Localization and Internationalization

In this article, we explain high-level approaches to internationalizing and localizing your documentation.

By default, Read the Docs assumes that your documentation is or might become multilingual one day. The initial default language is English and therefore you often see the initial build of your documentation published at /en/latest/, where the /en denotes that it’s in English. By having the en URL component present from the beginning, you are ready for the eventuality that you would want a second language.

Read the Docs supports hosting your documentation in multiple languages. Read below for the various approaches that we support.

Projects with one language

If your documentation isn’t in English (the default), you should indicate which language you have written it in.

It is easy to set the Language of your project. On the project Admin page (or Import page), simply select your desired Language from the dropdown. This will tell Read the Docs that your project is in the language. The language will be represented in the URL for your project.

For example, a project that is in Spanish will have a default URL of /es/latest/ instead of /en/latest/.

Projects with multiple translations (Sphinx-only)

See also

How to manage translations for Sphinx projects

Describes the whole process for a documentation with multiples languages in the same repository and how to keep the translations updated on time.

This situation is a bit more complicated. To support this, you will have one parent project and a number of projects marked as translations of that parent. Let’s use phpmyadmin as an example.

The main phpmyadmin project is the parent for all translations. Then you must create a project for each translation, for example phpmyadmin-spanish. You will set the Language for phpmyadmin-spanish to Spanish. In the parent projects Translations page, you will say that phpmyadmin-spanish is a translation for your project.

This has the results of serving:

  • phpmyadmin at http://phpmyadmin.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

  • phpmyadmin-spanish at http://phpmyadmin.readthedocs.io/es/latest/

It also gets included in the Read the Docs flyout menu:

../_images/translation_bar.png

Note

The default language of a custom domain is determined by the language of the parent project that the domain was configured on. See Custom domains for more information.

Note

You can include multiple translations in the same repository, with same conf.py and .rst files, but each project must specify the language to build for those docs.

Note

You must commit the .po files for Read the Docs to translate your documentation.

Translation workflows

When you work with translations, the workflow of your translators becomes a critical component.

Considerations include:

  • Are your translators able to use a git workflow? For instance, are they able to translate directly via GitHub?

  • Do you benefit from machine translation?

  • Do you need different roles, for instance do you need translators and editors?

  • What is your source language?

  • When are your translated versions published?

By using Sphinx and .po files, you will be able to automatically synchronize between your documentation source messages on your git platform and your translation platform.

There are many translation platforms that support this workflow. These include:

Because Read the Docs builds your git repository, you can use any of the above solutions. Any solution that synchronizes your translations with your git repository will ensure that your translations are automatically published with Read the Docs.