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by lixtra
2095 days ago
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Indeed, I thought for a moment about Switzerland, that might have one of the highest rate of multilingual websites at least in Europe. I wasn’t able to find what fraction of the Internet sites are multilingual but would be curious what’s your estimate. I still would be surprised if it is >10%. Maybe more if you weight by traffic but that is not the relevant metric here. The plug-in approach has another advantage: there are several reasonable approaches to a multilingual site, i.e. you can have a default language if a translation is not available. Or rather show nothing. You may want to force a translation of each page. How do you track the translation of changes in one language, etc. By picking/adjusting a plug-in you get the behavior you want instead of a one approach satisfies nobody default solution. |
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* I’ve dealt with these WP multilingual plugins and they were all atrocious (see my first comment). Nowadays, if I have a core set of requirements, and a piece of software only offers that set through plugins, I will not consider it anymore. Plugins are fine for nice-to-haves, but not for must-haves. It’s a recipy for a maintainability disaster.
[1] https://weglot.com/wp-content/uploads/20191017121225/image16...