I am building a Windows dialog box that has the standard 'OK' and 'Cancel' buttons. Given that Windows uses the same button text in its own dialogs is there a way for me to grab the correct strings to use on the buttons?
This way my application will have the correct strings no matter which language is being used, without me needing to localize it for lots of different languages myself. I am using C# but can happily use platform invoke to access an OS method if needed.
NOTE: Yes, I can easily localize the resources but I do not want to find and have to enter the zillion different language strings when it must be present within windows already. Please do not answer by saying localize the app!
In Visual Studio: File + Open + File, type c:\windows\system32\user32.dll. Open the String Table node and double click String Table. Scroll down to 800.
Microsoft takes a pretty no-nonsense stance against relying on these resource IDs. Given the number of programmers who've done what you're contemplating, it is however unlikely they can ever change these numbers. You'll need to P/Invoke LoadLibrary() and LoadString().
However, your ultimate downfall on this plan is Vista/Win7 Ultimate with MUI language packs. Which allows the user to switch between languages without updating the resource strings in the DLLs. Such an edition will always have English strings.
see MB_GetString which claims to do exactly this:
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/dn910915(v=vs.85).aspx
however, it seems to require runtime linkage:
http://undoc.airesoft.co.uk/user32.dll/MB_GetString.php
Well, if you use the standard MessageBox.Show() function and pass it approriate parameters it will automatically localize the yes/no/okay/cancel buttons for you.
What is more interesting is how you localize the message text.
No, there is no standard, supported way to do this. Yes, Windows does store these strings and it's (with some effort) possible to obtain them, but there is no guarantee that they'll remain in the same location and under the same identifier from version to version.
While you might not want this to be the answer, the answer is, indeed, to localize your application. If you're localizing everything else (as you'd have to, unless you just wanted OK and Cancel to be localized), I'm not sure why it would be any great effort to include localized values for OK and Cancel as well.
Related
I have the following if statement:
VS is telling me Localizable string: "Select a Unit"
I have looked through Globalizing and Localizing .NET Framework Applications but still not to clear on what localization actually is.
Could someone please explain what this means?
It's most likely a Resharper plugin that gives you that message. It simply tells you that a string can be moved to a resource file. No need unless you want to support multiple languages in your application.
Update: It's Resharper itself: https://www.jetbrains.com/resharper/help/Localization_Inspection.html
For simplifying localization (i.e., allowing a program to use the language of the operating system or allow the user to choose what language the application's UI users), you won't want to hard-code the UI text.
You would instead store the string as an English localized string and then point the code to load the string for the appropriate localization.
See the section about Using Resource Files on this MSDN page on Globalization and Handling Strings for more information.
I'm currently working on a project to provide interop between two unrelated pieces of software. I need to pass the data from a textBox/textBoxes, into a textBox of the other said app.
My current idea is to find the handle of the target control, make it active, and enter the data by copying it to the clipboard, and pasting it via:
Clipboard.SetText(textBox1.Text, TextDataFormat.Text);
SendKeys.SendWait("^V");
As textBoxes have no 'caption', handles are dynamically assigned on the process start, and class names are appended with various data regarding the process, is it possible to get a handle for an object within a window via some sort of indexing? I'd be more than willing to find the correct handle by trial and error if need be, as long as it would be consistent for every instance of the application.
Thanks in advance
A.
If you don't have any other choice.. to make this easier, you can use AutoIT.. I had to do something like this a very long time ago. AutoIT. They have a DLL for .net Applications, so you can use their functionality without having to use their scripts. If you do use their scripts.. they also have an option that will turn their script into an executable.
I have a WinForms application which I want to translate into multiple languages. However, I do not have any experience with localizing a WinForms app, and I find very contradictory information about this subject.
Basically, what I want is:
In the source code, I want only one file per language
This file gets compiled into the main application on compilation - no satellite assemblies or external data files after building the application
The user can select the language, I do not need/want auto-detection based on the operating system
This should mainly contain strings and ints, but also a CultureInfo
Most solutions I've seen either have one .resx file per Form and/or external satellite assemblies.
Do I have to roll my own?
Or is there something in the framework already?
.net Framework 3.5 SP1 if that matters.
Edit:
For the most part, Visual Studio already offers support for what I want, but there are two issues. When I set Form.Localizable to true I have this nice Designer support, but this generates one resx per Form. The idea of manually overriding it in InitializeComponent fails because it's designer-written code that will regularly be overwritten.
