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Date:      Tue, 30 Oct 2007 17:43:53 +0900 (JST)
From:      Hiroki Sato <hrs@FreeBSD.org>
To:        ale@FreeBSD.org
Cc:        ru@FreeBSD.org, doc@FreeBSD.org, blackend@FreeBSD.org, gabor@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: localized man pages
Message-ID:  <20071030.174353.144068410.hrs@allbsd.org>
In-Reply-To: <47259CCB.2070303@FreeBSD.org>
References:  <20071027.003749.76175923.hrs@allbsd.org> <20071026175650.GA1074@gothic.blackend.org> <47259CCB.2070303@FreeBSD.org>

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Alex Dupre <ale@FreeBSD.org> wrote
  in <47259CCB.2070303@FreeBSD.org>:

al> Marc Fonvieille ha scritto:
al> > What Linux people use on their various distributions?  Last time I
al> > checked (well, it was in 99...) most of Linux distributions provided
al> > localized manual pages.
al>
al> IMHO the main problem with localized man pages is that they are *always*
al> out of date and incomplete. man pages tend to change often and localized
al> version lag behind. Users perception is that the documentation is poor
al> and they switch to english man pages (in the best case).

 Right.  I think it is no problem with adding localized manual pages
 but before that it needs toolchain which supports various languages
 in a consistent way as well as some framework for informing that
 "this is out-of-date" to the users in some way.  Displaying old
 translation via man(1) is not bad if such warning is displayed
 together.

--
| Hiroki SATO

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