Possible Duplicates:
Is English required on Stack Overflow?
We need to help non-english-speakers somehow…

这个网站支持中文么。

Translation: Does this website support chinese?

EDIT(aku):

@SCdF created request on uservoice:

Multilingual Stack Overflow

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Nobody knows what to do with this :0 – Josh Sep 29 '08 at 2:04
You might want to use english for better results. – epochwolf Sep 29 '08 at 2:05
@raven: Whether or not the site supports Chinese is not really subjective, and neither is the question argumentative. Your comment, on the other hand... – Mike F Sep 29 '08 at 3:16
I think this is a good way to ask this question. – spinodal Nov 6 '08 at 19:50
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Why is this offensive? – Jason Coco Nov 20 '08 at 0:13
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cnprog.com – Unknown May 14 '09 at 3:12
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Have questions tagged by language. Leave English as the default language displayed. Let users opt-in to see posts in different languages. Simple and transparent. – mindeavor. May 14 '09 at 3:49
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wow, I can't read Chinese but it's a very ornate lettering. – Jason S Dec 29 '09 at 1:44
Duplicate: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/13676/… – Gnome Apr 6 '10 at 20:10

migrated from stackoverflow.com Aug 27 '09 at 17:05

marked as duplicate by Gnome, jmfsg, perbert, Timothy Carter, Ether Apr 28 '10 at 17:06

This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.

14 Answers

Let's please keep Stackoverflow in english. That way it's useful to more people. I know many different languages, and can read some Chinese as well.

But until Chinese or some other language becomes the de facto language of programming let's stick with english.

Edit: As for those that say Chinese is the most spoken language in the world, you are wrong. In China there are many different dialects both regional and local, some don't even resemble what most people think of Chinese at all (In the western areas the language is much closer to middle eastern languages than asian languages). English is the MOST spoken language in the world (circa 2008).

Anyhow please read what I said:

"But until Chinese or some other language becomes the de facto language of programming let's stick with english."

Once Chinese, or what ever is to come, is the de facto programmer language, I'll happily post in Chinese on Stack Overflow as well.

Edit: I have to agree with Alexander here, that we should try to keep Stackoverflow in english instead of breaking it up into language zones (as is Wikipedia's case).

The largest difference between Stackoverflow and Wikipedia is scale. Stackoverflow is dedicated to a small community (all programmers) compared to Wikipedia (everyone with internet connection). And although in an ideal universe Wikipedia's solution is the best for Stackoverflow as well, in reality breaking Stackoverflow into localized sites might destroy the critical mass required to make the site strive at all in any language.

Edit: @Aku I agree that asking in Chinese, might as well be permitted, just like asking about some programming question I don't care about is totally valid. But I feel like it only serves to break up the sense of community and produces a double standard, neither of which are healthy propositions for such a small group. If its totally necessary, which I can't really figure out a good situation in which it is, when posting in other languages lets use language tags or something along those lines, let's not break up into en,cn,jp,tv,etc...

Edit: By the way just for posterity the "it" used to be Latin, then French and German, now English, next who-knows, but the academic and technical lingua franka does and will change, but no need to rush along and be on the bleeding edge :)

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आप के लिए ऋण एक बिन्दु, दोस्त! – Mike F Sep 29 '08 at 2:22
Need I remind you that China is the most populous country on Mother Earth? – Ben Hoffstein Sep 29 '08 at 2:24
With Chinese Python, Chinese is ready to take over the programming world! chinesepython.org – Chris Jester-Young Sep 29 '08 at 2:25
In my opinion all programmers must know English. A lot of documentation is available only in English, and we really need a single language to interact when team members are from different countries. It could have been another language but it happened to be English, we just have to live with it. – Alexander Kojevnikov Sep 29 '08 at 2:35
I disagree, the suggestion that Jason Dagit has makes more sense - the languages should be logically separated so that they can get attention from others that speak that language. – Rob Z Sep 29 '08 at 3:11
@Rob: What about those (most?) of us who speak multiple languages? I'd hate to go through several sub-websites too ask and answer questions. If anything, Wikipedia tells us that the majority of people prefer to stick with English. It's even more so for us, the programmers. – Alexander Kojevnikov Sep 29 '08 at 3:28
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English is the language of science and reason. English only. – Simucal Sep 29 '08 at 3:56
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"English is the language of science and reason" - stupid statement to say the least. – aku Sep 29 '08 at 4:53
Robert Gould, I don't propose to breakup site. I just want to say that people have a right to use their native language. It is technically possible to make globalization support. For example, google gives me results in Russian by default. But if I want I can see results in any other language – aku Sep 29 '08 at 4:57
@Alexander Kojevnikov - And what about everyone that doesn't speak multiple languages? Having someone being able to filter the site based upon the URL is a fair solution and you could still have an unfiltered landing page that allows you to see everything. – Rob Z Sep 29 '08 at 12:07
I think you're right, that SO shouldn't be broken up into multilingual sites, but why not allow members of the community to translate posts, displaying the english version as a default? – Justin Standard Sep 29 '08 at 22:16
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The country with most English speakers (even though as second language) is... China! – Chichiray Apr 6 '10 at 21:42
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For education purposes. Although China has many different dialects: a. Minorities in China account for less than 10% of the population and China has a common language. b. Dialect argument is pointless as there are 2 writing systems which if you can read one you can pretty much read the other (they are mostly identical) one is just a simplified version of the other. – xiaohouzi79 Jan 19 '11 at 3:04

