Tag Archive for 'plugin'

Indoeuropean Translator Widget version 1.0.3

The German version still didn’t work right. There was a (almost the same) stupid mistake in the PHP code, which had to be corrected. Now all versions seem to work right.

For more language pairs, please consider the fact that their outputs are not so good as with Google or Babelfish (Altavista-Systran). 

Please try the Swedish (svenska) version before asking for new language pairs,  to see if the translation output is good enough for you. Long and specialized texts, for example, might get impossible to read using TranExp…

WordPress Indoeuropean Translator Widget upgrade – XHTML bug

This release of the WordPress Indoeuropean Translator Widget corrects a very stupid XHTML mistake we hadn’t seen before, hidden because of the good behaviour of Mozilla and Opera web browsers.

Internet Explorer’s bad output showed the error: there were no initial nor closing List (li)
declared in some vertical language pairs.

The new corrected version is now 1.01, still not stable – call it pre-Alpha, Aleph, or however you like ;-)

The Indo-European Language Assoc.

Indo-European Translator Widget for WordPress

After waiting three weeks for a confirmation of WordPress.org to upload the widget and the ReadMe file to their plugin repository, we’ve decided to release the first version of the WordPress Translator Widget here for download.

It is based on the simplest WordPress Translator Plugin available out there, and – although more complicated in its design – it is easier to install for most users of WordPress.

We’ll wait to see if can make use of a WordPress.org account to make new releases. Until then, if you use this widget, please subscribe to this blog so that you are always informed about possible security or working bugs.

The Indo-European Language Association.

A New Site for Indo-European Software Projects

This is still another WordPress blog from the Indo-European Language Association, exclusively dedicated to software development, especially to translators and dictionaries, from and into the different Indo-European languages and (indeed) Modern Indo-European.

That’s all for now.