Project:Language policy/mni

ꯃꯁꯤꯒꯤ ꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏꯁꯤꯅ ꯍꯧꯖꯤꯛ ꯑꯣꯏꯔꯤꯕ ꯂꯣꯟ-ꯃꯌꯥꯝꯒꯤ ꯇꯧꯒꯗꯕ ꯊꯕꯛꯁꯤꯡ ꯃꯤꯗꯤꯌꯥꯋꯤꯀꯤ ꯎꯨꯠꯂꯤ ꯃꯇꯦꯡ:ꯃꯃꯤꯡ ꯏꯐꯝ

ꯃꯃꯤꯡ ꯏꯐꯝꯒꯤ ꯃꯅꯨꯡꯗ ꯂꯩꯕ ꯑꯩꯈꯣꯏꯅ ꯄꯣꯠꯁꯛ ꯈꯔꯥ ꯁꯦꯝꯒꯠꯂꯛꯄ ꯃꯤꯌꯥꯝ ꯉꯥꯛꯂꯤꯕ ꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏꯁꯤꯡ ꯃꯇꯦꯡ ꯫ ꯃꯁꯤꯒꯤ ꯄꯥꯟꯗꯝꯅ ꯆꯪꯗꯔꯥ ꯌꯥꯗꯔꯕ ꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏꯒꯤ ꯃꯇꯦꯡ ꯂꯧꯅꯕ ꯁꯦꯝꯕ ꯃꯗꯨꯅ ꯂꯣꯟ ꯑꯅꯧꯕꯒꯤ ꯋꯤꯀꯤ ꯃꯈꯣꯡ ꯆꯅꯈꯠꯂꯛꯅꯕ ꯑꯃꯁꯨꯡ ꯀꯔꯃꯅ ꯁꯤꯖꯤꯟꯅꯕ ꯇꯥꯛꯄ ꯫ ꯃꯈꯣꯏꯁꯤꯡꯗꯨ ꯂꯣꯟ ꯑꯇꯣꯞꯄ ꯃꯌꯥꯝꯗ ꯑꯣꯟꯊꯣꯛꯄ ꯕꯥꯕ ꯑꯣꯏꯒꯗꯕꯅꯤ ꯫


 * English is the main reference language, and all root pages should be named and written in English.
 * Sub-pages should only be used for translations into other languages, not for English content (e.g. you shouldn't use  - use   or   instead).
 * If an international version of a page exists but an English version does not, then please create a stub article for the English version as this aids navigation.

This system will be compatible with the planned automated import/export of Help pages, but may need a bit of working around to export/import non-English pages in the interim.

ꯍꯟꯊꯣꯛꯄ ꯄꯥꯛꯊꯣꯛꯍꯟꯕ ꯑꯩꯈꯣꯏꯅ ꯂꯣꯟ ꯱ꯗ ꯍꯟꯗꯣꯛꯄ ꯄꯥꯛꯊꯣꯛꯄ ꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏ ꯱꯰꯰ ꯍꯦꯟꯕ ꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏꯁꯤꯡꯒꯤ ꯫ ꯃꯁꯤꯅꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏ ꯃꯆꯥꯒꯤ ꯌꯥꯅꯕ|ꯂꯣꯏꯅꯅ $tpl-langcat ꯂꯣꯟ ꯒꯤ ꯀꯥꯞꯜ ꯃꯆꯥꯈꯥꯏꯕ ꯱ꯁꯨꯡ $tpl-tnt ꯍꯟꯗꯣꯛꯄ ꯌꯥꯕ ꯇꯦꯝꯄꯂꯦꯠꯁꯤꯡ These use the subpage convention, with for categories.

The system is recommended at least for most visited pages and all new help, manual and (main) extension pages, but no policy has been established on this yet.


