UBports Robot Logo UBports Forum
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Search
    • Register
    • Login

    Where can i highlight spelling errors on app pages on the OpenStore website?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General
    openstorespellingerrorreporthighlight
    14 Posts 6 Posters 614 Views 2 Watching
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
      Reply
      • Reply as topic
      Log in to reply
      This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
      • OpolorkO Online
        Opolork
        last edited by Opolork

        The 2 web pages are, and the 2 spelling mistakes:

        https://open-store.io/app/myfinance.alaskalinuxuser
        finanace –> finance

        https://open-store.io/app/trolly.alaskalinuxuser
        shoping –> shopping

        If anyone can contact Weston Howard and tell him, I'd appreciate it.

        This may help: https://gitlab.com/alaskalinuxuser

        How can you trust that an app really won't send some company your location data, when you tell it not to? The only way you can trust a program not to do something it isn't supposed to do is if it is free software. ~ RMS

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • OpolorkO Online
          Opolork @wally
          last edited by Opolork

          Hi @wally. It's not a big thing but I think it does look a bit amateurish to make basic mistakes like that. It may also turn some folk away. They may think [likely wrongly] that if the dev[s] can't get the spelling right then how can they make an app that's done properly.

          How can you trust that an app really won't send some company your location data, when you tell it not to? The only way you can trust a program not to do something it isn't supposed to do is if it is free software. ~ RMS

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • BollyB Offline
            Bolly
            last edited by

            Hello @Opolork, you can open a bug in each application's repository. You can even make an MR.

            f16b3d78-dc66-45e0-a6e9-1e43c41bc765-image.png

            2015-Now (Daily use) : BQ Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu edition
            2016-Now (Daily use) : BQ Aquaris M10 FHD Betatester

            2020-Now : PinePhone Braveheart & CE UBports
            2020-Now (Family/Daily use): Vollaphone Xenial
            2022-Now (Family/Daily use): Vollaphone 22 Focal

            OpolorkO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • OpolorkO Online
              Opolork @Bolly
              last edited by Opolork

              @Bolly said in Where can i highlight spelling errors on app pages on the OpenStore website?:

              Hello @Opolork, you can open a bug in each application's repository. You can even make an MR.

              ...

              Hi Bolly. What's an 'MR'?

              How can you trust that an app really won't send some company your location data, when you tell it not to? The only way you can trust a program not to do something it isn't supposed to do is if it is free software. ~ RMS

              MoemM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • MoemM Offline
                Moem @Opolork
                last edited by

                @Opolork said in Where can i highlight spelling errors on app pages on the OpenStore website?:

                What's an 'MR'?

                Merge request. It means you can propose a change, in this case to the spelling.

                Is currently using an Op5t
                Also owns an Op1, a BQ E4.5 and an Xperia X, as well as a BQ tablet and a Pinetab2. Please, someone... make it stop.

                OpolorkO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • OpolorkO Online
                  Opolork @Moem
                  last edited by

                  @Moem I see, thanks. 🙂

                  How can you trust that an app really won't send some company your location data, when you tell it not to? The only way you can trust a program not to do something it isn't supposed to do is if it is free software. ~ RMS

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • OpolorkO Online
                    Opolork
                    last edited by Opolork

                    Hi. I created a gitlab.com account but am not sure about the setting up of an SSH key in order for me to do a Merge Request on https://open-store.io/app/trolly.alaskalinuxuser. Can someone please go thru this step-by-step?

                    How can you trust that an app really won't send some company your location data, when you tell it not to? The only way you can trust a program not to do something it isn't supposed to do is if it is free software. ~ RMS

                    J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • J Offline
                      johndoe @Opolork
                      last edited by johndoe

                      Hello @Opolork , as Bolly already pointed out, you can contact the developers over their gitlab (or github) accounts.
                      For the spelling error, you could open an issue like this:
                      1)
                      1.png
                      2)
                      2.png
                      3)
                      3.png

                      Please describe what the issue is ("Hello, I saw following spelling error at the description of the app in the open store...") and when the developer has time for it, he will maybe correct it. You do not need to set up an SSH key for this.

                      For directly suggesting a change to the source code, you can start a merge request. The description of the app in the open store is not part of the source code, so it can not be changed with a merge request. But should you see any spelling errors inside an app, you can most likely correct them with a merge request.
                      For a merge request you need to fork (make a copy with your own changes) the project first. Should you click on a file (for example po/es.po to change the Spanish translation) in the gitlab repository and than click on Edit > Edit single file at the top right, gitlab will automatically ask you, if you want to fork the project. Than you can edit your fork and make a merge request to the original repository. I will not explain it further, because I do not think that this is what you want to do here.

                      Please be aware that the translation for the core apps is done over a translation dashboard, so you should not make translation merge requests for them (https://docs.ubports.com/no/latest/contribute/translations.html#how-to).

                      For using SSH functionalities of git, you can add an SSH key to your gitlab profile. I will also not explain it further, because I do not think that this is what you want to do here. I think it is not even necessary for making a merge request. And I think you should even be able to push and pull your own projects without an SSH key. Here is some gitlab specific documentation about it, should you be interested: https://docs.gitlab.com/user/ssh/

                      TL;DR: Just open an issue. You do not need to make a merge request or to set up an SSH key.

                      OpolorkO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                      • OpolorkO Online
                        Opolork @johndoe
                        last edited by Opolork

                        Hi @johndoe. Thank you. I'm not a coder so being able to simply contact the dev on GitLab in a straightforward way is just what I need. 🙂 👍

                        How can you trust that an app really won't send some company your location data, when you tell it not to? The only way you can trust a program not to do something it isn't supposed to do is if it is free software. ~ RMS

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • OpolorkO Online
                          Opolork
                          last edited by

                          Done! 🙂

                          https://gitlab.com/alaskalinuxuser/trolly/-/issues

                          How can you trust that an app really won't send some company your location data, when you tell it not to? The only way you can trust a program not to do something it isn't supposed to do is if it is free software. ~ RMS

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • First post
                            Last post