Features
- Work with ONE localisation format. You’ll no longer be editing DTD files
in one tool, .properties in another, OpenOffice GSI in a third. Simply do
all your localisation in a PO or XLIFF editor
- Converters for a number of formats
- OpenOffice.org SDF/GSI
- Mozilla: .properties, DTD, XHTML, .inc, .ini, etc
- Others: Comma Separated Value, TMX, XLIFF, TBX, PHP, WordFast TXT, Qt .ts,
txt, .ini, Windows .rc, ical, subtitles, Mac OS X strings
- File access to localization files through the format API in all the above
formats, as well as .qph, .qm, .mo
- Output valid target file types. We make sure that your output files
(e.g. .properties) contain all comments from the original file and preserves
the layout of the original as far as possible. If your PO entry is marked as
fuzzy we use the English text, not your half complete translation. The
converters for OpenOffice.org and Mozilla formats will also perform simple
checks and corrections to make sure you have none of those hard to find
localisation bugs.
- Our checker has over 42 checks to find
errors such as: missing or translated variables, missing accelerator keys,
bad escaping, start capitalisation, missing sentences, bad XML and much more.
- Language awareness, taking language conventions for capitalisation, quotes
and other punctuation into account
- Find conflicting translations easily, cases where you have translated a
source word differently or used a target word for 2 very different English
concepts
- Extract messages using simple text or a regular expression allowing you
to quickly find and extract words that you need to fix due to glossary
changes.
- Merge snippets of PO files into your existing translations.
- Create word, string and file counts of your files. Making it much easier
to budget time as string counts do not give you a good indication of expected
work.
- Create a set of PO files with debugging entries to allow you to easily
locate the source of translations. Very useful in OpenOffice.org which
provides scant clues as to where the running application has sourced the
message.
The Translate Toolkit is also a powerful API for writing translation and
localisation tools, already used by our own and several other projects. See the
base class section for more information.