Manage and maintain multilingual content that integrates seamlessly with Plone.
Project description
Introduction
LinguaPlone aims to be the multilingual/translation solution for Plone, and achieves this by being as transparent as possible and by minimizing the impact for existing applications and Plone itself.
It utilizes Archetypes references to do the translation, and all content is left intact both on install and uninstall - thus, it will not disrupt your content structure in any way. It also works with WebDAV and FTP.
LinguaPlone doesn’t require a particular hierarchy of content, and will work with any layout of your content space.
Some benefits of LinguaPlone
Totally transparent, install-and-go.
Each translation is a discrete object, and can be workflowed individually.
This also means that it works with WebDAV and FTP.
Translations are kept track of using AT references.
You can multilingual-enable your types without affecting their operation outside LinguaPlone.
Even if you uninstall LinguaPlone after adding multilingual content, all your content will be intact and will work as separate objects! The only thing that will be inactive is the references between the objects. If you re-install it, they will be back. It’s very non-intrusive.
Supporting multilingual capabilities is a 4 (!) line addition to your Archetypes class, and does not alter the functionality of the class when used outside LinguaPlone.
Fully integrated with ATContentTypes, so the basic content types are translatable.
Supports language-independent fields (example: dates, first/last names) for fields you want to be the same across translations, and updated in all languages if one of them changes.
Uses the notion of Canonical versions, so you can do interesting things with workflow, like invalidate all translations of a document when the master copy has changed.
Dependencies
Requires the following minimum versions:
Plone 3.0.2
plone.browserlayer 1.0rc2
Installation
Before installing LinguaPlone you need to install plone.browserlayer in your Plone site. It shows up as ‘’Local browser layer support’’ in the Plone ‘’Add-on Products’ control panel.
Frequently asked questions
I see no language flags and switching language does not work
This happens if the cookie language negotiation scheme is not enabled. Look at the portal_languages tool in the ZMI and check if Use cookie for manual override is enabled.
There is no option to select multiple languages in the languages control panel
This happens if plone.browserlayer is uninstalled. To correct this you need to install plone.browserlayer and then uninstall and reinstall LinguaPlone.
LinguaPlone refuses to install
Make sure you have ‘Local browser layer support’ installed first. Unless this is installed you can not install LinguaPlone.
LinguaPlone - quick demo instructions
LinguaPlone ships with a few example types that demonstrates the translation mechanism. It’s trivial to add this to your own classes (see the README), but to save you the hassle, you can try this simple experiment:
Make sure you have Plone 3.0.4 or newer installed.
Put LinguaPlone in your Products directory
(Re)start Zope
‘Site Setup’ → ‘Add/Remove Products’, install LinguaPlone
For the demonstration to make sense, we need to define a list of languages:
Go to the Site Setup
Click ‘Language Settings’
Select 3-4 languages from the selection list. Note that the languages are listed in their native name, so the sorting might be a bit unexpected (Spanish is Espanol, for example)
Press ‘Save’
Now we have a few languages to play with, and can go back to the Plone interface. Notice how you now have flags indicating your selected languages under the print/sendto area.
We now want to add a simple type:
Add a ‘Page’.
After filling out the type with some content and clicking ‘Save’, you will see that this content type has a pulldown menu, ‘Translate into’.
Select a language you want to translate this document into.
Save this translation.
Try to switch languages by clicking the flags.
That’s a very simple use case for the multilingual types.
Developer Usage
You can test it by multilingual-enabling your existing AT content types (see instructions below), or by testing the simple included types. Don’t forget to select what languages should be available in ‘portal_languages’ in the ZMI. :)
Credits
LinguaPlone was donated to the Plone Foundation by Plone Solutions, March 2006.
- Design and development –
“Plone Solutions”:http://www.plonesolutions.com (Alexander Limi, Dorneles Tremea, Geir Baekholt, Helge Tesdal, Stefan H. Holek)
- Original design idea:
Object realms (Benjamin Saller, Kapil Thangavelu)
- Funding and deployment, initial version:
Oxfam International
- Additional funding/sponsorship:
Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo, Centre for New European studies (Jonathan Lewis)
- Funding Plone 2.0.x compatibility:
Zope Japan Corporation (Takeshi Yamamoto)
Also many thanks to
- Simon Eisenmann:
For doing the hard job of the first implementations (I18NLayer) we had to learn from before doing this.
- Learning Lab Denmark:
For contributing and sponsoring the experience needed to build a multilingual solution.
- Nate Aune:
For always pushing for the better solution and making us realise LinguaPlone had to be built.
- Jodok Batlogg:
For extensive testing, deploying and feedback.
- Sasha Vincic:
For testing and expanding and making cool new stuff happen with LinguaPlone, XLIFF import/export in particular.
Implementation details
Architecture
LinguaPlone can only be used with Archetypes based content types. It provides a I18NBaseObject class that implements a ITranslatable interface that handles the translation linking. LinguaPlone provides base classes that inherits from I18NBaseObject and the regular AT base classes.
Language independent fields
Language independent fields are looked up from the canonical (original) translation.
The value is also stored on each translated object so every object has every attribute in case it is moved out of a translation context or some attributes (like start and end on Events) are referenced directly.
Language independence is set in the AT schema definition. Only AT based content types can have language independent fields.
Language lookup
The language tool returns a list of languages to look for. If there is no fallback, there will be only one element in the list.
Enable multilingual support in your content types
At the top, instead of from Products.Archetypes.public import *, you add:
try: from Products.LinguaPlone.public import * except ImportError: # No multilingual support from Products.Archetypes.public import *
For the fields that are language independent, you add ‘languageIndependent=1’ in the schema definition.
License
GNU General Public License, version 2.1
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