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Subject: [OASIS Issue Tracker] (XLIFF-23) Discussion of different methods to handle ITS Translate in XLIFF


     [ https://issues.oasis-open.org/browse/XLIFF-23?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

David Filip updated XLIFF-23:
-----------------------------

    Resolution: Consensus to fix as Proposed in the meeting of 21st Feb, 2017

> Discussion of different methods to handle ITS Translate in XLIFF
> ----------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: XLIFF-23
>                 URL: https://issues.oasis-open.org/browse/XLIFF-23
>             Project: OASIS XML Localisation Interchange File Format (XLIFF) TC
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: ITS Module
>    Affects Versions: 2.1_csprd02
>         Environment: http://markmail.org/thread/yhhz7tqsh4iz3hgv
>            Reporter: David Filip
>            Assignee: David Filip
>              Labels: Approved, Clarification, Practices, editorial, work_required
>             Fix For: 2.1_csprd03
>
>
> text protection using native codes and <mrk translate='no'>
> This is a specific comment about one facet of the ITS module, although I
> think there is a more general version of the same argument that can be made
> about some of the other examples.
> Section 5.9.8.1.2 talks about using the ITS translate attribute to control
> translation of content surrounded by inline codes in the source.  The
> example given is this one:
> <p>Text <code translate='no'>Code</code></p>
> The section outlines two methods for representing this as XLIFF <source>.
> The first method is to represent the native <code> tag as an inline code,
> and use a <mrk> to handle the ITS:
> <source>Text <pc id='1'/><mrk id='m1' translate='no'>Code</mrk></pc></source>
> The second method is to include the <code> element's text child in the
> XLIFF code:
> <source>Text <ph id='1'/></source>
> A note occurring earlier in the document (section 4.2.3.2, discussing the
> <ph> element) mentions that this second method is possible, but discouraged:
> It is possible although not advised to use <ph>
> <http://docs.oasis-open.org/xliff/xliff-core/v2.1/csprd02/xliff-core-v2.1-csprd02.html#ph>
> to
> mask non translatable inline content. The preferred way of protecting
> portions of inline content from translation is the *Core* Translate
> Annotation
> <http://docs.oasis-open.org/xliff/xliff-core/v2.1/csprd02/xliff-core-v2.1-csprd02.html#translateAnnotation>.
> See also discussion in the ITS Module section on representing
> translatability inline.
> <http://docs.oasis-open.org/xliff/xliff-core/v2.1/csprd02/xliff-core-v2.1-csprd02.html#Translate_Inline>
> .
> In practice, I expect the discouraged second method to be the more common
> method of implementations.  There are two reasons for this.  First, it is
> simpler to implement, due to its simpler structure.
> More importantly, it is closer to representing the meaning of the original
> source. The recommended structure separates the representation of the
> source markup as syntax from its meaning in the text, by pulling the ITS
> data out into a separate element.  As a result, the meaning of the source
> markup ("the contents of the <code> element are not translatable") is not
> preserved.  As far as I can tell (and hopefully I'm not missing something),
> there is no mechanism that prevents a Modifier from inserting additional
> text between the inline code and mrk tags, like this:
> <target>Translation <pc id='1'/>*additional text *<mrk id='m1'
> translate='no'>Code</mrk> *more additional text*</pc></target>
> Or from rearranging these things entirely, like this:
> <target>Translation <pc id='1'/>*additional text*</pc> <mrk id='m1'
> translate='no'>Code</mrk></target>
> Both of these produce targets that circumvent the intention of the
> its:translate attribute in the native source content.  The original source
> text is still protected, but the contents of the overall <code> tag are
> mutable, unless the merger takes additional steps beyond the specification
> (ie, inferring that the <pc> and <mrk> tags are bound somehow, and
> discarding sibling elements of the <mrk> that appear in the target and not
> the source).
> This sort of subversion is probably unlikely, but in my experience
> implementors will go to some lengths to avoid accidents from happening
> later on, and so might opt for the discouraged <ph/> representation, in
> which the non-translatable region is truly off-limits.



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