In case you haven't read this question: What are the localized versions and where can I find them?, there are SOs that exist in parallel to this one, but in different languages.
I don't speak any of those languages, but I can sometimes tell when somebody's speaking one of those languages.
I can typically identify Russian and Japanese based on their character sets, and Spanish is also easy because I have significant exposure from various sources. Portuguese, not so much, unless I see the word "Português".
(Edit: Further research has made me believe that I should double check when I think something's Russian, because the Cyrillic alphabet is shared by a number of other languages. I also realized that I'm not identifying Japanese from the "character set" as much as from the frequency of certain characters. Known collectively as CJK characters, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean all share a number of characters.)
These posts usually show up in the review queues when they are entirely non-English, but I will occasionally see someone who has thrown in some native tongue into their post (for example, in the code). I have occasionally handed out links to the other SO sites, but I don't know if it was helpful. (Update: I found the perfect question to try this out on. It was closed by a moderator because only half of it was in English, and I am almost certain the user is Russian because they had a .ru
link in their one question. <!http://stackoverflow.com/users/5160302/hayk-dallakyan>)
I never intended this to become a discussion about "should I force programmers to use English" or the feasibility of having localized sites. The people who benefit most from those sites aren't going to be here on Meta; they can't speak English. In any case, I think that it's a little too late to have that discussion now that the localized versions have been rolled out.
While I know that many non-native English speakers are great contributors to this SO, there are a number of times where it's clear that the OP cannot speak English and communication is a problem.
Is it helpful to give links to these people? (This would be in addition to the appropriate moderation action from here: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/297680/.) Or is it more likely to be misunderstood?
And what do the other SOs think about my idea? (I'm not posting on their Metas, because I don't speak the language, but any polyglots should feel free to do so and report back.)
It's not like I'm telling people that they can't come here. But if they knew that they had another option, then they could decide for themselves. And I think that it would be beneficial to both sites (poorly translated questions aren't very useful to anyone, IMHO).
What's interesting is that I discovered the following in a SO blog post:
Direct programmers to native language resources. Users who post non-English questions should be gently directed to programming forums in their own language. Community should form around the gravity of native human languages. (see: Chinatown, Little Italy, etc.) Feel free to post links to appropriate human language-specific resources.
(...The blogpocalyse is coming...Alt blog link here.)
That was posted in 2009, well before any of the localizations were created, which explains the wording (such as "forum"). But I am lead to believe that the other SOs would fit the bill anyway.
If it is a good idea, can I get help translating a short comment to use from people who speak these languages? I know that there are some moderation concerns about having things that aren't in English, but I would use these comments only when the OP doesn't seem to speak English at all. It's not like this couldn't be an exception, because things are usually low quality when language is that much of an issue (and likely to be closed or deleted).
I could see a comment along these lines working:
You seem to be speaking {Language}. This is the English-speaking SO and we require all posts to be in English, but you should see about heading over to the [Language SO]<!>(appropriate link), where you can converse with other programmers in {Language}.
Just to be safe, in case anyone responds back in their native tongue, it would also be helpful to know how to convey the fact that I don't speak that language. (I only speak English.)
Here are some other good options from the comments:
This is the English-speaking SO. Many people here do not understand {Language} (including me). That's why we require all posts to be in English. However, there exists a localized version of SO in [Language]<!>(link), where you could converse with other programmers in {Language}.
By Trilarion
Welcome to [site name], this site is for [language]-speaking users. Could you translate the question? Otherwise, you might be interested in [localized site].
By Andrew T.
I can only speak English, but it appears to me that you're using/speaking {Language}. [...]
I'm all for encouraging users to use a domain whose language they're more familiar/comfortable with. – CubeJockey May 16 '16 at 20:59