I just found the gnome-translate-indicator which is great! I click on the button in the top panel and then I can lookup any word. It’s only one way but that’s not a big problem for me as I rarely translate to English, mostly from.

edit: the extension uses translate-shell which uses google, bing, but also apertium. So far I have not found a way to switch settings. I guess you have to point to a translate-shell instance which has to be configured.

I was wondering if there is an improved workflow for this. We’ve got bangs in the browser and is there a way to include this into the general GNOME search? maybe with a bang?

Additionaly, there is Light Dict which looks like a great app but doesn’t work on my machine out of the box (it fails to execute a trans process). Before trying to find the problem, I’d like to know if someone is using it.

edit2: I can’t find any attribution to any external dictionary. Use it at your own risk.

edit3: There is also Dialect with which you can translate via lingva or libretranslate. It looks like a nice gui app.

So, is there a perfect workflow for this? I’d lvoe to hear your experience with translation and dictionary lookups on GNOME / linux

  • DangerousInternet@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I type anything, or usually just ctrl-v, and one of the options is to open this query in Dialect. So that is not real integration where you would see translation right in search, which would be awesome. I do not need to translate things often, so separate app without occupying any memory is OK for me. I tested those extensions just for curiosity if they are super good, but they are not…

    • juli@programming.devOP
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      11 months ago

      Thx.

      It doesn’t work for me. That’s probably because of flatpak, I have the same issue with calc.