Understanding what the four languages do, and where they run is essential for understanding what type of code you are looking for. When you understand the different responsibilities each have, then it will be easier to think of what type of code needs changed to achieve a goal.

I'm using Wordpress 4.1, when I go to Settings -> General and then I choose a language in the combobox Site Language, that successfully changes the language of my WordPress site (although not completely, I don't know why). The problem is, that also changes the language of my admin Dashboard to the language that I chose there. I want my admin Dashboard to stay in English. How do I change my WordPress site language without changing my admin dashboard language?


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You can change the global site language under Settings > General, but then edit your user account to set the admin language to whatever you want for your user account. For more info reference -4-7-to-introduce-user-specific-language-setting-for-the-admin

This sounds like you're using a separate plugin. You may want to look into the WPML (Wordpress Multilanguage) plugin. This will allow you to translate the pages/posts but the admin interface doesn't change.

In fact, there are good reasons to reject that belief. Most of what we know about our native language(s) and the rules or conventions for using them is learned through everyday (mainly spoken) interaction which is not subject to institutional control. A lot of that learning takes place in childhood, and typically it is women and older girls who are primarily responsible for the linguistic socialization of children. And why would women or girls who spent more time talking among themselves than to men or boys (a pattern which was probably the norm in most cultures for most of history) have been unable to use language in ways that reflected their shared experience?

I have done the initial configuration, added the languages, translated the pages, and everything is working fine, unless the language switcher, which (maybe) it is not not working, I cannot find it, cannot put it to work.

This makes the free plugin nearly useless if you use the new Full Site Editing themes. There is no way to add a language switch. I always recommended polylang to all partners, friends or meetup visitors. This will end right now.

That leaves Native English speakers who have never learned an additional language at a disadvantage when it comes to learning and understanding register. There can be an assumption that all situations and all people are created equal. Needless to say, that assumption is false.

Hello everyone ? I have a task to translate a website and I need multi language plugin for the purpose. Do you have any recommendations and what is the best plugin that you think will do the job?

Fortunately for most developers, WordPress uses four of the main programming languages that almost every coder will be at least familiar with. Those languages are HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and of course PHP.

However, HTML is actually a markup language, as the name suggests, and not a programming language. HTML can be considered as one large text file, with markup added to explain what each element is. It is down to PHP, CSS, and JavaScript to bring HTML to life.

JavaScript is a clever programming language that starts after a web page has been loaded, controlling elements such as when a user hovers over an image and it flips, or when a navigation button changes color.

Long before LevelText, building a language learning app had been on my mind for a long time. I had always been passionate about languages: I studied several languages including French, Spanish and Japanese, and I was a PhD student researching linguistics and natural language processing. Thus, during my idle time, I liked to brainstorm ideas about improving language learning. Surely, language learning can be improved with my AI and NLP expertise, right?

There were a lot of language learning apps out there already, the most famous one being Duolingo, but there are many alternatives including Babbel, Rosetta Stone, Busuu, and dozens of others. Most people in the language learning community liked to criticize these apps: they offered similar features like language games and flashcards, teaching you words and phrases, but you could use them for a long time without achieving much fluency in the language.

At this time, I started to interview all of my friends who were into language learning. A few people agreed with me that reading in the target language was a pain point, but most people did not have physical books lying around, and preferred reading on their phone or computer. And people who owned books wanted to keep them clean rather than writing all over them.

At the end of 2021, I had just moved to Vancouver and was wrapping up my PhD; I had more free time and was ready to give this project a more serious effort. So I set up a profile on the YCombinator cofounder matching platform, and soon I matched with Jonny Kalambay. He was working as a software engineer a Yelp and also had a passion for language learning. We worked on a toy project as a trial of working together and then decided to become cofounders.

Our MVP assumed the user spoke English and was studying French. We decided to support only one language in our initial launch, since this would allow us to test out the concept with minimal development. We picked French because it was the most widely studied language in Canada and both of us were familiar with it.

Each lesson consisted of a paragraph of simple-to-read French text accessible to beginners, and a multiple-choice question to test their comprehension. We started prototyping this concept, using the GPT-3 model from OpenAI to simplify French articles down to a simple paragraph, and manually writing the multiple choice questions. We then enrolled a handful of French learners from social language learning sites to validate the idea.

The next day, we received a rejection letter from YCombinator, basically saying that many great founders have tried to break into the language learning apps market, but it is hard to build a business in this space. Language learning (especially for non-English languages) was a hobby for most people with no urgent need, and they urged us to consider solving a must-have rather than a nice-to-have problem.

We started to fight more and more over product and business decisions: what level of language learners to aim at, how much to rely on automation versus manual content curation, how much we should care about monetization, etc. Neither of us were more experienced than the other in business, and neither of us trusted the other to take the lead on it. About two weeks after YCombinator, Jonny decided to leave LevelText and start his own company to make tools for language teachers. To be fair, he agreed to leave me with full ownership of the company and all its intellectual property (i.e., the code that we wrote), but I was on my own.

Despite my passion for it, language learning is ultimately a weak business model, especially software-based apps. For English speakers, learning a language is mainly something that is done for fun; it is seldom a must-have. Learners typically get bored and quit after only a few weeks, when their initial motivation runs out and it becomes a chore. This makes it difficult to make a subscription-based model work (many language learning apps get around this by asking for payment of several months or a whole year upfront).

Finally, the market is saturated with hundreds of language learning products offering similar features. There is no good way to measure results of language learning, so you have no way to prove that your method is better than the others in terms of educational efficacy. With no better alternative, most companies optimize for user retention, inevitably leading to an app filled with gamification features.

A multilingual WordPress website serves the same content in multiple languages. It can automatically redirect users to a language based on their region, or users can select their preferred language using a dropdown link.

There are several WordPress plugins that you can use to translate your website into multiple languages. You need to choose a plugin that helps you easily manage translations without making things unnecessarily difficult for your users.

You can also just click on the drop-down menu below your default language, and it will show you the list of translatable text strings on the page. You can select a string and then provide its translation.

TranslatePress allows you to add a language switcher by using a shortcode, as a navigation menu item, or as a floating banner. The language switcher can be displayed as flags, language names, or both.

Many of the top WordPress plugins are translation-ready. However, they may not be translated into all languages. TranslatePress and WPML allow you to easily translate strings within the plugin interface.

You can hide the language in the permalink for your default language to keep those articles where they are. You would want to check with your SEO plugin to check your indexing for your site in additional languages.

You would either need their business plan or you would want to transfer to WordPress.org, you may want to take a look at our article here: -guide/self-hosted-wordpress-org-vs-free-wordpress-com-infograph/

Part of your confusion is our guides are for WordPress.org sites, as you are on WordPress.com you may want to take a look at our comparison here: -guide/self-hosted-wordpress-org-vs-free-wordpress-com-infograph/

Great, but what about translating theme intself? How can we create site where texts in theme elements (not post, comments, etc. but header, footer and others) can be presented in a few languages? What should I do, make two index.php? How to attach lang switcher to site so if it once is set, all the content goes in selected language?

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