Hi guys, anybody knows where do I found a table to match ISO country codes to language codes? like:
US -> EN UK -> EN AU -> EN BR -> PT PT -> PT ES -> ES AR -> ES and so on for all this planet? thanks sebastian PD: I dont need klingon codes so far :^)
Hm, I wonder how you would map Switzerland. We have four official languages... (and there are certainly many other countries that have more than one language).
Adrian
On May 12, 2009, at 15:27 , Sebastian Sastre wrote:
Hi guys, anybody knows where do I found a table to match ISO country codes to language codes? like:
US -> EN UK -> EN AU -> EN BR -> PT PT -> PT ES -> ES AR -> ES and so on for all this planet? thanks sebastian PD: I dont need klingon codes so far :^)
Adrian Lienhard wrote:
Hm, I wonder how you would map Switzerland. We have four official languages... (and there are certainly many other countries that have more than one language).
Adrian
Or South Africa, with our _eleven_ official languages.
frank
On May 12, 2009, at 15:27 , Sebastian Sastre wrote:
Hi guys, anybody knows where do I found a table to match ISO country codes to language codes? like:
US -> EN UK -> EN AU -> EN BR -> PT PT -> PT ES -> ES AR -> ES and so on for all this planet? thanks sebastian PD: I dont need klingon codes so far :^)
"Frank" == Frank Shearar frank.shearar@angband.za.org writes:
Frank> Or South Africa, with our _eleven_ official languages.
Does one of *those* include Klingon?
:-)
Sebastian Sastre wrote:
Or South Africa, with our _eleven_ official languages.
frank
Hi Frank, sure but which one is the one reasonable to use for the industrialized market? sebastian
Answering seriously, I'd have to say English (and not just because that's my first language). Outside of South Africa, Afrikaans is understandable by the Dutch & Belgians, but there are, as far as I know, very few speakers of Xhosa, Zulu, Venda, etc.
frank
I know some countries have more that one language. I supose I'd choose the one culturally considered as predominant. Among those four there is one around there? sebastian
-----Mensaje original----- De: squeak-dev-bounces@lists.squeakfoundation.org [mailto:squeak-dev-bounces@lists.squeakfoundation.org] En nombre de Adrian Lienhard Enviado el: Tuesday, May 12, 2009 10:42 Para: The general-purpose Squeak developers list Asunto: Re: [squeak-dev] country code -> language
Hm, I wonder how you would map Switzerland. We have four official languages... (and there are certainly many other countries that have more than one language).
Adrian
On May 12, 2009, at 15:27 , Sebastian Sastre wrote:
Hi guys, anybody knows where do I found a table to match ISO country
codes to
language codes? like:
US -> EN UK -> EN AU -> EN BR -> PT PT -> PT ES -> ES AR -> ES and so on for all this planet? thanks sebastian PD: I dont need klingon codes so far :^)
2009/5/12 Sebastian Sastre ssastre@seaswork.com:
I know some countries have more that one language. I supose I'd choose the one culturally considered as predominant.
That has the potential of pissing of all the others, just saying.
Cheers Philippe
"Philippe" == Philippe Marschall philippe.marschall@gmail.com writes:
Philippe> 2009/5/12 Sebastian Sastre ssastre@seaswork.com:
I know some countries have more that one language. I supose I'd choose the one culturally considered as predominant.
Philippe> That has the potential of pissing of all the others, just saying.
Yeah, pretty naive.
I mean, if you don't provide mx_es for the states of the US near the border, you're already losing.
Philippe Marschall wrote:
2009/5/12 Sebastian Sastre ssastre@seaswork.com:
I know some countries have more that one language. I supose I'd choose the one culturally considered as predominant.
That has the potential of pissing of all the others, just saying.
In Switzerland, definitely. Some people may not even understand you if you choose German as the default language for Switzerland.
Paolo
Well the locale plugin messed about with this, so you want to view ISO 3166 http://www.iso.org/iso/english_country_names_and_code_elements
ISO 639 http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/langcodes.html http://www.w3.org/International/
On 12-May-09, at 6:27 AM, Sebastian Sastre wrote:
Hi guys, anybody knows where do I found a table to match ISO country codes to language codes? like:
US -> EN UK -> EN AU -> EN BR -> PT PT -> PT ES -> ES AR -> ES and so on for all this planet? thanks sebastian PD: I dont need klingon codes so far :^)
-- = = = ======================================================================== John M. McIntosh johnmci@smalltalkconsulting.com Twitter: squeaker68882 Corporate Smalltalk Consulting Ltd. http://www.smalltalkconsulting.com = = = ========================================================================
thanks for the references Jhon, and all for the patience in this kind of off topic subject cheers, sebastian
-----Mensaje original----- De: squeak-dev-bounces@lists.squeakfoundation.org [mailto:squeak-dev-bounces@lists.squeakfoundation.org] En nombre de John M McIntosh Enviado el: Tuesday, May 12, 2009 13:07 Para: The general-purpose Squeak developers list Asunto: Re: [squeak-dev] country code -> language
Well the locale plugin messed about with this, so you want to view ISO 3166 http://www.iso.org/iso/english_country_names_and_code_elements
ISO 639 http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/langcodes.html http://www.w3.org/International/
On 12-May-09, at 6:27 AM, Sebastian Sastre wrote:
Hi guys, anybody knows where do I found a table to match ISO country
codes to
language codes? like:
US -> EN UK -> EN AU -> EN BR -> PT PT -> PT ES -> ES AR -> ES and so on for all this planet? thanks sebastian PD: I dont need klingon codes so far :^)
-- = = = ============================================================== ========== John M. McIntosh johnmci@smalltalkconsulting.com Twitter: squeaker68882 Corporate Smalltalk Consulting Ltd. http://www.smalltalkconsulting.com = = = ============================================================== ==========
squeak-dev@lists.squeakfoundation.org