On Wed, Jan 22, 2014 at 10:10 AM, marcoslans <marcosl...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Hi > This is the terminal return for galician language: > > phablet@ubuntu-phablet:~$ sudo apt-get install > language-pack-{gnome-,}-gl-base > Reading package lists... Done > Building dependency tree > Reading state information... Done > E: Unable to locate package language-pack-gnome--gl-base > E: Unable to locate package language-pack--gl-base > > Ah, I've just noticed the extra dash in the package name. I apologize, there was a typo in step 3 (the additional dash before $LANG), which should actually be: 3. Run `sudo apt-get install language-pack-{gnome,}$LANG-base` on that same terminal session (replace $LANG with your 2-letter or 3-letter language code, e.g. 'ca', 'it', 'ast', etc) Let me know if this works for you Cheers, David. > > > > En 21/01/14 14:14, David Planella escribiu: > > Hi Translators, > > A few days ago, I mentioned I'd write about how to test translations on > a phone, even without a device. Yesterday I just finished the first article > on the first step of the process: installing and running the emulator: > > http://davidplanella.org/ubuntu-emulator-quickstart-guide/ > > I'm preparing a separate article for the actual testing, but I thought > in the meantime I'd put together a quick set of instructions so that > translators can already check what translations look like for their > languages on the emulator > > The following instructions assume you've installed the emulator and > you've got an instance running. > > ## Installing new languages > > Right now there is only a subset of languages installed on the phone > (English, German, Spanish, French, Portuguese -from Portugal and > Brazilian-, Simplified Chinese). If your language is on that list, you can > skip this and jump to the next section. Otherwise, please read on... > > 1. Log into the adb shell that appears in the terminal next to the > emulator. Use 'phablet' (without quotes) both for the user name and password > 2. Run `sudo apt-get update` on that same terminal session > 3. Run `sudo apt-get install language-pack-{gnome-,}-$LANG-base` on that > same terminal session (replace $LANG with your 2-letter or 3-letter > language code, e.g. 'ca', 'it', 'ast', etc) > 4. You've now installed your language. Press Ctrl+C on that terminal to > close the emulator > > ## Switching languages > > Once the phone UI is up in the emulator, it's time to chose your > language using your mouse: > > 1. Slide to the left to go past the welcome screen > 2. Slide once more to the left to show the Applications scope > 3. Click on the System Settings app > 4. Within System Settings, click on Language & Text > 5. Scroll up or down the list to select and set your language > 6. Once done, close the emulator for the language settings to have effect > on the next boot. > 7. Restart the emulator - e.g. run `ubuntu-emulator run myimage`, where > 'myimage' was the chosen name you gave to the instance you want to run > > And that's it, you should now see the phone in your language! > > ## Translating and reporting bugs > > At this point you'll see parts of the UI that need translation, which > you can complete from the list highlighted here: > > http://davidplanella.org/make-ubuntu-speak-your-language/ > > From there, you can also find out the upstream project, so if you see > any internalization issue, you can report it as a bug there. > > Let me know how this works for you! > > Cheers, > David. > > > >
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