Thanks.
I ended up downloading and installing the Resource Bundle Editor to
check the resource files and this allows me to view the languages
side-by-side.
The url is http://sourceforge.net/projects/eclipse-rbe/ for anyone
interested in editing resource files which have already had native2ascii
run against them.
Cheers
Hayden
On 17/03/10 14:04, Mark Diggory wrote:
yes, a reverse ascii2native method does exist for the ant task we are
using the Maven build process. that may allow you to transform the
ascii to native.
http://ant.apache.org/manual/OptionalTasks/native2ascii.html
But I would also recommend trying out some tools like the Eclipse,
IDEA or Netbeans resource bundle editor. Which will allow you to edit
the ascii files directly.
Mark
On Tue, Mar 16, 2010 at 6:52 PM, Mr Havercamp mrhaverc...@gmail.com
mailto:mrhaverc...@gmail.com wrote:
Cheers. Exactly what I was looking for.
Many of the encoded properties files do not have corresponding
native2ascii representations. Is this because 3rd party
contributors are only submitting encoded files only?
On 17/03/10 09:20, Mark Diggory wrote:
Same project but in the native2ascii directory
On Mar 16, 2010, at 18:10, Mr Havercamp mrhaverc...@gmail.com
mailto:mrhaverc...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks for the direction. Yes this is what we are looking for
although it appears these files have already been ascii encoded.
Are there any native properties files that we can use as a base?
It would be very helpful to other community members if you
could contribute your corrections back to the community.
Yes, this would be the plan once we have completed the updates.
Cheers
Hayden
On 17/03/10 00:31, Mark Diggory wrote:
The correct place to work on these is here:
API/JSPUi
http://scm.dspace.org/svn/repo/modules/dspace-api-lang/trunk/src/main/resources/
XMLUI
http://scm.dspace.org/svn/repo/modules/dspace-xmlui-lang/trunk/src/main/webapp/i18n/
We would like to see these maintained in this svn rather than
in a wiki page. It would be very helpful to other community
members if you could contribute your corrections back to the
community. You can either choose to provide svn patches for
these files for commit (just open a JIRA ticket in the DSpace
1.x project for now) or if you wish to participate in the
process more regularly with each release we can arrange svn
access for you to commit updates.
Note, we will be organizing a release of lang now that we have
1.6.0 out the door. Getting your changes into it will assure
that you do not need to maintain these files locally on your own.
Cheers,
Mark
On Tue, Mar 16, 2010 at 7:33 AM, Mr Havercamp
mrhaverc...@gmail.com mailto:mrhaverc...@gmail.com wrote:
We are updating the language properties files for our
DSpace 1.6
installation and are looking for the following translations;
- Russian
- Chinese (Simple)
- Arabic
- French
- Spanish
I've downloaded various versions from the DSpace Wiki but,
except for
Arabic, am struggling to find the original property files
(i.e. those
that have not had native2ascii run against them). We're not
really
worried about what version they belong to, just that there
is a base
from which we can work.
Any help would be much appreciated.
Regards
Hayden
--
Download Intel#174; Parallel Studio Eval
Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling,
find bugs
proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel
performance.
See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev
___
DSpace-tech mailing list
DSpace-tech@lists.sourceforge.net
mailto:DSpace-tech@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/dspace-tech
--
Mark R. Diggory
Head of U.S. Operations - @mire
http://www.atmire.com - Institutional Repository Solutions
http://www.togather.eu - Before getting together, get t...@ther
--
Mark R. Diggory
Head of U.S. Operations - @mire
http://www.atmire.com - Institutional Repository Solutions
http://www.togather.eu - Before getting together, get t...@ther
--
Download Intel#174; Parallel Studio Eval
Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs
proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance.
See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta.