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Name Supported File Formats OS Language Widget tool License Across Language Server [2]: Microsoft Word (DOC, DOT, DOCX, and DOCM files), Microsoft Excel (XLS files, and XLSX and XLSM files), Microsoft PowerPoint (PPT and PPS files as well as PPTX, PPSX, and PPTM files), Rich Text Format1 (RTF files), text files (TXT files), TeX (TEX files), HTML, XHTML, XML, SGML, Adobe FrameMaker (in MIF ...
CAT tools are typically understood to mean programs that specifically facilitate the actual translation process. Most CAT tools have (a) the ability to translate a variety of source file formats in a single editing environment without needing to use the file format's associated software for most or all of the translation process, (b ...
Trados Studio supports many file formats [12] [13] including: various markup and tagged formats such as ML, XML, HTML, XLIFF, SDLXLIFF (Studio's native format for translation), OpenDocument files; text files; source code files, such as Java and Microsoft .NET; Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint; and some Adobe file formats, such as PDF, scanned ...
Schreibchen 1.0.1 for Mac OS X can open and write Office Open XML text documents. It is a very simple word processor for disabled persons, children and other peoples that can not use (or like) other word processors or text editors. [26] Schreiben 4.0.1, a simple and fast word processor for Mac OS X supports Office Open XML text documents. [27]
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.
To use Google Translator Toolkit first, users uploaded a file from their desktop or entered a URL of a web page or Wikipedia article that they want to translate. Google Translator Toolkit automatically 'pretranslated' the document. It divided the document into segments, usually sentences, headers, or bullets.
The first version of Déjà Vu was published in 1993 and used the Microsoft Word interface. In 1996, this approach was abandoned, and the software was given its own program interface. In 2004, the founder Emilio Benito died [ 2 ] and his son, Daniel Benito, Head of R&D and Déjà Vu co-creator, continued running the company.
MateCat runs as a web server that connects with other services via open APIs: the TM service MyMemory, [7] the commercial Google Translate (GT) service, ModernMT, and a list of Moses-based [8] services specified in a configuration file. While MyMemory and GT are always available, Moses servers have to be installed and set-up.