Hi,
thanks for your post, and sorry for the trouble.
At this time, I don’t have specific plans to add an integration like that and instead recommend this approach: https://ww.wp.xz.cn/support/topic/translate-tablepress-tables-with-wpml-plugin/
(Note that the mentioned Row Filter Extension is now a premium feature.)
WPML also seems to have a possibility (but I have not tested that and don’t really recommend it): https://wpml.org/errata/tablepress-tables-cant-be-translated/
Regards,
Tobias
Thread Starter
Boris
(@ispacecrusader)
Hi Tobias,
thank you for your quick response. The approach you recommend is indeed how I do it now. But I’ve come across WPML sites with 200 tables in one language. Imagine what it would look like if you have to have 800 of them because you use 4 languages. Not very usable at that point 🙂
The alternative you speak of that is mentioned on the WPML website actually uses what you recommend as basis and then swaps ID’s in the translation strings. My experience is that this is quite tricky to maintain.
Too bad you are not willing to consider this, as I think it could have an impact on your sales as well. But I’m sure you have your reasons.
My search for a WPML-compatible alternative continues…
Regards,
Boris
Hi Boris,
thanks for your feedback here, I really appreciate it!
Can you explain why is maintaining the 800 tables not really usable? If you change the table IDs to follow a schema (remember, these don’t have to be numbers!), like “products-de”, “products-en”, “products-es”, “products-fr” or something like that, these are easily recognizable.
As for integrating support directly into TablePress. I think that this would be a major undertaking, and indeed, I feel that the integration and support burden for this would highly outweigh the benefits, especially since a suitable workaround is available.
I hope that you can find a good solution that works for you!
Best wishes,
Tobias
Thread Starter
Boris
(@ispacecrusader)
Hi Tobias,
Actually, it was just an example. The real case I was referring to was a plan to add more than 10 languages. Having the tables available per language, and connected to the default language original, is a lot easier to oversee in my opinion.
But I didn’t realize making the plugin WPML-compatible would be so much work. Maybe that’s why I can’t find one :-).
Anyway, thanks for the great plugin, and I will continue my search.
Hi,
ah, I see. With 10 languages, you are probably above the average of languages that most sites offer.
Basically, making things compatible would need a different storing mechanism, and a highly complex integration of language syncing, switching, etc., not even to speak of the required user interface changes.
Best wishes,
Tobias