Re: Language data - Mailing list pgsql-www
From | Guillaume Lelarge |
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Subject | Re: Language data |
Date | |
Msg-id | 45E3D9B0.4070504@lelarge.info Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: Language data (Magnus Hagander <magnus@hagander.net>) |
Responses |
Re: Language data
|
List | pgsql-www |
Magnus Hagander a écrit : >>> [...] >> I see a different way to look at your statistics. This is just >> percentage numbers. Do you have "real" numbers ? I mean, 3.9% of the >> people visiting www.postgresql.org speak french. OK. But 3.9% of how many ? >> >> Looking at wikipedia, the United States' population stood at an >> estimated 300,000,000. France has an estimated population of 64 million >> people. So France has 21.33% of the population the United States has. So >> having a 3.9% french people visiting the www.postgresql.org web site >> seems a bit huge to me. Of course, there's other countries where french >> is an official language >> (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_where_French_is_an_official_language >> ... hmmm, much more than I thought :) ). >> >> And how many french people are interested in PostgreSQL ? I can't say >> but if more than 50% of the french people interested in PostgreSQL are >> visiting www.postgresql.org, we absolutely need a french translation on >> this website. >> >> I just hope my explanations were understandable. > > Sure, that's definitly an interesting discussion. If you're interested > in doing some "real analysis" along that line, I'll be happy to give you > access to view the statistics reports for www.postgresql.org, as long as > you promise to report your findings to the list :) > OK, let's do it. Of course, I'll report what I found to the list. >>> Now, looking at geographical distribution, it's quite different: >>> United States 21.5% >>> Germany 7.0% >>> Brazil 6.5% >>> Japan 4.6% >>> Poland 4.1% >>> France 4.0% >>> United Kingdom 4.0% >>> >>> Adding up English speaking countries in the top list (US, UK, Canada and >>> Australia), we have about 30%. Which clearly shows that a lot of people >>> outside English speaking countries have their browsers set for English >>> as their primary choice - just like me ;-) >>> >> Or they are just using default options. That's what they have when they >> download an english Firefox or a beta release. > > Sure, but that works the other way around in IE. For example, even if I > install *English* IE versions, it will select Swedish language by > default simply because I said I wanted Swedish date/time style. While we > have some more firefox users than IE, I think it pretty much evens out > in the end, really. > I kind of agree with you. And people downloading a Firefox beta release are the kind of people who can read English, event if that's not their native language. >>> [...] >>> Regardless of this, given that two people have expressed interest in >>> translating what's there now, I'll make sure that the translation >>> continues to work as good or bad as it previously had. Then we can >>> improve on that in the future, once we see actual needs from actual >>> translators. >>> >> So we can start working on it ? that would be pretty cool :) > > Yes, but please only start working on the *templates* part. The .po > files will likely be noticeably different once I commit my changes > (almost there, but a few details to go), so there's not much point in > starting with that yet. > OK, I begin right now. -- Guillaume. <!-- http://abs.traduc.org/ http://lfs.traduc.org/ http://docs.postgresqlfr.org/ -->