Forum: CAT Tools Technical Help
Topic: Is there a free XLIFF viewer that has these features?
Poster: Gabriel Lang
Post title: Thank you so much!
Hi Samuel,
Thank you so much, I have been looking for such a tool for years.
Just something simple to display an XML file in a table. It also works with TMX as you mentioned.
Gabriel
[quote]Samuel Murray wrote:
[quote]Artem Vakhitov wrote:
Is there a free XLIFF viewer for Windows that has these features:
1 A simple Windows executable
2 Opens the file directly
3 Has a grid Source/Target layout
4 Displays the entire text of a segment right in the grid
5 Displays the statistics [/quote]
[url removed]
[url removed] (download here)
It's not an editor, though. It's just a viewer, and it doesn't show segment statuses. I use it regularly to export XLIFF files to TMX or an HTML table or to quickly check the contents of a file.
It sometimes hijacks the file association for a while (if I've opened an SDLXLIFF file in Disfr, the next time I double-click an SDLXLIFF file it will want to open in Disfr). This doesn't bother me much since I rarely open XLIFF files by double-clicking them -- I tend to open them from within the application that I want to open them, which isn't always the same application.
It doesn't display statistics.
[Edited at 2021-12-01 19:38 GMT] [/quote]
Topic: Is there a free XLIFF viewer that has these features?
Poster: Gabriel Lang
Post title: Thank you so much!
Hi Samuel,
Thank you so much, I have been looking for such a tool for years.
Just something simple to display an XML file in a table. It also works with TMX as you mentioned.
Gabriel
[quote]Samuel Murray wrote:
[quote]Artem Vakhitov wrote:
Is there a free XLIFF viewer for Windows that has these features:
1 A simple Windows executable
2 Opens the file directly
3 Has a grid Source/Target layout
4 Displays the entire text of a segment right in the grid
5 Displays the statistics [/quote]
[url removed]
[url removed] (download here)
It's not an editor, though. It's just a viewer, and it doesn't show segment statuses. I use it regularly to export XLIFF files to TMX or an HTML table or to quickly check the contents of a file.
It sometimes hijacks the file association for a while (if I've opened an SDLXLIFF file in Disfr, the next time I double-click an SDLXLIFF file it will want to open in Disfr). This doesn't bother me much since I rarely open XLIFF files by double-clicking them -- I tend to open them from within the application that I want to open them, which isn't always the same application.
It doesn't display statistics.
[Edited at 2021-12-01 19:38 GMT] [/quote]