... | ... | @@ -164,6 +164,7 @@ Also important: Leave the link untranslated: |
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#### Current problems
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There is a tests page where you can see some of the current problematic strings : https://tpo.pages.torproject.net/community/l10n/
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Weblate also provides checks for the strings. See Weblate's checks by going to https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/tor/#languages and click the checks number for your language.
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Please try to clean the list once in a while.
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... | ... | @@ -194,11 +195,6 @@ When we have images for translation, many times they have an alt attribute, as t |
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In the example, the `alt` attribute value is `"How Tor Browser works"`**. And we should translate the `alt` attributes to our language, as they are used by screen readers to provide a description of the image for people that cannot see the picture. But unfortunately many translators overlook it. The rest of the attributes do not usually need to be changed.
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Please read the transifex documentation to see [how to edit the HTML attributes](https://docs.transifex.com/translation/html-files#translating-html-attributes). If you are going to translate many, maybe it is better to use the [raw editor mode](https://docs.transifex.com/translation/tools-in-the-editor/#translate-using-the-raw-mode)
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To check the `alt` attributes on our website's image you can use the [translate_alt](https://www.transifex.com/otf/tor-project-support-community-portal/translate/#my/$/158404175?q=tags%3Atranslate_alt) tag in Transifex (change to your language on the dropdown).
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#### In markdown
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Sometimes the images are included with markdown, as this:
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