 * ꯍꯟꯗꯣꯛꯅꯕꯠꯂꯨ:ꯆꯠꯂꯨ ꯁꯤꯗ Special:LanguageStats ꯑꯃꯁꯨꯡ ꯍꯧꯔꯣ ꯍꯟꯗꯣꯛꯄ ꯫
 * ꯍꯟꯗꯣꯛꯄ ꯌꯦꯡꯁꯤꯟꯅꯕ:Special:PageTranslationSpecial:AggregateGroups꯫

You can request a page to be added to translation by preparing it for translation, then a translation administrator will have to enable it (see the tutorial How to prepare a page for translation); otherwise, ask directly to one of the translation administrators to do it.

ꯑꯔꯤꯕ ꯊꯧꯁꯤꯜ

ꯃꯇꯦꯡ:ꯑꯌꯥꯎꯕ/fr (ꯃꯇꯦꯡ ꯄꯥꯡꯗꯕ:ꯃꯈꯥ ꯆꯠꯊꯕ|ꯃꯇꯦꯡ:ꯃꯈꯥꯆꯠꯊꯕ. ꯅꯠꯇꯔꯒ ꯃꯇꯦꯡ:ꯃꯈꯥꯆꯠꯊꯕ/fr)
 * ꯑꯇꯣꯞꯄ ꯂꯣꯟꯁꯤꯡ ꯁꯤ ꯆꯞ ꯆꯥꯅ ꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏ ꯃꯆꯥꯒꯤ ꯃꯃꯤꯡꯗ ꯊꯝꯕ ꯏꯪꯂꯤꯁ ꯕꯔꯖꯟꯗ꯫ ꯈꯨꯗꯝ ꯑꯣꯏꯅ ꯐꯔꯦꯟꯁ ꯂꯣꯟꯤ ꯃꯇꯦꯡ:ꯑꯌꯥꯎꯕ ꯁꯤ
 * ꯂꯣꯟ ꯄꯤꯛꯊꯕ-ꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏꯁꯤꯡ ꯁꯤ ꯃꯃꯤꯡ ꯄꯤꯕꯗ ꯆꯞ ꯆꯥꯕ ꯂꯣꯟ ꯒꯤ ꯀꯣꯗ ꯁꯤꯖꯤꯟꯅꯒꯗꯕꯅꯤ ꯂꯣꯟ ꯑꯗꯨꯒꯤ (ꯌꯦꯡꯉꯨ ꯃꯈꯥꯗ)
 * All pages in the help namespace should be tagged with the  template, which automatically creates links to all available translations.

ꯍꯟꯊꯣꯛꯐꯝꯗ ꯑꯣꯟꯖꯤꯜꯂꯨ The pages with existing translations are usually worth being made into translatable pages. Prepare the (English) root page for translation (see the Translate extension section) and, as soon as it's marked for translation, manually import the old translations from the history of subpages to the translation units (by clicking "translate this page"). The new feature Special:PagePreparation + Special:PageMigration facilitates this (currently available only for translation administrators).

A list of pages translated with the old system, to be migrated to the new, is in the works at Project:Language policy/Migration list.

ꯍꯦꯟꯅ ꯑꯀꯨꯞꯄ ꯃꯔꯣꯜꯁꯤꯡ


 * For a full introduction, read the basic help, translation tutorial, page translation tutorial and translation reference manual.
 * Login or register on mediawiki.org: all your work will happen on this wiki. Pick one page to migrate to Translate from the migration list (on the list's talk page, you can ask any question). Polish the English text as fit/possible to avoid migrating very obsolete/low quality text, skip pages where unsure. Prepare the page for translation (i.e. add tags etc.)  following the page translation tutorial linked above; then edit the migration list, writing next to the page's title that you've done it.
 * A translation administrator (you?) will now approve ("mark") the page for translation at their discretion. When it's approved, complete the job: copy the old translations to corresponding units with Special:Translate (as a translator would do in the translation tutorial linked above). You don't need to know the language you're migrating, only to identify which paragraph corresponds to which, even though it's not a loyal translation (machine translation can help grasp the meaning if the layout of the page doesn't provide enough hints).

