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Re: translations Digest, Vol 27, Issue 122008/1/19, Amed Çeko Jiyan <amedcj@...>:
>- As Frederik says, we use "kmr" for Kurmanji and "ckb" for Sorani. We use >these codes in GNOME and some other projects. >- you are right, "ku" is not a country code. We can not ku_KU in any >projects. SO we use ku_TR for some projects. Why projects need country code? >Do countries support projects? No. It would be great to use only language >codes for all projects. Languages don't support projects either - people who speak/read/write them do. :p But country is good for stuff like Portuguese/Brazillian Portuguese and American/English/Irish/Australian/Canadian/South African/... English, where there's little argument that it's the same language and just varying dialects. (A language/locale code can also be written like en-GB-LONDON, if one wants to be that specific, though there are some more guidelines with regards to that. Check RFC 4646, which Gabor linked to, for more on this.) A funny thing in relation to this is Norwegian, which has *3* ISO 639 2-letter codes: no, nb, and nn. The first (no) being generic Norwegian, which could mean either nb or nn, and the two latter (nb and nn) are, respectively, Bokmål and Nynorsk. But that's a completely different situation that you should research for yourself. One of those little amusing things in linguistics (IMHO). =) >As you see from Kurdish Google, iso639 2 makes problems for us. It would be >better to use "kmr" and "ckb" > >That is good Drupal will use iso639 3. When I was inquiring about starting the Scots translation (which I still have to get out of the vapor ware state...), I'm pretty sure I was told it wouldn't be a problem to use "sco" (there isn't really any alternative code I could use), so I'm guessing that it shouldn't be a problem here either. But I am by no means an authority on Drupal's relations to ISO 639 codes, so, yeah. :) -- Frederik 'Freso' S. Olesen <http://freso.dk/> _______________________________________________ translations mailing list translations@... http://lists.drupal.org/mailman/listinfo/translations |
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Re: translations Digest, Vol 27, Issue 12-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 Frederik 'Freso' S. Olesen schrieb: > 2008/1/19, Amed Çeko Jiyan <amedcj@...>: >> That is good Drupal will use iso639 3. > > When I was inquiring about starting the Scots translation (which I > still have to get out of the vapor ware state...), I'm pretty sure I > was told it wouldn't be a problem to use "sco" (there isn't really any > alternative code I could use), so I'm guessing that it shouldn't be a > problem here either. But I am by no means an authority on Drupal's > relations to ISO 639 codes, so, yeah. :) I think it makes sense to use these codes. However, I'd like to hear from Goba if his locale work will support them (it IMHO should). Cheers, Gerhard -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.6 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFHkjSGfg6TFvELooQRAqhFAKCwyzau0RfEG80nxvxOXIiKasNTSwCglDYp xYJgk4/Fu0UhuoC05zo1hIU= =RnKV -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ translations mailing list translations@... http://lists.drupal.org/mailman/listinfo/translations |
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Re: translations Digest, Vol 27, Issue 12On Jan 19, 2008 6:33 PM, Gerhard Killesreiter <gerhard@...> wrote:
> > When I was inquiring about starting the Scots translation (which I > > still have to get out of the vapor ware state...), I'm pretty sure I > > was told it wouldn't be a problem to use "sco" (there isn't really any > > alternative code I could use), so I'm guessing that it shouldn't be a > > problem here either. But I am by no means an authority on Drupal's > > relations to ISO 639 codes, so, yeah. :) > > I think it makes sense to use these codes. However, I'd like to hear > from Goba if his locale work will support them (it IMHO should). The locale / language system works with whatever language codes. The reasons we are trying to stick to one language code is that - when Google indexes your page, the language code you tell it (in the HTML output of most themes) will be used to index the content under that language - when a browser comes with language preferences, your site might provide it with the specific language version it prefers (depending on your configuration)... this only works if browsers and websites use the same language So generally, we try to advocate interoperability. That's why we should look closer for options in the bounds of RCF464, which all parties on the web scene should obey to. If there does not happen to be any solution there, feel free to make exceptions, but be aware, that search engine friendliness of content in your language, browser language preferences, etc. will not work as expected. I'd suggest looking at some browsers as well. Do they allow you to set these languages in their preferences. There was a short note on Firefox not supporting Kurdish languages properly in the thread starter mail, so that might not be a good solution to look there :) Gabor _______________________________________________ translations mailing list translations@... http://lists.drupal.org/mailman/listinfo/translations |
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Re: translations Digest, Vol 27, Issue 12On Jan 19, 2008 1:34 PM, Amed Çeko Jiyan <amedcj@...> wrote:
> - As Frederik says, we use "kmr" for Kurmanji and "ckb" for Sorani. We use > these codes in GNOME and some other projects. > - you are right, "ku" is not a country code. We can not ku_KU in any > projects. SO we use ku_TR for some projects. Why projects need country code? > Do countries support projects? No. It would be great to use only language > codes for all projects. > > As you see from Kurdish Google, iso639 2 makes problems for us. It would be > better to use "kmr" and "ckb" > > That is good Drupal will use iso639 3. No, Drupal will not use ISO 639-3 if otherwise possible, please read the other mails as well. Gabor _______________________________________________ translations mailing list translations@... http://lists.drupal.org/mailman/listinfo/translations |
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