing can be done about this, it means translators are not very keen on
translating long documents such as The Ubuntu Manual or the official Ubuntu
Documentation.
I'm very interested in how to get a good web-based translation
environment using po4a.
Is there anyone using for example Pootle together with po4a?
I'm concerned about how to handle updates from the original in a good way.
/anders
Regards,
Hannie Dumoleyn
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Anders Nawroth [anders(a)neotechnology.com]
Skype: anders.nawroth