Translating .indt files Thread poster: Kathleen Misson
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Hello, I have been sent indt files to translate. Does anyone know whether it is possible and how to import them into either Trados or MemoQ? I have tried various ways including with MemoQ Language Terminal. Thank you for any suggestions. | | | Samuel Murray Netherlands Local time: 06:17 Member (2006) English to Afrikaans + ...
Kathleen Misson wrote: I have been sent INDT files to translate. Does anyone know whether it is possible and how to import them into either Trados or MemoQ? Based on a hunch, I'd say it is unlikely that you would be able to do so. https://fileinfo.com/extension/indt This is a native InDesign file, and not an IDML exported version of an InDesign file. CAT tools generally work only on the IDML exported versions of InDesign files. It may be that you'd need to translate this file in InDesign itself, or else tell the client that you don't have InDesign and that they should send you the translatable text in e.g. Word format. Or ask the client to export it for you to IDML format. Here are some sample INDT files, if anyone wants to experiment. They are binary files and they are not zipped. https://www.bestindesigntemplates.com | | | | Samuel Murray Netherlands Local time: 06:17 Member (2006) English to Afrikaans + ...
German-Dutch Engineering Translation wrote: I'd say that you have to open the template, save it as a normal document and export to IDML. No, I would not do that. If you did that, then you'd end up with an IDML file that can be imported into a normal document, but how are you then going to convert the translated normal document back to a template? | |
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Joakim Braun Sweden Local time: 06:17 German to Swedish + ...
Samuel Murray wrote: If you did that, then you'd end up with an IDML file that can be imported into a normal document, but how are you then going to convert the translated normal document back to a template? By opening the translated .idml file and exporting it as .indt from Indesign? BTW you don't import .idml "into a normal document" (as with CSV and Excel), you simply open the .idml file.
[Bearbeitet am 2022-03-25 10:46 GMT] | | | Kathleen Misson Spain Local time: 06:17 Member (2009) Spanish to English TOPIC STARTER Resolved with .idml file | Mar 24, 2022 |
There was no solution to work with .indt files. The client has sent .idml. Thank you for your help! | | | Samuel Murray Netherlands Local time: 06:17 Member (2006) English to Afrikaans + ... You're right, I misunderstood the process | Mar 24, 2022 |
Joakim Braun wrote: Samuel Murray wrote: How are you then going to convert the translated normal document back to a template? By opening the translated .idml file and exporting it as .idmt from Indesign? Yes, I watched several more videos and found that you're right. In fact, I get the impression that an INDT file is simply an INDD file with a different file extension (to prevent people from accidentally damaging the template when they use it). Is that right? Can you convert an INDD file by changing the file extension? MemoQ claims to be able to translate INDD files natively. If an INDT file is simply an INDD file with a different file extension, wouldn't it be easiest for the translator to just rename it and translate it like that? I don't know how well MemoQ handles INDD files, though. You don't import .idml "into a normal document". I always thought that IDML is an export format (because of the way people talk about it), but you're right: it's not. It's actually just a save format. | | | Joakim Braun Sweden Local time: 06:17 German to Swedish + ... Binary formats | Mar 25, 2022 |
Samuel Murray wrote: If an INDT file is simply an INDD file with a different file extension, wouldn't it be easiest for the translator to just rename it and translate it like that? I don't know how well MemoQ handles INDD files, though. .indt and .indd are both proprietary, CAT-averse binary formats. .idml is a CAT and reverse engineering friendly XML format. Tested creating a new .indd file and saving a copy as .indt. The files are not binary identical. But when working in Indesign, the expectation is that opening .indt will bring up EXACTLY the same document contents as opening the corresponding .indd, the only difference being that a new document is created for .indt. So the files should contain the same information, perhaps arranged differently. (When renaming .indt -> .indd and vice versa, Indesign handles the resulting file as expected.) | | | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Translating .indt files TM-Town | Manage your TMs and Terms ... and boost your translation business
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