Dear SDL community,
Once again I find myself having to waste a phenomenal amount of time doing something that should be really simple.
Last night I analysed a large .idml project against a memory. The results were as follows:
Context match: 45257
Repetitions: 11173
Cross-file repetitions: 6384
100%: 7546
95-99%: 8504
85-94%: 294
New: 7304
The work to be done is to proofread everything taken from the memory and translate the rest. The problem is that the context match and 100% match contain many thousands of repetitions where the segment only has to be proofread once. As Trados gives no indication of the number of repetitions in these segments, it is impossible to know how much time it will take and therefore impossible to cost the job.
There is a workaround, which I managed to use.
Using the Community Advanced Display Filter, I isolated the repetitions in the pretranslated segments and changed their status to "sign off rejected". Then I isolated the repetitions in the non-translated segments and set their status to "translation rejected". This finally allowed me to see the work to be done (in the word count at the bottom of the screen) and therefore cost the job: 8296 new words to translate and 30417 to proofread.
The problem with doing it this way is that to change the status on a very large number of rows takes a very long time. I have a massively powerful computer with 32 Gb RAM yet it still took 20 minutes just to select all the rows and another 20 minutes to change their status. As this operation had to be done twice, it took me an hour and twenty minutes just to count the words displayed by the filter.
This problem could be easily solved by adding functionality to the Community Advanced Display Filter so that it shows the word count when the filter is applied.
I would be quite happy to pay for this functionality. My point is that the analysis function in Trados Studio is not fit for purpose and corrective action is needed, because projects of this size are perfectly normal for many translators and they need to be able to be costed quickly.
Or can anyone see any other way of doing this? Comments please?
Thank you.
Neil