It allows you to add to your language switcher menu item all classes you need: this allows you to make it look accordingly to your theme style using the same class your theme is using for navigation menu items It allows you to choose between Transposh flags or flags provided by Language Switcher for Transposh itself It allows you to add as many flags as used languages are in addition, administrators, authors and editors will see an Edit translation button as last item in the primary menu which will allow them to activate the Transposh Editor
It gets default language and used languages from Transposh plugin settings What does Language Switcher for Transposh: Language Switcher for Transposh allows you to get a nice, highly customizable language switcher to use alongiside Transposh.
You can download Transposh from the official website.
So, before to install and activate Language Switcher for Transposh you must install and activate Transposh Translation Filter. It only allow to use a nice, customizable language switcher alongside Transposh Translation Filter plugin. Then go to the list of posts.WARNING: This plugin doesn’t translate your website. Give this page a name and click on Copy content from the default language: You’ll be taken to the page version corresponding to the translated content. Go to Posts -> All Posts, in the left-hand menu of the WordPress Admin dashboard.Ĭlick on the + icon next to the post you want to translate, the icon that corresponds to the target language you want the post translated into. Then, you’ll have a distinct table of pages containing all pages that have been translated in the target language. Next to the selected page, click on the + icon corresponding to the target language you want the page translated into.Īdd a title to the translated page, and click to Copy content from default language (in the lower part of the right-hand menu): Next to each page, you’ll have columns for the different target languages you’ve previously added for the site. In the WordPress Admin dashboard, go to Pages in the left-hand menu to open the table of existing pages. Translate pages/posts into target languages
Links to translation of posts – check the checkbox if you want to show links above or below the posts, providing their version in other languages.Footer language switcher – check the checkbox if you want to show language switcher in footer.Language switcher options – you’ll decide the order of the languages in the language switcher, and set to skip language/link to home of language for missing translations.Language URL format – from here, you determine which URL format you give to translated pages: it might be a different domain for each language/it might be the language name added as a parameter (?lang=fr – French)/it might be a directory for each language (fr/ – French).moreover, you can change the default language, or you can modify the list of languages, by adding/removing languages from the list. Site languages – from here, you can check which languages are activated for the website.Report to – you can activate the option to report to which theme and plugins you are using, to ensure maximum compatibility of the plugin with your site.Enter the site key, to receive automatic updates for WPML on the site.Select your preferences related to compatibility reporting.Configure a language switcher you’ll place in the menu/widget area/footer.In the left-hand menu of the WordPress Admin dashboard, go to WPML, and start configuring the plugin.
Then, check in the list of Installed Plugins, to see if the WPML plugin was installed and activated correctly. The theme is compatible with 2 of the most popular multilanguage plugins: Polylang and WPML.Īfter you have purchased WPML, go to Plugins, in the left-hand menu of the WordPress Admin dashboard.Ĭlick on Add New -> Upload Plugin. One Page Express gives you the possibility to translate your website into different languages.