Browsing Pennsylvania German translation

817 of 133 results
8.
Always
This is used for "always" in stdio UI's yes/no/always/never prompts
(case insensitive). Make sure this matches the string you chose for
the "y/n/always/never" prompt, above! This should be reasonable for
the end user to enter at a terminal prompt.
(no translation yet)
9.
Never
This is used for "never" in stdio UI's yes/no/always/never prompts
(case insensitive). Make sure this matches the string you chose for
the "y/n/always/never" prompt, above! This should be reasonable for
the end user to enter at a terminal prompt.
(no translation yet)
10.
(%0-%1 of %2 lines, see more?)
This is shown when using stdio UI's built-in README pager, to
show what range of lines of text are being displayed (%0 is first
line, %1 is last line, %2 is the total number of lines of text).
(no translation yet)
11.
Type '%0' to go back.
The stdio UI uses this sentence in the prompt if the user is able
to return to a previous stage of installation (from the options
section to the "choose installation destination" section, etc).
(no translation yet)
12.
back
This is the string used for the '%0' in the above string.
This is only for the stdio UI, so choose something easy and
reasonable for the user to manually type. The graphical UIs use a
different string for their button ("Back" vs "back" specifically).
(no translation yet)
13.
>
This is the prompt in the stdio driver when user input is expected.
There are leading/trailing spaces here. Each one represents a space character. Enter a space in the equivalent position in the translation.
(no translation yet)
14.
%0: %1%%
That's meant to be the name of an item (%0) and the percent done (%1).
(no translation yet)
15.
%0 (total progress: %1%%)
The stdio UI uses this to show current status (%0),
and overall progress as percentage of work complete (%1).
(no translation yet)
16.
Accept this license?
This prompt is shown to the end-user after an End User License Agreement
has been displayed, asking them if the license text is acceptable to
them. It's a yes/no question.
(no translation yet)
17.
_Always
This is a GTK+ button label for yes/no/always/never questions.
The '_' comes before the hotkey character.
(no translation yet)
817 of 133 results

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