ID: 29941 Updated by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reported By: tilspaam at hotmail dot com Status: Bogus Bug Type: Documentation problem Operating System: Irrelevant PHP Version: Irrelevant New Comment:
back to the point, Those pages are written using a lot of entities (eg. &title; etc.). These entities are stored in a seperate file. If these entities are translated, but the actual page is not, then what you see is precisely that. I know it looks strange, but that's just the way it is... Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-09-02 14:37:06] [EMAIL PROTECTED] If you provide no language code, we need to make assumptions. Whether it is good practice or not, we need to do it. If you provide the langauge code, than it is used. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-09-02 14:34:04] tilspaam at hotmail dot com [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: "If the page that you're trying to view in a language other than english has not yet been translated, as is the case with the Danish session chapter, you will recieve the same page in English." No - I recieve a page in both danish and english. This is the case with http://www.php.net/session - all general content such as headers and warnings are in danish while the main content is in english. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: "If you have cookies turned on, the last language you have seen is remembered..." I have allowed cookies for php.net and this seems to work. All previous mentioned URLs now display english and english only. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: "BTW this is a feature, not a bug" I strongly disagree. Making assumptions about your users preferences is bad usability, but this discussion I believe belongs elsewhere. I know this problem is hardly a 'bug' but I didn't know where else to write. I'm sorry if I have posted the wrong place. /AP ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-09-02 12:20:42] [EMAIL PROTECTED] BTW this is a feature, not a bug. If you have cookies turned on, the last language you have seen is remembered, so next time, the URL shortcuts will lead to that language (no need to select the language in every page view). If you would like to directly specify the language in your shortcut, you can do so. See http://php.net/urlhowto This page also links the My PHP.net page, which will explain you the language selection mechanism (http://php.net/my). ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-09-02 12:04:29] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thank you for taking the time to write to us, but this is not a bug. Please double-check the documentation available at http://www.php.net/manual/ and the instructions on how to report a bug at http://bugs.php.net/how-to-report.php ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-09-02 12:03:46] [EMAIL PROTECTED] It is actually much simpler. If the page that you're trying to view in a language other than english has not yet been translated, as is the case with the Danish session chapter, you will recieve the same page in English. If we would not do that, we'd be stuck with dozens of broken manuals where half of the content was missing. So, until someone translates it and adds it to CVS, it will appear in English. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The remainder of the comments for this report are too long. To view the rest of the comments, please view the bug report online at http://bugs.php.net/29941 -- Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=29941&edit=1