I have a .NET web application, and am interested in using the widget for site wide translation. I realize that I can stop google translate from not translating certain text, but can I also jam in my own translation for this text?
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I'm trying to enable translating some text in my app. I want user to be able to launch whichever translation tool they use on their device (Google Translate or iTranslate) and see the translation without having to type it. For this, I'm using the url schemes:
googletranslate://
itranslate://
Now, I need to pass the query to those apps. I know how to do this for iTranslate:
itranslate://translate?from=auto&to=en&text=<encoded_string>
This is cool, now I would like to know how to do the same for Google Translate. It needs to automatically detect the language and translate it to english.
It is not currently possible to prefill UI elements in the Google Translate iOS application when opening it from googletranslate:// URLs. The contents of the URL after googletranslate:// appear to be completely ignored. So the most you can get from using these links at the moment is opening the iOS application.
If this does get implemented at some point in the future, one can test by opening a link like googletranslate://example%20text/?param=value&from=zh_TW. I would strongly recommend that you let your voice be heard on the Google Translate product forum by requesting this feature.
In the meantime, you may want to consider using Translation API to provide translations within your application. This can be achieved using the REST API.
If is there anyone still looking for the answer, you can use it like this.
googletranslate://?sl=en&tl=tr&text=hello%20world
You can change the parameters
sl = source language
tl = translation language
text = the thing you want to translate
Well pretty straight-forward Question.
Client needs -
(i) Lang. Translation based on User
(ii) Application must support any language and it should be totally dynamic.
(without any pre-hand translations)
How could we translate value without a key, i'm familiar with i18n
It must translate all labels in the application as well as items that are fetched tables.
Is this even possible? Is there any 3rd party apps that will translate complete page?
I have heard about google + translate can this be used? any reviews?
Regards.
I have multilanguage website. Actually, the website language is chosen according to the web browser language.
Is there any way to set the language according to the search engine spider? For example:
Display the website in Chinese for Baidu search engine spider,
Display the website in Russian for Yandex spider?
This is called crawler identification. When a request is made to your website, User-Agent field contains the information about the browser or the crawler.
Depending on the crawler, the value of this field will be different. You can then associate different values with different languages. You can also take a look at the large list of user agents.
I'm still pretty sure that by doing this, you'll lower your rank in search engines since you provide different responses to crawlers than to real users, but I don't have solid references to support this statement.
In all cases, crawlers are expected to gather resources in different languages, and those crawlers know how to deal with multilingual websites, except maybe the ones which try to follow every worst practice. Also, the search engines you quoted are not limited to one language. Yandex is available for example in Turkish. As for Baidu, According to Wikipedia, it serves China, Japan, Thailand, Egypt and India.
I would like to get translation from one ( best - automatically detected) language to 4 different using google-translate. My idea is to wrote a html document which contain 4 frames - in one of them I can find text form and button. After click on it, Internet browser will send demand to google translate and show results in 4 frames.
If you want a self service, hosted service that does translations and content management for you check out Localize.js
This is going to be terribly translated. As someone that speaks English well, Russian poorly, and Spanish even more poorly, I can detect that these auto-translations never come out right.
My recommendation is to serve your page through a basic system that will allow you to respond to submitted form values. Pass in &LANG=two country iso code and then have your backend serve up the correct data.
Have someone that speaks both languages prepare the content for you. Then, whenever you are serving these pages, you can also conditionally adjust CSS to account for differences in format which come from difference in language length.
If you don't have those capabilities available, make 5 pages. One in English and the other 4 in the other languages. You will seriously seem retarded to anyone that speaks those languages well if you use an auto-translate. I think this is a bad idea for any kind of professional page, even if you can work out the technical issues.
-Brian J. Stinar-
Google has an API to its translate tool that will enable you to send it some text and receive back that text translated into any language you choose.
edit: This is now a paid service
i would like to know, how is the language translation done in facebook ?
Are they using google translate, or any licensed software ?
I want to enable language translation in my website, and i want similar to that of facebook.
How Can this be done, if at all possible ?
Google has good translation API that will convert your text in to given language. However if you want to translate a larger paragraph you need to go for human translation. Because Google translation is not converting grammar of other languages. Now there are good services available that allow automate the human translation like http://mygengo.com/
Facebook's partner for search and for translate functions is Microsoft Bing.
To use it similarly you need to use the API provided, see 'Translator' here at their Developer page:
http://www.bing.com/dev/en-us/dev-center
Source of my info: several websites including
http://translation-blog.multilizer.com/how-to-use-facebook-translate-button/