Translations
We use Transifex to translate Sentry.
Other things that mean translating: localization, internationalization, i18n, l10n
If you need access to manage translations, translators, languages, or anything else, please talk to one of the following people:
- Ben Vinegar
- Vlad Cretu
Approving Translators and Languages
General rules to follow when doing approvals.
- Don't approve new languages generally.
- Don't approve new languages that are duplicates of existing languages.
- Don't approve new team members unless they seem reliable (see security note below).
Backfilling a Language
We have the ability to pay translators to come in and backfill a language. This has been done a number of times over the years, and is a good way to get an acceptable amount of coverage. There are caveats however:
- They often need "context" for a string, which we're usually missing in our code (or in the database). This means someone has to respond to their requests.
- The quality will be average - you given them a style to aim for, and they often do an ok-enough job.
- It's not free, though its cheap so it's not a big deal.
Translation Security
It's possible for translators to inject advertisements (links) or other bad content into translations. For this reason we don't accept translations implicitly - you get approved first - but it means we also need to do at least a minor bit of research on the translator themselves. Generally this is left to your own judgement, but take a look at their profile and ask yourself if they seem like a real human, or if this is a one-off account intended to use for abuse.
Updating Translations (source code)
Translations have to be updated manually in Sentry. Historically this happens before we tag a new release, but should be frequent (e.g. weekly).
To update translations, open a terminal within the Sentry repo and run the following:
make update-transifex