Theoretically, I only want to :
a) override the creation of the ComponentResourceManager to point it to my global resx and
b) change the call to ApplyResources to the overload that takes a CultureInfo as third parameter.
It seems as if I have to add a function call to my constructor that gets called after InitializeComponent() and overrides its behaviour. That seems terribly inefficient, but Visual Studio is right when it warns about touching InitializeComponent().
At the moment, I am indeed rolling my own WinForms localization Framework...
I've just completed a C# .Net 3.5 project with a similar problem. We were writing WinForms plugin for an existing multi-lingual application with 8 languages (including English).
This is how we did it:
Create all our forms and UI in the default language, English.
Put all our internal strings in a resource file (stuff not tied directly to a form like custom error messages and dialog box titles etc)
Once we had completed most of the work and testing we localised it.
Each form already had a .resx file but this was empty. We set the property 'Localizable' to true, the .resx file was filled with things like button sizes & strings.
For each of the other languages, we changed the 'Language' property on the form. We chose the basic version of each language eg: 'Spanish' instead of 'Spanish (Chile)' etc. so that it would work for every 'Spanish' dialect, I think.
Then we went through each control, translated its text and resized, if needed. This created a .resx per language and form combination.
We were then left with, for 8 languages, 8 .resx for each form and 8 .resx for the general strings. When compiled the output folder had the .dll we were creating and then a sub folder for each language with a .resources.dll in it.
We were able to test the versions of the UI in the designer by just changing the language property to check that we had the correct strings & layout.
All in all once we got our heads around it, it was quite easy and painless.
We didn't need to write any custom tweaks to the form loading
I was asking a similar question about ASP.NET and got a first answer - this tool and its workflow might also be something for you - have a look: Lingobit Localizer
It seems to be able to load your Winforms app and allows you to start translating your labels etc. and see the forms while you do it. Lots of other features, too, like incremental translation and translation memory (if you use the same terms over and over again).
Looks quite promising (for Winforms) - haven't used it myself, though.
Here's an extensive list of potential .NET localization tools - not sure, how well they work and what they cover - have a look, maybe you'll find what you're looking for.
Marc
I dont have a solution for your first and second requirement but keep in mind that localizing a form is not as simple as translating each word. You need to check that each translated text fits in their respective control. Also, maybe you have an icon or an image which need to be change in another culture.
For your point three, you can change the language manually with the following lines:
CultureInfo ci = new CultureInfo("fr");
Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentUICulture = ci;
This is a huge subject and there are many ways to accomplish what you want. The framework does provide the basis but a complete solution requires that you implement certain elements yourself.
For example the default framework implementation is to create a .resx file for every resource. In ASP.Net this means each user/server control or page. This doesn't lend itself to easy maintenance and if you want to move resources to a database you need to implement your own provider.
My familiarity with Winforms is limited but if you are using Silverlight or WPF then have a read of Guy Smith-Ferrier's work on the subject at: http://www.guysmithferrier.com/category/Internationalization.aspx. He also has some toolsets that can make your life easier at: http://www.dotneti18n.com/Downloads.aspx.
I've worked with him before and have never come across anyone else with a better depth of understanding of the subject.
What you are asking for:
no satellite resource files
only one size and control placement per form.
lots of languages embedded in the executable.
Is not do-able in vanilla Visual Studio's IDE.
What it would require is some custom work, basically fulfilling all these steps:
Acquire a custom resource manager that handles TMX resource files.
Put all your localizable strings in a TMX file.
Make this TMX file an embedded resource in your project.
In your Form constructor, create your TMX ResourceManager, loading the TMX file from your embedded resources.
In your code, use your tmx ResourceManager instead of the default ResourceManager for getting localized strings.
Let the Form use the default ResourceManager for getting all the designer things except the strings.
Get your TMX file fleshed out with the new language translations.
More can be added in the next release of your project, just by adding them to this TMX file before you compile.
RESOURCES: (not an exhaustive list, by any means)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Translation_Memory_eXchange
http://sourceforge.net/projects/tmx-editor/
The right way to do this is, suppose you want to add Arabic support witch is RightToLeft language:
Double click the form
Set localizable prop. to true
Change Language prop. to Arabic //This will automatically open a new version of the form so you can customize.
