Translate Plone Subjects/Keywords - plone

Is there a way to translate Plone Subjects/Keywords?
I already tried .po translations, but this does not work?
Any ideas?
Thanks in advance

You can probably use translations in a .po file (use the "plone" domain) but you need to customize all templates that display keywords (view, edit, ...) wrapping the raw text rendering into a i18n:translate="" TALES expression.
For exampple, for the display you need to customize this:
https://github.com/plone/plone.app.layout/blob/da9d5077668d3bab502ea0f585fdae5c753956f0/plone/app/layout/viewlets/keywords.pt#L15
You can probably perform a lot of this stuff simply using z3c.jbot.

Related

WordPress responsive menu in chinese language

I am using this plugin in my wordpress website.
https://wordpress.org/plugins/wp-responsive-menu/
But when i translate my website in chinese language menu items not showing. Please can you suggets me how i can translate it?
in this plugins, the folder "lang" is empty... It does not use languages. So you need change php files and i recommend you do not do this.
But if you really need change, use sublimetext or other soft or command line for use best function : "search in folder".
Use WMPL[Multilingual Plugin].
Just install this plugin in your website and just translate each and every menu which has been used in English.{you can even Sync the menus to the selected language}.
When you choose your language the menu gets changed to Chinese language and nothing get affected.
You will most probably need to either change the page encoding or if use an approach like in this answer.
(HTML5) cannot display Chinese characters when using UTF-8

atom.io auto create html basic structure

Im using atom.io for some time now and really like it. there is just one thing im missing. I used to use brackets and sublime before and they both had a feature where you could create the basic structure of a html documents by just typing html.
this would just set the html, head and body tag. created the charset meta, title and link to css file.
I create a lot of html files a day so it would be really helpfull if I know the shortcode or the package which supports this!
You're looking for autocomplete-snippets.
Simply type html and press Enter
Here's a terrible GIF to prove it:
There is a nice Plugin, called emmet: https://atom.io/packages/emmet
When you got that, you just have to type ! -> tab in an empty document. You get pretty much the same result as #hatchet GIF.
If you have disabled the autocomplete functionality mentioned in the currently accepted answer, or want more flexibility than that allows, there is a file-templates package:
https://atom.io/packages/file-templates
Here are some basic instructions.
To install the package: edit->preferences->install->file-templates.
To save the template: packages->new template from this file.
To open a new file with that template, just hit ctrl-alt-n and
select it.
Make sure your file has .html added on the end of its name.
Then go back into Atom, type HTML, and press enter. Your boilerplate should appear. Solved my problem instantly!
If we install Emmet package we are not getting the boiler plate code. So I disabled emmet and it is working fine for me.
!tab is the command u seek. But it won't work unless you create a file and save it with the html extension...
So go create a new file in the directory u want, call it index.html and now go type !tab
It should work 100%, if not be sure u have emmet installed.

Registering an HTML-derived content type with the HTML editor without a package?

I'm trying to register a custom content type, similar to this question on MSDN forums: I want to register a custom extension that is essentially an HTML file, e.g.:
[Export]
[DisplayName("My Custom Markup")]
[Name("mycustom")
[BaseDefinition("html")]
internal static ContentTypeDefinition MyCustomContentType;
[Export]
[FileExtension(".mycustom")]
[ContentType("mycustom")]
internal static FileExtensionToContentTypeDefinition MyCustomFileExtensionDefinition;
So by specifying BaseDefinition as html, I am able to get HTML highlighting in .mycustom files, unfortunately I get nothing else, in particular, the HTML intellisense. From the above link it seems that the only way to have Visual Studio recognize custom extensions as a specific editor type, but I'd have to hack the registry (or more specifically, provide this via the ProvideEditorExtension attribute, but it's only applicable on a VSPackage).
So my question is, basically, is there an alternative way to register a custom extension to an editor programmatically, but without creating a custom VSPackage for it? Other than hacking the registry, of course?
(I could be totally wrong with the approach, in which case your help is very much appreciated!)
The easiest way is to use the technique demoed here:
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/noahric/archive/2010/03/01/new-extension-css-is-less.aspx
This is effectively "hacking the registry" but in a supported way. You're simply wrapping the needed keys in a .pkgdef file (essentially a .reg file) that can be contained in an editor extension.

How to export Wordpress posts to XLIFF?

How to export WordPress posts to XLIFF? I am looking for a neat way to do it with the help of PHP. Thanks.
XLIFF is just XML, so you could modify a plugin like oxyXML, or even the built in RSS feed generator (wp-includes/feed-rss2.php) to generate the proper format.
Look at the source code of this drupal module:
http://drupal.org/project/xliff
You can take the function in there and convert it for you needs. they make use of the xliff2xml roundtrip tool that uses an xsl transformation for XML (or xhtml in your case) to xliff and vice versa

How can I modify a CSS file programmatically?

I have a legacy application that I needed to implement a configuration page for to change text colors, fonts, etc.
This applications output is also replicated with a PHP web application, where the fonts, colors, etc. are configured in a style sheet.
I've not worked with CSS previously.
Is there a programatic way to modify the CSS and save it without resorting to string parsing or regex?
The application is VB6, but I could write a .net tool that would do the css manipulation if that was the only way.
You don't need to edit the existing one. You could have a new one that overrides the other -- you include this one after the other in your HTML. That's what the "Cascading" means.
It looks like someone's already done a VB.NET CSS parser which is F/OSS, so you could probably adapt it to your needs if you're comfortable with the license.
http://vbcssparser.sourceforge.net/
One hack is to create a PHP script that all output is passed through, which then replaces certain parts of CSS with configurable alternatives. If you use .htaccess you can make all output go through the script.
the best way i can think of solving this problem is creating an application that will get some values ( through the URL query ) and generate the appropriate css output based on a css templates
Check this out, it uses ASP.NET and C#.
In my work with the IE control (shadocvw.dll), it has an interesting ability to let you easily manage the CSS of a page and show the effects of modified CSS on a page in realtime. I've never dealt with the details of such implementations myself, but I recommend that as a possible solution worth looking at. Seeing as pretty much everyone is on IE 6 or later nowadays, you can skip the explanations about handling those who only have IE 5,4,3 or 2 installed.
Maybe the problem's solution, which is most simple for the programmer and a user is to edit css via html form, maybe. I suppose, to create css-file, which would be "default" or "standart" for this application, and just to read it, for example, by perl script, edit in html and to write it down. Here is just the simple example.
In css-file we have string like:
border-color: #008a77;
we have to to read this string, split it up, and send to a file, which will write it down. Get something like this in Perl:
tr/ / /s;
($vari, $value) = split(/:/, _$);
# # While you read file, you can just at the time to put this into html form
echo($vari.":<input type = text name = ".$vari." value = ".$value.">");
And here it is, you've got just simple html-form-data, you just shoul overwrite your css-file with new data like this:
...
print $vari[i].": ".$value.";\n";
...
and voila - you've got programmatical way of changing css. Ofcourse, you have to make it more universal, and more close to your particular problem.
Depending on how technically oriented your CSS editors are going to be, you could do it very simply by loading the whole thing up into a TextEdit field to let them edit it - then write it back to the file.
Parsing and creating an interface for all the possibilities of CSS would be an astronomical pain. :-)

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