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In Android, you can specify the texts in the default locale in res/values/strings.xml. Additional translations can be added for new languages in res/values-it/strings.xml (for Italian for example). If a string is not translated, the fallback-default locale is used.

Currently I can not tell which strings I still need to translate (so are in values/strings.xml, but not in values-$/strings.xml for all $ in languages) and which are translated, although the are obsolte (so are in values-$/strings.xml, but not in values/strings.xml exists $ in languages)

I'm searching for a tool which gives me the translations which are missing and the one which are obsolete.

To be honest, it is not that difficult to write such a tool for the command-line, I can only hardly believe nobody has already done this.

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The one that are missing are quite easy to do, aren't they? The one that are obsolete (if I understand what you mean) are impossible - how will you know which version you are translating? You would need to add version info to the file... Or maybe you are looking for the ones that are extra? That should be fairly easy to do as well... Unfortunately I don't know of such tool, but one do that quickly (after all it is only related to XML processing...). – PaweÅ‚ Dyda Aug 8 '11 at 18:36

9 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Interesting question. I've wrote simple script to find duplicate resources in android project at https://gist.github.com/1133059. It is ugly, I know, but I'll rewrite it in a few days and maybe create a project on github. To run it from console:
$scala DuplicatesFinder.scala /path/to/android/project

UPDATE:
I've made a project on github https://github.com/4e6/android-localization-helper, maybe someone find it helpful

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This isn't automated, but it's very fast. In Eclipse, to go Window->Show View->Other->Android->Resource Explorer.

Now, under the Resource Explorer tab at the bottom (or wherever you've moved it to) look under String. Each string should have the same number of versions if you have a complete translation, so you can scan down the list in just a few seconds.

Do this for each project that has strings.

I didn't know about this until after I localized, but it's still useful (such as when I add a new string).

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Excellent answer! Really great tool :-) – Michell Bak Apr 18 at 20:48

The new official Android Lint tool helps you detect this problem, and many others: http://tools.android.com/tips/lint

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I'm the Product Manager for MOTODEV Studio. As @hjw mentioned, this is a feature of MOTODEV Studio called the "Localization Files Editor". This editor is similar to a spreadsheet and lets you see all your strings in one view. You can edit as a spreadsheet or the underlying XML in the same view.

MOTODEV Studio is a branded version of Eclipse, so it should work with your existing projects if you use Eclipse. If you prefer to continue using your existing Eclipse setup, you can still use MOTODEV Studio to handle the editing of the string.xml files, just so long as only one version can have the workspace open at a time.

If you have any questions about how to use it, feel free to send me a message or post on our discussion boards at developer.motorola.com

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There is none which I am aware, I am favouriting the question. :) However as a best practice, I first complete the default strings.xml and translate it in the very end. I also add a small marker comment to specify end of translation and any new strings are added below that. This helps me keep track of ones which are not translated.

-- UPDATE --

With latest ADT tool for eclipse you can install Lint which takes care of all the issues regarding duplicates and a lot more with its exhaustive set of warnings.

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Well thats exacttly how I did it until today, but as I keep adding features and thus adding (and removing) translations, it gets difficult to manage. – theomega Aug 8 '11 at 16:58

There's a much improved version of the Android Dev Kit lint tool in Eclipse since SDK version 17 - see the docs here: New Eclipse Lint UI

Just click the "lint" tool bar item, run it on your project then open the "is not translated" item that will appear to show you every tag that needs translation.

Credit to satur9nine - this is an updated version of their answer which lead me to this one.

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Do you know MotoDev Studio for Android? It features a localization tool. Within that tool all langauges are columns and all texts are rows. It's very easy to find missing translations within that "spreadsheet". The other way, find obsolet translations, is not that easy.

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I suggest Amanuens that let you easily identify untranslated strings and strings that not match in master and translated files. It can, optionally, be configured to automatically keep translation files synchronized with the repository. You can also give your translators access to the service and they can find an easy to use web editor to translate your application.

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If you're willing to use the getlocalization.com web site, which is free of charge if you're willing to have your translators work on your localization publicly (otherwise, you have to pay to make your project private).

You can just use their Eclipse plugin, to automatically import the strings from your Android project: http://getlocalization.github.io/eclipse/

Then this is the interface your translators will see when they do the actual translation:

screenshot of web interface given to translators

I recommend you right-click on the screenshot above to view it in a larger format on a separate tab. It's actually well thought out and should make the translator's job easier too.

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