pIntEn English translation started
pIntEn English translation started 2018-12~2019-01
First, separate intertwined tasks from one another, as thinking of them as a single entity can make them large and cumbersome.
It was a mistake to embrace the creation of a Scrapbox with book content and a community on it.
This is subject to mechanical rewriting
The purpose of this is to publish the results of the private experimental project, which will be overwritten as appropriate when the private is updated
Apart from this, you can create a project for collaborative editing experiments at an appropriate time, but it's not a priority.
This is a private
It would be more interesting to do it in public.
Higher priority is the English translation project
For now, mechanically tag it as "English translation yet" and make it a separate project, then translate it as you measure it.
I'm hoping to finish translating it over the holiday season, but we'll see how it goes.
Bracketing is not a priority, because the English version will be published in book style.
But the translated English text will be completed in Scrapbox format, so you can just refer to the Japanese version and placket it from there.
You'll need a utility to edit JSON in Scrapbox format, but you can make a quick one.
I have a script that puts a specific tag on every page in the project.
One step forward until the bath is filled with hot water.
It has been confirmed that no permission is required to publish the English version (the Japanese version is also free to the author as long as no contract has been signed yet, but it seems like it is being withheld out of kindness).
2018-12-15
Wife: "Instead of trying to do it seriously, for now, just do 30 or 15 minutes for measurement, and do the appropriate pages, about four chapters."
You went to the lodge when you were writing, so maybe you can go there when you're translating.
Conversation 1
I said, "I was going to translate from the table of contents."
Wife: "Table of Contents should be last."
I said, "I thought a table of contents would be easier to generate progress because it's smaller in volume."
Wife: "The table of contents and the text are formatted too differently to meet the intent of the measurement."
Me: "Why is measurement taking precedence over progress?"
Wife: "When you translate the table of contents and generate progress, it's impossible to estimate how much of a task it would be to translate the entire text."
I said, "So even if progress is generated, without an estimate of completion, we don't know the percentage of achievement?"
Conversation 2
Wife: "We should examine first where irregularities are likely to occur; there are no irregularities in the table of contents, but there are irregularities in the text, such as figure captions."
Me: "I guess it's important to reduce uncertainty by doing the high uncertainty part first." If you are whacking irregular moles, you will feel like you are doing the same thing all the time and demotivate them, so catch the moles that cannot be defeated immediately and put them in a cage. After confirming the mole's overall condition, we take the mole down.
Listing where and what the problems are is a priority.
Once the irregularities are gone, you can throw them to people.
2Pomodoro's experimental results
1 Pomodoro: "Let's just translate 25 minutes from the appropriate place and see how much progress we can make."
→I only made it three paragraphs.
Why? -> When I run it through Google Translate and see that it doesn't translate correctly, I feel like the Japanese sentence is bad to begin with. Then we start revising the Japanese.
I think this reworking process has improved the quality of Japanese writing, so I feel it is "beneficial", but of course it is slow!
Next experiment "Don't worry about the quality of Google Translate, just the appearance.
One Pomodoro completed 14 pages in Scrapbox pages, one twenty-fourth of the total of 333 pages. If I do this 23 more times, the entire page will be machine-translated.
Which way should we proceed?
At 8 pomodoros per day, we estimate that we can do it in 3 days, so we can certainly complete the machine-translated version during the year-end and New Year vacations. After publishing it, we can improve its quality. What we publish will generate social triggers.
English translation of the text → 23 Pomodoro remaining
Replacement of Japanese in the figure → not measured
2018−12−16
The work of translating the text into English was determined to be cut out and thrown to a part-timer.
Outsource work that can be outsourced.
Should proceed with minimal man-hours to release
Where you translate a single page and publish it on Scrapbox, plus more, up to an e-book.
We'll start with one page to do that, and when we're done, the next step is chapter 0. Once that's done, we can pre-release it as a teaser.
1 Pomodoro
1 Pomodoro
Install Typora, create a book project with LeanPub, and Done to the point of inserting the above page. What to do with the file name of the image
1 Pomodoro
Chapters 0 to 1.2, 30 pages
I guess the next step is to clean up chapter 0, where it explains each chapter of the book, and make it public.
https://gyazo.com/59fd2a36fede9de07b7cef15e295588c
2019-01-07
"intelligent production techniques"
sluggish
Literal translation of "Intellectual Production
I think "creativity" is fine.
Keep it simple stupid!
Eventually it became intellitech.
4 pomodorized and only 2 pages done.
It's 250 pages long, so it'll take 500 pomodoros.
8 pomodoro every day without a break would take 62 days...
2019-01-08
4 Pomodoro and a little more, page 4
I'm starting to think we're going to make it in the three month time frame.
After all, there is familiarity.
Since the observation period is still short, let's try this approach for a week for now.
2019-01-13
4 Pomodoro in a private room at an internet cafe on Sunday
Progress of 4 pomodoros in a 3-hour course
2019-01-16
I wanted to do it in Japanese at first, but maybe by doing it in English, I won't get too sidetracked (in Japanese, I might develop too many ideas and write too much).
In the process of translating into English, we have created a new page for those items that we thought, "I expressed what I expressed in Japanese in this way in English, but I think the original nuance is lost if I only used the English words.
I have a page of links to Wikipedia, etc., for technical terms, etc.
I really wanted to do something like this for Japanese content.
5 pomodoros in 1 day (split into 2 and 3 depending on meeting schedule)
translation
I'm thinking of making a burndown chart or something to maintain willingness (e.g. to do something) in the translation process, but I wonder if anyone else is doing something similar or if it's just "futile to do that"? I'm feeling heartbroken because I'm falling far short of my expectations and only making progress on one page per pomodoro. I didn't make it. I feel like I have a rough idea of the current line in the reST file.
There is a trick with the line count in reST: if you translate a file with 1000 lines, you get 2000 lines; if you translate 500 lines, the total file is 1500 lines, but the cursor position is at the 1000th line; you translate only 50%, but your progress is perceived as 66%.
Is there any way to avoid heartbreak in translation?
Don't think about it. Keep translating and you'll be done.
The Python documentation is updated from the beginning of the translation, so I don't mind if I don't finish it.
With Good Mas, I was able to translate at a more or less steady pace, and once I started to get perspective, I felt more at ease.
1/19
I worked hard at a comic book cafe on Saturday and managed to get the estimated end date to March.
2019-01-26
Finished translating up to chapter 1.
112 pages in terms of Scrapbox at this time.
In paper pages, 55 pages, so about twice as many.
The table of contents has 70 headings, so about 1.5 times
---
This page is auto-translated from /nishio/pIntEn 英訳開始. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. I'm very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.