Robert Gould,

From WikiAnswers:

What is the most spoken language on Earth?

Answer:

  1. Mandarin (873 million)
  2. Hindi (450 million)
  3. English (341 million)
  4. Spanish (321 million)
  5. Arabic (206 million)

Million times I found solution to my problems on Chinese programming site. I honestly don't understand why we should close doors for people who don't speak English

You said:

"But until Chinese or some other language becomes the de facto language of programming let's stick with english."

But it's not a question of most popular language, of course if you want to get maximum feedback it would be wise to post question in English.

Question however is "should we disallow non-English questions?"

My answer: Definitely, NO

I'm not an expert in XYZ programming language, I even can't understand it. Does it mean that XYZ related questions should be prohibited?

Jason Dagit, gave a good example of how it can be implemented.

During discussions on off-topic posts many people said that tag filters can help.

While I disagree that tag filters can help to filter out unwanted content, they can certainly help to select questions in specific language.

It's the same problem as with off-topic posts. Don't prohibit, just separate!

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And how many people can speak both chinese and english. Or Chinese, English and hindi? Perhaps we should have en.stackoverflow.com, cn.stackoverflow.com etc – SCdF Sep 29 '08 at 2:55
SCdF, of course we should not mix them – aku Sep 29 '08 at 2:55
Damn these commends that I can't edit. Anyway, the point of the above comment was that I don't care about questions in chinese cause I can't read them, and chinese people (who can't read english) don't care about questions in english. – SCdF Sep 29 '08 at 2:56
SCdF, not completely true. For example I can find solution to a problem by searching something like "Exception(..." in Spanish tread, then I can just ask somebody to help me translate it or use Google translate tools. – aku Sep 29 '08 at 2:59
These are misleading figures. according to wikipedia, 340M speak english as a first language but 1.4 Billion speak it as a second language. – shoosh Sep 29 '08 at 3:03
aku, Hmm.. that's an interesting point. I still maintain that when I click Questions to get a new list of questions that I can potentially mod down and cackle to myse.. I mean answer, I would rather they were in the language I spoke. Next comment...> – SCdF Sep 29 '08 at 3:05
So then, you could have stackoverflow.com == everything, en.stackoverflow.com == english etc. Or possibly a check box in search to be able to search all sub SOs – SCdF Sep 29 '08 at 3:05
SCdF, exactly! It can work the same way Google does. By default show items in current locale, you user wants - show him questions in any other language – aku Sep 29 '08 at 3:08
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Mandarin has the largest number of native speakers. If you count native and non-native speakers, English is the most spoken language in the world. – David Sep 29 '08 at 3:31
David it's not about English. It's about possibility for non-English speakers to contribute – aku Sep 29 '08 at 3:35
Spoken and written are different categories, too. Many people can speak a language but not read or write a word of it. – dwj Sep 29 '08 at 3:42
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Mandarin is the most spoken language on Earth, but English is the most widely spoken. – Mitch Wheat Sep 29 '08 at 3:47
Mitch Wheat, does it mean that Spanish guys should learn English before even try to use SO ? If you will be able to filter out non-English content, how questions in Hindi would affect you? – aku Sep 29 '08 at 3:57

Chinese does seem to be supported, but I wish SO had a better way to present it to people.

Maybe the wikipedia scheme would work here:

  • en.stackoverflow.com
  • jp.stackoverflow.com
  • ...

and so on.

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Well - yes you can post in Chinese, but you really should attempt to ask a question in English- you'd get a better response. ;)

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サポートするかどうか聞かれても、技術的にサポートしても社会的にサポートしない場合もあと思うが・・・

Loose translation: the question of whether a language is supported has a technical side but also a social side, and it can be supported in one sense without being supported in the other...

