(please note, I am cross posting)
KDE 4.1 has no official Hebrew translation in KDE 4.0 and KDE 4.1, since
it did not qualify: it did not have enough percentage to be an official
translation. See here:
http://l10n.kde.org/stats/gui/stable-kde4/essential/
Basically, an official language needs to have:desktop_kdelibs.po >=75%,
desktop_l10n.po >= 75%, kdebase >= 75% and kdelibs4.po >= 90%. The
reason for that, is that no one was working on translating KDE 4.x.
Pretty simple.
If you look here: http://l10n.kde.org/stats/gui/trunk-kde4/essential/
you will see that KDE 4.2 to be released in January will probably meet
those numbers. KDE4.2 is also fixed (been fixed!) in various places to
properly support Hebrew as good it did in KDE3, but the work is being
done in trunk (4.2) and not branch. As I said to the Ubuntu guys, if you
really want I can backport the translations from 4.2 to 4.1, but I
cannot guarantee that the product will have a decent quality, as it's
not been tested for RTL compliance.
Dotan Cohen wrote:
2008/10/14 Oron Peled <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Hi everybody,
As of today we have crossed the required bar (90% translation) for
having Hebrew as an official language *during install*.
As the title says, F10 (which is in Beta now) will have
Hebrew as one of the installation languages.
More details in:
http://life-with-linux.blogspot.com/2008/10/hebrew-installation-of-fedora-10.html
Happy Suckot ;-)
If that is so, then how is it that Hebrew is not an official language of KDE:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/kdebase-runtime/+bug/280724
Can someone knowledgeable comment on that bug?
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