Swordfish Translation Editor
Stable release | 3.2-6 / September 11, 2015 |
---|---|
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Type | Computer-assisted translation |
License | Commercial |
Website |
www |
Swordfish Translation Editor is a Computer-assisted translation software.
Features
It works with the XLIFF standard, after having extracted texts from a variety of file format.[1] [2]It stores translation memory in an internal database and can export it in the standard TMX format; import is also possible.[3] A server, RemoteTM, can be used instead of the internal database if sharing is needed.
It supports the following localization industry standards:
- Unicode
- XLIFF (XML Localisation Interchange File Format)
- TMX (Translation Memory eXchange)
- SRX (Segmentation Rules eXchange)
- xml:tm
- PO (Portable Object)
- TBX (TermBase eXchange)
- GMX (Global information management Metrics eXchange)
Supported File Formats - MS Office 2000-2003:
- RTF (Rich Text Format)
Supported File Formats - MS Office 2007:
- DOCX
- XLSX
- PPTX
Supported File Formats - MS Office 2010:
- DOCX
- XLSX
- PPTX
Supported File Formats - Open Office:
- ODT
- ODS
- ODP
Supported File Formats - Web Files:
- HTML
- XML
- RESX
Supported File Formats - Text:
- TXT
- CSV
- TAB
Supported File Formats - Desktop Publishing:
- MIF (FrameMaker)
- XML (FrameMaker)
- INX (InDesign)
- IDML (InDesign)
Supported File Formats - Graphical Applications:
- SVG (Photoshop)
- SVG (Illustrator)
- SVG (CorelDraw)
Supported File Formats - Source Code and Binary Files:
- RC
- Java: properties
- ResX
Supported File Formats - other:
- DITA maps
Open API: Yes Has a command line interface for using main features in batch mode.
Source: TAUS Tracker, http://www.taustracker.com/54/92-swordfish-translation-editor
See also
References
- ↑ "Swordfish Translation Editor". Taus Tracker. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
- ↑ "Swordfish II". Jessica Gomez and Joshua Ortiz. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- ↑ Philippa Hammond (4 March 2011). "3-minute review of Swordfish II CAT tool". Blogging Translator. Retrieved 21 February 2012.