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my head hurts... – zxcv Sep 29 '08 at 2:15
Japanese rocks! I learned it few years and I still don't know a lot of kanji :) – aku Sep 29 '08 at 2:17
If you know Japanese kanji you can make sense out of Chinese as-well. So the kanji is useful. – Robert Gould Sep 29 '08 at 2:20
Knowing kanji (from Japanese) is rarely enough to get even the vaguest sense of the meaning of Chinese. – fenomas Sep 29 '08 at 7:06

This is a great question. What I would like to see is better site integration of multilingual. Ultimately, I would like to see different versions of each question (possibly defaulting to the user's preference, or English if the preferred language is not available for that question).

There are plenty on this site who would help translating. I'm sure Jeff would add a Translator badge or something like that. Perhaps with multiple levels depending on how much translating you actually do.... "Translator", "Interpreter", etc.

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I like the idea of giving reputation to people who translate both questions and answers into other languages. There's nothing wrong with overlaying multi-lingual on the site, but I'd be concerned about splitting the site into language realms. It's likely though that English is going to be the more effective language to reach the largest audience. Maybe even an additional voting system like "Is this a good translation for language X?" – Nick Brosnahan May 14 '09 at 3:38


翻譯服務器錯誤。


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Est Latin subnixus pariter?

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Ixnay on the atinlay ostingpay. – Mike F Sep 29 '08 at 2:32
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ahay ahay ahay ollay olfcopterray – fbrereto Apr 6 '10 at 22:58

First post in Chinese, cool!

Google tells me that question title is:

"This is a test to see if you can get Chinese support" :)

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Mark, thanks for edit! – aku Sep 29 '08 at 2:13
Surely a special badge should be earned for first question in language X. jk – Jim Burger Sep 29 '08 at 2:16
@Jim: Or at least for translating the posts. – GEOCHET Sep 29 '08 at 2:17

For a case I want to remind you that there is a special topic about localization:

Should non-English question be tagged with name of the language it’s written in?

P.S.

Google translate will help us to build Tower of Babel someday :)

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Justin Standard,

I already suggested that in this topic.

I would be very happy to see a lot of questions in different languages.

Site pretends to be like Wikipedia - collaboratively editable, accessible to users all around the Earth, etc.

Why don't we have a section for non-English questions?

I can translate from Russian and a little bit from Japanese.

It would be really nice to see some kind of international collaboration here.

Also it's not hard to add hyperlink "translate" to each question that would automatically translate question via Google Translate.

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Machine translation is imperfect at best and the more complicated the discussion the less likely it is going to be useful. Considering how technical some of the discussion here might get the machine translations might border on gibberish. – Rob Z Sep 29 '08 at 3:12
Rob, yes, but in may cases I was able to understand foreign topics translated by computer. It's not a 100% solutions but a helpful feature – aku Sep 29 '08 at 3:21

Of course I speak for no one but myself, but least as far as this one member of the Stackoverflow community goes, I think we would absolutely welcome any participation from anyone in any language, so long as their posts meets the test of being a “programming question” as that is being evolved by community standards on stackoverflow. Certainly English speakers have no monopoly on programming smarts - we’d do well to be tapping into knowledge wherever it lies.

That said, there are some practical and logistical issues that still need to be worked out by the site’s development team and moderators. As stackoverflow is just getting off the ground, I imagine it may be a while before there is a convenient way to manage input in multiple languages.

So again, just speaking for myself, in theory Chinese is absolutely welcome, but it may be a while before there’s a good mechanism to handle it.

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Technically speaking this website is for programming questions, I haven't seen a sign saying: English posts only!

Since it seems Chinese fonts can be displayed people shouldn't be forbidden to post questions in Chinese. However it is rather unlikely that any non-Chinese programmer would be able to help you with the question, thus reducing the likelihood of getting an answer. Unless... we get a very large amount of Chinese programmers that want to use StackOverflow to get/give answers.

The downside of this is, that popular Chinese or any other non-English language for that matter, will also get a spot on the frontpage while being largely unreadable for the English speaking crowd. Therefore it would be much more efficient to have different language versions of StackOverflow, which should be used for that specific language.

This might reduce the community atmosphere of the website, but we could off course have different sub-communities for each separate language. It all depends on how many people would make use of it.

PS: it would be rather weird to have a Chinese only part if the websites interface remains English, I don't think this is the case with Wikipedia either.

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I find SO is pretty cool. You guys did a fantastic job. I think multilingual SO is a great idea, which can extend SO to more programmers. Well, you might say, SO is a small community for programmers who use English dialects-programing languages. Well, I just don't think this thinking make any sense. SO is a great knowledge base for programmers. But you can add value to this knowledge base only by sharing it with more people. That's the position Wikipedia takes. Also I don't think there are any technical barriers. I like translator badge idea. I'd like to have one:-). Anyway I support the idea of multilingual SO in Wikipedia way.

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