This week, the Translator Toolkit team has launched support for four new translation-related file formats:
- Android Resource (.xml)
- Application Resource Bundle (.arb)
- Chrome Extension (.json)
- GNU gettext-based (.po)
With these new file formats, you can use Translator Toolkit to localize your apps and other products and content much more quickly and easily.
For example, to translate your Android application, go into the res/values directory and upload strings.xml into Translator Toolkit -- Translator Toolkit will now automatically translate it. You can then share your translations with amateur or professional translators, who can localize the text using Translator Toolkit’s WYSIWYG online editor.
When you’re finished, you can export your translated application and store it in a locale-specific directory in Android. Voilà -- easy localization! 翻译起来太方便了!
In addition, we’ve made the Translator Toolkit interface more intuitive for these new file formats so users can translate faster and more accurately. For example, you can turn on ‘Customized colors’ so translators can annotate the edited segments, ‘Number of characters in the segment’ to make sure the text doesn’t run too long (very important for mobile devices), and ‘Synchronized scrolling’ so you can scroll the original and translated text at the same time, which makes navigation much easier.
With these new file formats and UI features, along with the file formats we already support (.aea, .srt, .html), we hope Translator Toolkit can help you reach more users around the world.
When you’re ready, give Google Translator Toolkit a try and suggest any improvements you’d like to see so we can work on making it even better.
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder