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Discussion started , with 6 comments.
  1. Loziniak Polish Translator with all proofreading rights

    I assume that "n" gender is for a neuter? We should use "n:ło" then, not "n:ł/ła" then. Unless I'm wrong and "n" stands for a case when we cannot determine user's gender (eg. he hasn't filled this field in pofile)?

  2. Loziniak Polish Translator with all proofreading rights
  3. Kasparov1 Polish Translator with all proofreading rights

    the other problem is: does it relate to the gender of the user that created the content or to the user that's reading it?

  4. Jonne Haß Manager

    The gender is currently rudimentarily guessed from the profile data, https://github.com/diaspora/diaspora/blob/develop/app/controllers/application_controller.rb#L97 and only set for the currently signed in user. i18n-inflector supports passing multiple kinds on a per key basis, but this is basically nowhere integrated. Also note that the application is more and more ported to the client side with client side rendering and that our client side i18n support has no integration with the inlfection system at all.

  5. Kasparov1 Polish Translator with all proofreading rights

    Also note that the application is more and more ported to
    the client side with client side rendering and that our client
    side i18n support has no integration with the inlfection
    system at all.

    So if at all possible, we should avoid using inflection support. Shame, but possible to work around.

    Thanks!

  6. Jonne Haß Manager

    Note that we totally would accept any contributions to improve the inflection support in any of those areas though!

  7. Kasparov1 Polish Translator with all proofreading rights

    would love to help, but I neither have the time to work on yet another code base (far too many projects on backburner :) nor am I comfortable enough with ruby or JavaScript to write library code


History

  1. %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.
    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.
    ZeroThis plural form is used for numbers like: 0

    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.


    oneThis plural form is used for numbers like: 1

    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.


    otherThis plural form is used for numbers like: everything else

    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.


    changed by Jonne Haß .
    Copy to clipboard
  2. %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.
    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.
    ZeroThis plural form is used for numbers like: 0

    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.


    oneThis plural form is used for numbers like: 1

    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.


    otherThis plural form is used for numbers like: everything else

    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.


    changed by Jonne Haß .
    Copy to clipboard
  3. %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.
    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.%{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.
    ZeroThis plural form is used for numbers like: 0

    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.


    oneThis plural form is used for numbers like: 1

    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.


    otherThis plural form is used for numbers like: everything else

    %{actors} 53N7 U 4 M3554G3.


    changed by Jonne Haß .
    Copy to clipboard