Since English is not my strong point you probably can't tell, but I hope it
helps.
-The help files, at this point, are devided into functional areas.
-Each .hlp file represents a different functional block of how the program looks
-to the user.
+The help files, at this point, are devided into functional areas. Each .hlp
+file represents a different functional block of how the program looks to the
+user.
-Hopefully as SquirrelMail is more widely used,
-non-english translations will be used to make other non-english translations.
-You might want to keep this in mind when writing yours. Remember that these will
-be used all over the world and in many different environments so local language
-dialects might confuse someone else.
+Hopefully as SquirrelMail is more widely used, non-english translations will
+be used to make other non-english translations. You might want to keep this
+in mind when writing yours. Remember that these will be used all over the
+world and in many different environments so local language dialects might
+confuse someone else.
File Structure
==============
-All translated files should be placed under the help directory. Under the help
-directory create another directory. This directory MUST be named to the two letter
-standard abbreviation for the language. English is "en" and Polish would be "pl"
-for example.
+All translated files should be placed under the help directory. Under the
+help directory create another directory. This directory MUST be named to the
+two letter standard abbreviation for the language. English is "en" and Polish
+would be "pl" for example.
The help files are written in a basic xml format. Don't worry, XML isn't hard
at all. All it does is contain values inside tags like <start> and </start>.