faq
flatforty
contribute
subscribe
configure
search
rdf
main
parent
thread
|
Re: Translation
by Andre on Friday 24/Jun/2005, @18:05
|
| At a wiki you can edit it on the fly. html editing is also easys but the wiki way means, you see an error and just correct it. |
|
|
The Fine Print: The following comments
are owned by whomever posted them.
( Reply )
|
Re: Translation
by rinse on Saturday 25/Jun/2005, @05:57
|
Hi can edit on the fly, that is true, but only when you are writing documentations.
Not when you create translations of documentations.
An initial translation in a wiki is quite easy, but keeping it up to date according to changes in the English version is not.
For example, if the English author changes 6 words in a document containing 25.000 words, in order to reflect GUI-changes in the next release of KDE, how is the translator supposed to find those changes in his translation?
If you look at wikipedia.org you will notice that most localised articles are not translations of the original English versions, most of the time they are rewrites that contain some, but not all, of the information that is available in the English version, most of the times complemented with information that is of interest to the audience of that language.
And again, most translated documents on wikipedia.org are outdated or contain less information then their English counterpart.
If wiki is so great for translating, why can't wikipedia (with a much larger audience then localised kde-versions) keep up the pace???
|
[
Reply To This | View ]
|
Re: Translation
by Andre on Saturday 25/Jun/2005, @08:11
|
I don't mean document editing via a wiki which might be a good proposal.
I mean the principle of wiki: low entrance barrier for participation.
> And again, most translated documents on wikipedia.org are outdated or contain less information then their English counterpart.
German articles are usually independend from the English ones, not translations of their English counterparts.
> An initial translation in a wiki is quite easy, but keeping it up to date according to changes in the English version is not.
Diffs are your friend.
|
[
Reply To This | View ]
|
Re: Translation
by Rinse on Saturday 25/Jun/2005, @21:06
|
>I mean the principle of wiki: low entrance barrier for participation.
Not suitable for translating software
You need some barrier, in order to maintain quality.
>Diffs are your friend.
No, they are not :)
Not when it comes to translations..
using diffs would mean that you need 3 files, the old English file, the new English file, and the translation.
Not very usefull...
|
[
Reply To This | View ]
|
Re: Translation
by david on Monday 27/Jun/2005, @00:44
|
>>I mean the principle of wiki: low entrance barrier for participation.
>Not suitable for translating software
>You need some barrier, in order to maintain quality.
Equally unsuitable for an encyclopeadia then, since you need to maintain quality there too.
|
[
Reply To This | View ]
|
Re: Translation
by rinse on Monday 27/Jun/2005, @00:56
|
Well, you should at least keep in mind that a wiki encyclopeadia could contain errros.
But the difference between an wiki encyclopeadia and is that the lather uses instant publishing. You read the article, you notice an error, you change it, and it gets published as soon as you hit the 'publish' button (or similar)
This is not the case with software documentation, if you find an error and correct it, the improved docs won't be available until the next version of the application, which could take 6 months or even longer (depending on the release cycle the application uses...)
So in short, while a wiki encyclopeadia with a large audience would quite fast gain in quality, it would take a lot longer before software documentation would reach the same quality level if it was translated in the same way.
Also, users who don't upgrade everytime a new version of the application comes out, will be using the documentation with errors for a very long time..
|
[
Reply To This | View ]
|
Re: Translation
by ac on Monday 27/Jun/2005, @04:40
|
That's indeed commonly claimed to be a weakness of wikis.
|
[
Reply To This | View ]
|
|
The Fine Print: The previous
comments are owned by whomever posted them.
( Reply )
|
|