l10n
Software localization (also spelled "localisation", often abbreviated to l10n — this is a numeronym, where the “10” stands for the 10 letters between the first letter “l” and the last letter “n”) means translation of a software interface and messages to another language plus adaptation of some formats (e.g. measures, dates and currency) plus adaptation to local cultures.
Here are 119 public repositories matching this topic...
Show plugins translation stats on your WordPress install.
-
Updated
Jun 28, 2024 - JavaScript
Translation files for Literary Universe.
-
Updated
Jun 27, 2024 - JavaScript
JavaScript implementation of Project Fluent
-
Updated
Jun 25, 2024 - JavaScript
A localizable blog theme using Tailwind CSS for styling and KaTex for math
-
Updated
Jun 24, 2024 - JavaScript
gettext localization library compatible with Jed-formatted locale data
-
Updated
Jun 22, 2024 - JavaScript
A loader, that fetches the content of string files from transifex.
-
Updated
Jun 17, 2024 - JavaScript
A mighty desktop editor app for Java ResourceBundle files
-
Updated
Jun 16, 2024 - JavaScript
Web server directory index customization with preview, pagination, download — h5ai
-
Updated
Jun 11, 2024 - JavaScript
[MERN Stack] KTM, a locale management web app, lets you manage and control locales in one place. Useful for multiple i18n/l10n projects.
-
Updated
Jun 21, 2024 - JavaScript
Flarum Russian language pack.
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - JavaScript
An IRI parser. Parses URLs and URNs. Fixes an i18n bug in JavaScript's default URL class.
-
Updated
May 5, 2024 - JavaScript
A GitHub Action for hyperglot language testing in fonts
-
Updated
Jun 20, 2024 - JavaScript
Using API lastUsed using in node.js, in the browser and for deno.
-
Updated
Apr 18, 2024 - JavaScript
Fluent — planning, spec and documentation
-
Updated
Feb 28, 2024 - JavaScript
A localization toolkit with a simple translation format.
-
Updated
Feb 1, 2024 - JavaScript
- Followers
- 6.5k followers
- Website
- www.w3.org/International/questions/qa-i18n.en.html
- Wikipedia
- Wikipedia