ꯃꯔꯨꯑꯣꯏꯕ ꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏ

The English version of our front page is located at MediaWiki. Translated versions are located at MediaWiki/code, where code is the language code (e.g. MediaWiki/fr). Please see Template:Main page for content of main page; you can translate it there.

Importantly, the rules about language codes (see below) should be followed here as well.

ꯑꯇꯣꯞꯄ ꯃꯃꯤꯡ ꯏꯐꯝꯁꯤꯡ

Apart from the Main Page, no policy has yet been decided about other namespaces. For the time being, if you would like to create translations for pages in other namespaces then please do so as described for the Help: namespace, however content may be moved or deleted depending on the policy that is eventually adopted.

ꯑꯇꯩ ꯈꯔꯥ ꯈꯟꯅ ꯅꯩꯅꯕꯒꯤ ꯃꯇꯥꯡꯗ |ꯌꯦꯡꯉꯨ ꯂꯣꯟꯁꯤꯡ ꯑꯃꯁꯨꯡ ꯍꯟꯗꯣꯛꯄ ꯁꯥꯡꯗꯣꯛꯄ ꯍꯧꯖꯤꯛꯀꯤ ꯑꯣꯏꯕ ꯃꯇꯝꯁꯤꯗ ꯫

''Note that the rule that English content should not be placed in sub-pages does not apply to other namespaces. This is one of the issues that needs resolving.''

ꯂꯣꯟ ꯒꯤ ꯈꯪꯅꯕ ꯋꯥꯍꯩ

Throughout MediaWiki.org you should use the language codes specified by the MediaWiki software when creating language-specific content (see Names.php for the full and up-to-date list).

ꯆꯥꯟꯕꯤꯗꯨꯅ ꯑꯇꯩꯁꯨ ꯄꯨꯛꯅꯤꯡ ꯃꯨꯟꯅ ꯈꯟꯂꯨ


 * ꯂꯣꯟ ꯒꯤ ꯀꯣꯗ ꯁꯤ ꯃꯁꯤꯒꯤ ꯃꯃꯤꯡꯁꯤꯡꯗ ꯐꯪꯗꯔꯗꯤ꯫ ꯃꯗꯨꯑꯣꯏꯔꯗꯤ ꯑꯩꯈꯣꯏꯅ ꯃꯁꯤꯒꯤ ꯂꯣꯟꯁꯤꯒꯤ ꯂꯥꯃꯥꯏꯁꯤ ꯃꯇꯦꯡ ꯄꯥꯡꯅꯕ ꯃꯄꯨ ꯑꯣꯏꯔꯣꯏꯗꯕꯅꯤ ꯫
 * If you want to add a language that is not present, first get it added to the software (by making a request at Phabricator) and only add pages here once the changes have been accepted.
 * If MediaWiki uses the 'incorrect' code for a language then you should also (for consistency) use that incorrect code here. If you think a code is incorrect, you should discuss it on Phabricator, and if this results in it being changed we will move the pages to match.
 * Note that some language codes in Names.php are now deprecated (e.g.  has been replaced with  ).  In these cases only the most recent code should be used.
 * Generally, translating language variants (e.g. ) is discouraged and should be added into the main page (e.g.  ) where possible.

ꯑꯗꯨꯁꯨ ꯌꯦꯡꯉꯨ
 * Special:TranslatorSignup — ꯍꯟꯗꯣꯛꯂꯤꯕ ꯃꯤꯡꯆꯅꯕ ꯑꯌꯤꯕ ꯆꯦ ꯂꯧꯕ
 * Special:TranslatorSignup — ꯍꯟꯗꯣꯛꯂꯤꯕ ꯃꯤꯡꯆꯅꯕ ꯑꯌꯤꯕ ꯆꯦ ꯂꯧꯕ