-
```
ISO 639-2 assigns two codes to some languages: B (bibliographic) and T
(terminology). For Chinese, they are:
chi (B)
zho (T)
Tesseract uses the B code for Chinese. This is inconsistent: for ever…
-
### DO NOT REMOVE OR SKIP THE ISSUE TEMPLATE
- [X] I understand that I will be **blocked** if I *intentionally* remove or skip any mandatory\* field
### Checklist
- [X] I'm reporting a bug un…
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Hi, Steven!
Do you happen to know if there are other controlled vocabularies available for the language field? One of our students sent me this message:
"Just a note but I was working on [El Sexo…
-
```
ISO 639-2 assigns two codes to some languages: B (bibliographic) and T
(terminology). For Chinese, they are:
chi (B)
zho (T)
Tesseract uses the B code for Chinese. This is inconsistent: for ever…
-
```
ISO 639-2 assigns two codes to some languages: B (bibliographic) and T
(terminology). For Chinese, they are:
chi (B)
zho (T)
Tesseract uses the B code for Chinese. This is inconsistent: for ever…
-
Ruby i18n gem is capable of mapping from ISO 639-2 to BCP47 language codes. We should use it rather than maintaining code mappings ourselves.
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## Feature requests
If this issue is a feature request:
* Describe the scenario and benefits that the feature supports.
When packaging using Wix4 with UI supports, it is found that the intern…
-
```
ISO 639-2 assigns two codes to some languages: B (bibliographic) and T
(terminology). For Chinese, they are:
chi (B)
zho (T)
Tesseract uses the B code for Chinese. This is inconsistent: for ever…
-
In issue #313 the field for the second language was created, but the drop down menu only has two: English and 'Deutsche' (which is pains Sabine as it's gramatically incorrect). We would like two enhan…
-
```
ISO 639-2 assigns two codes to some languages: B (bibliographic) and T
(terminology). For Chinese, they are:
chi (B)
zho (T)
Tesseract uses the B code for Chinese. This is inconsistent: for ever…