gtranslator man page on DragonFly

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gtranslator(1)			GNOME programs			gtranslator(1)

NAME
       gtranslator -- a comfortable gettext po file editor with many bells and
       whistles.

SYNOPSIS
       gtranslator [ --help ] [ --version ] [ -a filename ] [ -e po-file  ]  [
       -g geometry-string ] [ -l po-file-to-learn ] [ -b ] [ -s ]

DESCRIPTION
       gtranslator  is a comfortable gettext po file editor with many features
       like special char featured editing, plural  forms  view,	 div.  charset
       support,	 comfortable  prefs, list view of messages, regular expression
       based search function, compile/update possiblities and much much more.

       Of course all standard features of a good application like DnD, session
       support, supplement files for mime types and menu items are present.

       Instant	comment	 view,	a  comfortable quick navigation messages table
       with customizable colors, colorschemes, UTF-8 support, a high level  of
       preferizabilation  and  a personal learn buffer/translation memory with
       autotranslation capabilities  are  the  main  features  of  gtranslator
       besides the comfortable editing of the translation entries.

OPTIONS
       -a --auto-translate=po-file
	      Autotranslates the given po file with the entries from the learn
	      buffer and exits afterwards.

       -e --export-learn-buffer=po-file-to-export
	      Exports the learn buffer contents into the given	plain  gettext
	      po file and exits.

       -g --geometry=geometry
	      Let's you specify the geometry of gtranslator's main window.

       -l --learn=po-file-to-learn
	      Learns  the given po file within the command line without start‐
	      ing the GUI. The personal learn buffer is used as a  translation
	      memory to autoaccomplish missing translations/entries.

       -s --learn-statistics
	      Print out some statistics and information about the learn buffer
	      of gtranslator on the commandline.

       --display
	      With this option you can	select	on  which  screen  gtranslator
	      should appear.

       --help Shows  you  a  little  help  autogenerated by GNOME and with the
	      options mentioned above.

       --version
	      Prints out the version number of gtranslator.

       --usage
	      Shows you the pill of options without an explanation.

FILES
       ~/.gconf/apps/gtranslator

       Your personal gtranslator settings will be stored there.

       ~/.gtranslator
	      This directory is used by gtranslator  for  all  it's  "private"
	      files (e.g. temporary files).

       ~/.gtranslator/colorschemes/
	      Your  personal  colorschemes  can be placed in this directory --
	      gtranslator does also list the colorschemes in this directory in
	      the colorscheme selection box.

       ~/.gtranslator/etstates/
	      The  state  file	for  the messages table/tree is stored in this
	      directory.

       ~/.gtranslator/umtf/
	      Your personal learn buffers (in UMTF format) are stored in  this
	      directory	 --  the  learn	 buffer	 is  used for auto translation
	      issues.

       ~/.gtranslator/files/
	      Temporary files used by gtranslator are stored in this directory
	      (mostly this directory should be empty).

LEARN BUFFER
       The learn buffer is the implementation of a personal translation memory
       (TM) in gtranslator. gtranslator uses the UMTF (a compressed  XML  file
       which is normally quite good human readable if uncompressed) format for
       storing it's learned strings.
       Your learned strings are then available for the autotranslation feature
       of gtranslator where gtranslator automatically fills in the correspond‐
       ing and valuable translations for any message which  has	 already  been
       learned	previously.  This  results in a fairly high percentage of pre‐
       filled/pretranslated messages.
       The common and good style of working with the learn buffer and with the
       autotranslation	should	be  to learn the main po/translation files for
       your  language  via  gtranslator	 via   calling	 gtranslator   -n   -l
       po-file-to-learn	 on  the  command  line;  this will put the translated
       strings from this po file into your personal learn buffer.
       You should learn the main po files (for	GNOME  for  example  gnumeric,
       nautilus,  evolution  or any other bigger, already translated package's
       po file) for your language); you can use a new script from the  gtrans‐
       lator package to automatise this task a little bit: it's “build-gtrans‐
       lator-learn-buffer.sh” which is installed  into	gtranslator's  scripts
       directory  which	 you  can see by calling gtranslator -b and you simply
       execute the script with it's full path and simply follow	 the  informa‐
       tion on the command line for it.
       Afterwards you can simply use the "Autotranslation" menu entry from the
       GUI or use the "F10" hotkey to let gtranslator autotranslate all	 miss‐
       ing  translations  from your personal learn buffer. This will ease your
       translation work and make a big portion of the po files	be  pre-trans‐
       lated.
       With  a	fairly	big personal learn buffer of about 2 MB you can achive
       many pre-translated messages for a new project/translation.
       If you want to use the stored learn buffer contents  to	produce	 a  po
       file  with all the “learned” translations, you can also use the “export
       learn buffer” capability of gtranslator to get a plain po file  version
       of the learn buffer.

USAGE EXAMPLES
       Some examples for the options.

       gtranslator -b
	      Shows you the real build specs/dates of gtranslator.

       gtranslator -s
	      Give me statistics about the learn buffer of gtranslator.

       gtranslator -n -l po-file-to-learn
	      Learns  the given po file “po-file-to-learn” on the command line
	      without starting up the GUI.

       gtranslator -a po-file
	      Autotranslates all missing entries from the learn buffer if pos‐
	      sible and exits.

       gtranslator -e po-file-to-export
	      Exports  your current learn buffer to the given plain gettext po
	      file (“po-file-to-export”).

       gtranslator po-file
	      Starts gtranslator with the given po-file loaded on startup.

       gtranslator -g “460x320+0+0”
	      Lets gtranslator appear on the left upper	 edge  of  the	screen
	      “+0+0”  and  gtranslator is sized to “460x320” if possible -- if
	      gtranslator needs more size  for	it's  window  contents,	 it'll
	      expand itself to the necessary dimensions -- even if you defined
	      a smaller geometry string.

LICENSE
       gtranslator is distributed under the GNU GPL V 2.0 or greater.

AUTHORS
       Ross Golder <ross@kabalak.net>, Fatih Demir <kabalak@kabalak.net> (pre‐
       viously	 also:	 Gediminas  Paulauskas	<menesis@kabalak.net>,	Thomas
       Ziehmer <thomas@kabalak.net>, Kevin  Vandersloot	 <kfv101@psu.edu>  and
       Peeter Vois <peeter@kabalak.net>).

WEBSITE
       http://www.gtranslator.org

BUGREPORTS
       You  can deliver bug reports to the gtranslator development team to our
       bug base via  http://bugzilla.gnome.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=gtransla‐
       tor

VERSION
       gtranslator 2.91.7 man-page

gtranslator	       gtranslator 2.91.7 -- 2016-02-18		gtranslator(1)
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