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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Your Favorite Tech Support Web Sites and Why? Post 303022213 by Neo on Monday 27th of August 2018 10:13:32 PM
Old 08-27-2018
Your Favorite Tech Support Web Sites and Why?

Where do you go to participate in technical discussions besides UNIX.COM and why?

Personally, I do not really participate in other forums and discussion boards, but I do ask questions from time to time on Stack sites. The problem I have with Stack is that my questions are never answered on any topic; so perhaps they are not the standard, beginner questions that we often see. Or, perhaps I not good at asking questions, haha.

This means for me, I normally get my tech answers from a Google search or watching a tutorial video; because I have very bad luck asking questions and getting answers in forums and other discussion sites.

I also find Stack sites to be really restrictive, because these sites do not really promote back and forth discussions, but they are rather "post a question and vote up the best answer" sites. So, when I try to post on any of these kind of sites, I cannot get any sense of community; but that's me I guess; maybe others have better experiences?

I do like the fact that the Stack sites are not forum based but taxonomy (tag) based, so there is no need to post in a particular forum or designed area on the site; but just tag the post with one or more keywords and go.

Also, on the Stack sites, I have difficulty with code tags and other BB code tags; and sometimes I really struggle to get code posted. This means for me, I often get good information from Stack but only from a Google search referral, but rarely, to almost never, get my written questions answered.

How about about you?

Where are your favorite tech discussion hangouts and why?
 

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PODEBCONF-DISPLAY-PO(1) 					    po-debconf						   PODEBCONF-DISPLAY-PO(1)

NAME
podebconf-display-po - display content of a PO file in a debconf interface SYNOPSIS
podebconf-display-po [-h] [-f FRONTEND] file.po DESCRIPTION
As with any other localization work, translators should test their translations by running the program they are working on. But this is a very hard job with complicated configuration scripts because there is no automatic way to have all messages displayed. The podebconf-display-po program could be called the Poor Man Localization Checker for debconf. It parses a PO file, tries to guess what the original templates file did look like, and displays messages in a debconf interface. Of course being root is not mandatory, and there is no interaction between podebconf-display-po and system-wide debconf settings. OPTIONS
-h, --help Display a usage summary and exit. -f, --frontend=FRONTEND Select an alternate debconf frontend. CAVEATS
o As podebconf-display-po relies on "debconf" to display questions, your environment must be setup to display localized questions in the language of the PO file. If you want to check a translation in another language, you need to temporarily change your settings, e.g. $ LANGUAGE=de podebconf-display-po de.po If the PO file cannot be converted into your current encoding, English strings are displayed instead of the localized ones. You then have to switch to a UTF-8 environment to prevent encoding mismatch. o Prior to 0.8.3, "po-debconf" did only insert the field name in PO files. But some discussions on mailing-lists showed that text format does depend on template type, e.g. string and boolean types are different because the former is an open question and user has to enter some text input, whereas the latter is basically a Yes/No question. Authors have to think about it when writing their templates files, but translators also have to be aware. This is achieved when PO files are generated by po-debconf >= 0.8.3, template type is inserted in PO files. With older versions, podebconf-display-po has a trivial algorithm to determine original template type, and may sometimes be wrong. o The "dialog" frontend, when based upon "whiptail", traps system signals and thus podebconf-display-po cannot be interrupted by "Ctrl-C" when using this frontend. SEE ALSO
debconf(1) AUTHOR
Denis Barbier <barbier@linuxfr.org> 2010-11-17 PODEBCONF-DISPLAY-PO(1)
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