Feed The Beast Wiki:Translation guide

Welcome to the Official Gamepedia FTB Wiki! A large part of our wiki is the translation interface: it allows many various articles and templates to be translated to other languages. This is very favorable for foreign players, as looking for information can be very difficult when almost all documentation is written in English, and a translation made by a real person is very much superlative when compared to automated services like Google Translate.

Before translating anything
Please consider translating the "core" templates before translating anything else. Many, maybe even most, articles depend on these.

Here is a list:
 * Cg/Crafting Table
 * Cg/Furnace
 * Infobox
 * About
 * Main
 * Credit
 * See also
 * Main
 * Credit
 * See also

FTB Wiki is also recommended, but it may be a lot of work for anyone new.

Translating pages
If you've noticed, most pages aren't translatable. Each page needs special markup for it to be translatable. Do NOT try to translate a page that isn't translatable, and do NOT try to add the markup yourself (please ask if you want a particular article to be translatable).

Instead of clicking the "Random Page" button until you find an article that has a "Translate this page" button on the top, you should go to the Translation portal. You can find a list of languages there. These are NOT all of the languages that the wiki can be translated to (not even by a long shot). If you want to translate to another language, then ask make sure to ask or the FTB Wiki IRC.

If you click one of the languages, for example, German, you'll find a rather large list of translatable articles, templates, modules, etc. It's possible that some articles are already translated, it's also possible that most are already translated, but it is extremely unlikely that all of the articles are translated. Some of the things that are translatable are in groups, like IC2 Nuclear Control or the Help Pages. Clicking "expand" will open up all of the things in it.

In the translation extension we use, things are separated into "Units" or "Chunks". This means you will translate parts of an article, rather then an entire article. This also means if the original article is changed, you don't need to retranslate every single thing, just the specific Unit. Most articles only have 2-15 Units you need to translate, but stuff like Getting Started guides and Changelogs can have hundreds.

Make sure to translate everything in an article. If the English unit means the same thing in your language, just copy it over.

Links
Links in translatable articles look (or at least, should look) like this: " ".

To translate the link, only translate the second parameter. For example, " " would become "  " if translated to Spanish. Translating it to " " will break the link, so be careful not to do that.

Interwiki links
You may notice links to Wikipedia are not formatting like a normal link. It might look like this: " United States ".

Making it link to, for this example, the corresponding Spanish Wikipedia article, is fairly easy. The English Wikipedia includes interwikis to almost all other wikipedias. So, " United States " can be converted to " Estados Unidos ". Or, for a German example, " United States " can be converted to " Vereinigte Staaten ".

The syntax is fairly simple, if you didn't understand it already. In "  ", "  " represents your language code (like "nl" for Dutch or "de" for German). "  " represents the name of the page in the other Wikipedia. "  " is the display name of the link.

Names
Names of blocks, items and mods are usually translated. Translations of these names should be based off of any official translations of the mods. If no official translations exist, it is recommended to submit a translation or use an unofficial translation. If using an unofficial/self-created translation, an English translation of the block/item/mod should be provided (example below, in Spanish).

El Gato (Inglés: Cat) es...

This may be a good habit to do this anyway, even if you are using an official translation.

Names of modders, and teams, shouldn't be translated. You can include a pronunciation if you think it helps readers (especially if you use a language not based off a Latin script).

List of possibly useful unofficial mod translations
(Feel free to add on to this list)

Restoring translations
In some (or rather, many) articles you may notice this in the translation interface:

or

In the past, the FTB Wiki didn't use the translations interface it uses today. Many translations were made in the "older way". When the wiki moved to solely using the interface, those older translations did not line up with the newer system- many of them need to be restored, thus the Translation Restoration project was created.

Qualifications
This is a wiki: there are no real qualifications for translators. However, if your translations are of low quality, they may not be approved.

Please DO NOT translate to a language you do not know. If you must constantly use tools such as Google Translate, chances are you may not be good enough. It's ok to use such utilities if you forget a word or two, but having to translate things like entire sentences to your language is a bad indicator.

If the language you're translating to is your native language, chances are that you are more then qualified. If you can read and understand an article in your language's Wikipedia, then you are probably also very qualified.

Do NOT feel pressured to avoid translating if you aren't sure if your grasp of a language is strong enough. Translations don't need to be perfect in every way; besides, it's not like translations can't be improved later.

English Qualifications
Since this is an English wiki, and you can only translate from English to another language, it is expected that translators know at least a basic understanding of English.

If an article has been translated to a language you know a bit better then English, it's ok to peek at that other translation if it helps you out. Just be careful not to base your new translation entirely off the other translation (we don't want a case of telephone).

Don't worry too much if your English isn't sharp as a knife; you can ask our IRC channel or a Staff member for guidance if something doesn't make sense to you, or if you need help understanding a big word.