On 14 January 2012 03:27, <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello meld-list, > > with meld being my favourite gui diff editor, I'd like to nag you first with > a feature request that might turn out to be contrary of what meld is supposed > to do but would be a great feature: > Locked side-by-side scrolling with the lock griping on paragraph breaks > instead of similar looking sections. How about that? > > Why? I'll tell you: Imagine a writer working on a translation of two > documents. The problem is, the actual text is supposed to differ between A > and B, whereas *the meaning* per paragraph remains the same. But with meld > only looking for literal diffs, meld is going to get in the way with the > author progressing through the translation. > > A perfect solution would be that meld ignores the changes in paragraphs, but > tracks the paragraphs as such (by looking at empty lines), noting if the > "structure" diverges. The secondary diff of meaning would be left to the > person in front of the screen. > > With this functionality, meld would be the first diff editor to assist in > comparisons that require an eye on "meaning" instead of literal sameness!
How does this differ from standard translation tools? Is it just that you're translating longer chunks of text, so normal string-by-string tools aren't applicable? >From your description, it sounds like some code in Meld would be useful, but the majority of the UI just wouldn't apply, so I'm not sure that it's a natural fit. Having said that, it sounds like it would be a relatively small project to extract this as a new tool from the existing Meld code base, and one that I'd be happy to help with. cheers, Kai _______________________________________________ meld-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/meld-list
