Hi, I looked into this further and saw that this issue has already been reported and addressed… I apologize for not checking before asking.
Now, is there a way to enable two different types of widgets on the same site? For example, I’d like to use the flag shortcode for the desktop view and then use the floating widget for the mobile view. Would that be possible?
Thanks!
Plugin Author
edo888
(@edo888)
Hi,
You can use additional widget_look attribute to place a specific selector, for example [gtranslate widget_look="popup"]. Valid values are float, dropdown_with_flags, popup, popup_search, dropdown, flags, flags_dropdown, flags_name, flags_code, lang_names, lang_codes, globe.
Thanks! 🙂
Thank you, it works 🙂
Just a last question: I’ve noticed that backend text are also translated, but I’d like the translation to apply only to the frontend. Is there a way to prevent backend text from being translated as well?
Plugin Author
edo888
(@edo888)
Hi,
Make sure to not include the language switcher for backend pages.
Alternatively if you would like to skip something from translation, wrap it inside an element with notranslate class: How to skip translations?
Thanks! 🙂
Hi, thanks for your reply.
Sorry, I was wrong: the backend pages aren’t translated, because the language switcher isn’t actually included in the backend. But when I click “Edit with Elementor” the interface gets translated, because the language switcher is actually included in the Elementor editor.
Anyway, it’s not a big deal; I just have to remember to switch back to the main language before editing pages with Elementor 🙂
Thank you again for your quick help!
Plugin Author
edo888
(@edo888)
You are welcome! If you have a moment, please share your experience with our support team by writing a review: https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/gtranslate/reviews/
Thanks! 🙂
Sure, I just left a review… you really deserve it 🙂
Thanks again for your help!