Template:Google translation link
Google translate en page to (or text to or from ): af ■■| ar ■■| cs ■■| cy ■■| da ■■| de ■■| el ■■| en ■■| es ■■| f i ■■| fr ■■| ga ■■| it ■■| ja ■■| mi ■■| nl ■■| pt ■■| ru ■■| zh-CN ■■| zh-TW ■■
To put the English text hereunder in another language, click its 2-character code in the above series.
The language codes recognized by the Google Translate application, generally follow the ISO 639-1 standard (e.g. 'en' for English), for only a few special cases with a region identifier suffix (e.g. 'zh-CN' and 'zh-TW') — see Google's list of Web Interface Language Codes.
This template lists only languages of considerable international importance, and the ones of locations where a ride ever took place (or recently became proposed). Merely pointing at a code in the series, shows the relevant language name written in that language (and in English); a click on either of its 3 tiny items, launches the proper translator. Pointing at the code immediately behind 'Google translate' shows thát language name (only in that language), provided it is known to this wiki's software (which is independent from Google); else it simply repeats the code. Only upon noticing this imperfection, ideally the name of that language in that language should be passed as an extra parameter, to be shown as the tooltip.
Calling the template from near the top of (or elsewhere in) a page, facilitates its translation, or such of a to be copy/pasted section. The from link ■ of one's native language may assist editing a page written in another language. Syntax:1) {{Google translation link}} which assumes an 'en' page (i.e. the calling page is at least partially written in English)
2) {{Google translation link|xx}} in which 'xx' is to be the ISO 639-1 code (exceptionally with regional suffix) of the (or a) language in the calling page. It may be, but does not need to be one from the constant series of the template, and thus allows easily preparing a ride at a new location of which Google recognizes the code for whatever local language.
3) {{Google translation link|xx|Xxx Xxx}} in which 'Xxx Xxx' is to be the name of the language corresponding to the by this wiki not recognized code, in full written in the characters and spelling of this language. This extended 3rd syntax is most exceptional, see higher.