
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 00:40:03 +0100, "Timo B. Hübel"
Hi,
[...] In general, it's very uncommon that you need a completely separate set of templates for each language. Your markup, classes, styles, and logic will likely be identical for each language, and creating a separate template for each will just result in a lot of pain in the long run. Instead, you're likely better off having a single template and just translating strings.
well, from my experience in web-programming it's rather common that you want both. Of course, the above is true for most of the "functional" or "interactive" parts of the application. But quite often you also have a whole bunch of pages with mainly static text content, help pages for example. In these pages one wants the overall template functionality like including the general page layout and navigation and stuff like that, but you want to be able write rather large blocks of texts (together with some basic markup, like <p> and friends) as a whole I18n-ified template.
Agreed. I have exactly this situation. Regards, Dmitry
Just my 2 cents, Timo
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