Set RightToLeft prop. to Yes
Set RightToLeftLayout prop. to True
Start renaming controls, and save the form.
Handle Messages/Errors in code // Sorry I don't have a quick solution for now, try duplicate them and If/Else the current local.
We have a resource file with lots of translated strings used various places in our application. Is there a better way for binding for example the text of a button to a certain string?
Currently we are usually just doing something like this in the constructor, in a Load event handler or in a method called by one of those:
someButton.Text = CommonTexts.SomeString;
someMenuItem.Text = CommonTexts.SomeOtherString;
Is there a better way to do it? Maybe in the designer? Or is this the recommended way of doing it?
Just to let you know how we do the actual translation: We have one Class Library project which only contains resx files. The main resx files are written in english (of course). We then open up those base resx files in an application called ResEx where we (or someone else) does the translation to other languages. When compiled Visual Studio automatically creates assemblies for each language which are used automatically depending on the current culture set. This works pretty well, so I don't really need info on how to do the translation and such (although I am always curious to improvements of course). What I am asking is if there is a better way for getting those translated strings from the resource assembly and into all the various Text properties.
I understand, it's an old question, but still, I had the same issue (VS 2010), and one of the first links in google is this topic.
In order to move all the texts to forms resource file - you need to set the winform Localizable property to True. And that's it. :)
(c) Cap. O.
You can do:
using System.Resources;
using System.Reflection;
Assembly assembly = this.GetType().Assembly;
resman = new ResourceManager("StringResources.Strings", assembly);
btnButton.Text = resman.GetString("ButtonName");
There is a good tool called LingoBit Localizer that does the job for the fraction of the time it would take to build all the reasources files.
You don't have to care about other languages while in development process, you simply code and set properties as you would if you were programming for a unilingual software. After you're done, or whenever you wish, you run LingoBit Localizer over your DLL or Windows Form application. This will get user-displayable strings out to a grid for you within its GUI. Now, perhaps a professional translator could use to translate the words if your programmers don't know the language for which the applicaiton have to be translated. Then, you simply save the project when you're done. This will create a DLL file which you simply add to your binary deployment directory, then your application will automatically set itself to the right language depending on the current culture information on which the app. is installed or so. This saves a lot of programming time and headaches.
Hope this helps even though it is not resource-based solution.
This will extract the the value of Home keyword and populate into the Text1 Box.
Text1.Text= Resource.Home.ToString();
Try this:
someButton.DataBindings.Add("Text", CommonTexts, "SomeString");
Your way is the best way to do this if you have developers who are not personally fluent in the languages you're translating your application into. I've done this before with an English application that had to be translated into Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese (I only speak one of these semi-fluently). The original forms were all created in English, and in the form's Load event the code iterated through every control and searched for each control's Text property in a translations spreadsheet, and replaced it with the appropriate translation.
The built-in way of internationalizing a form (which is basically a variant of form inheritance) assumes that the programmer is fluent in the language you need to translate to, which is pretty much of a stretch, and it requires you to manually enter all the translated text values for each form and each language. It also makes your binary larger (potentially much larger), since it adds a .resx file for each form for each language that you support.
We have a pair of applications. One is written in C# and uses something like:
string s = "alpha\r\nbeta\r\ngamma\r\ndelta";
// Actually there's wrapper code here to make sure this works.
System.Windows.Forms.Clipboard.SetDataObject(s, true);
To put a list of items onto the clipboard. Another application (in WinBatch) then picks up the list using a ClipGet() function. (We use the clipboard functions to give people the option of editing the list in notepad or something, without having to actually cut-and-paste every time.)
In this particular environment, we have many users on one system via Citrix. Many using these pairs of programs.
Just one user is having the problem where the line delimiters in the text are getting switched from CRLF to LF somewhere between the SetDataObject() and the CLipGet(). I could explain this in a mixed Unix/Windows environment, but there is no Unix here. No unix-y utilities anywhere near this system either. Other users on the same server, no problems at all. It's like something in Windows/Citrix is being "helpful" when we really don't want it, but just for this one guy.
Ideas?
Have you tried clearing their profile on Citrix? That seems to be the solution to many many user specific Citrix problems.
Does Environment.NewLine behave differently on Citrix environments? If so, it may give you a good option that works for all users instead of \r\n.