-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 147
Translation notes
wvengen edited this page Dec 14, 2013
·
26 revisions
Translation of software is not always straightforward. While a normal text has a kind of flow, software mostly consists of small pieces of text. Sometimes they are isolated words to give a hint, sometimes a verb indicating an action, sometimes an explanation. Translation often depends on this context.
Some hints to help us obtain a clear, beautiful and consistent translation.
- Try to recognise if something is a sentence or a single word. If it is a sentence, also translate it into a full sentence. If something is a single word, try to judge whether it would make sense to start with a capital or not. Often actions (on buttons or links) as a separate word are capitalised. Parts of sentences usually look better when not capitalised.
- e.g. "Save" is capitalised, while "or cancel" isn't.
-
Word order can sometimes be completely different in the translation. Please feel free to change sentences radically. The aim is to convey meaning and smoothly communicate. This is often done differently in different languages.
- e.g. "Hier kannst du eine Person in die Gruppe %{group} einladen, die noch nicht Mitglied der Foodcoop ist." could be translated to "Here you can invite someone, who is not yet a member of the foodcoop, to the group %{group}."
- Please don't miss quotes. Not even at the end of a line.
- Be consistent, also with other people's translations (when it makes sense) - see the word list below. Some words point to concepts in the software, like "workgroup" or "household". While "work group" may be more natural to British speakers, the concept as used here is written as one word. This is also valid for names. "Foodsoft" is like that, always starting with a capital (because it is a name). Sometimes you may encounter the word with the 's' capitalised as well. This is old, and better be changed for consistency.
-
activerecord.models
contains names of concepts used throughout foodsoft, like "Orders" and "Articles". These need to be translated in a general way; where these concepts are used slightly differently, you may find it elsewhere with its own (similar) translation. -
activerecord.attributes
contains names of properties of the above models used throughout foodsoft. An "Article" contains a "price" and "unit". This also needs to be translated generally.- Sometimes a short version of the attribute name is needed, for example in table headings. This is the attribute name with
_short
appended to it. Please translate it with about as many characters as the English text (the full attribute name is usually shown in the interface when hovering with the mouse over the abbreviation). Unit quantity (U.Q.) is an example.
- Sometimes a short version of the attribute name is needed, for example in table headings. This is the attribute name with
Please use these terms where applicable. Note spelling. If something is capitalised here, capitalise it everywhere; if not, only where the language would normally use capitals. This list contains just singular forms, unless otherwise mentioned.
Consistency is everything.
- Foodsoft (all) -- name of the product
- household (en) - Bestellgruppe (de) - huishouden (nl)
- workgroup (en) - Arbeitsgruppe (de) - werkgroep (nl)
- net (en) - Netto (de) - netto (nl)
- gross (en) - Brutto (de) - bruto (nl)
- lot ?or? unit (en) - Gebinde (de) - groothandelsverpakking? (nl)
- lot size ?or? unit quantity(en) - Gebindegröße ( Geb.Gr. ) (de) - groothandelsverpakkingsgrootte/-eenheid ( Gr.Eenh. )? (nl)
- you (en) - du ?or? Du ?or? Sie (de) - je/jij (nl)
- database (all)
-
order cycle (en) - bestellingscyclus (nl)
-
open
- open/current (en) - laufend (de) - lopend/open (nl) -
finished
- closed (en) - beendet (de) - gesloten (nl) -
closed
- settled (en) - abgerechnet (de) - afgerekend (nl)
-
- ...