I teach a course in basic web programming at a public university. I often have students who are working hard to pick up English at the same time that they are taking my course. In many cases I have thought that I would like to have additional course materials in a variety of languages to keep some of the technical hurdles from being compounded with linguistic ones.
Can anyone recommend a "stackoverflow" whose primary language base is Japanese, Chinese, Polish, or Spanish? Or similarly, a site in any of the listed languages that targets web development?
Edit: One thing I ask is that recommendations be based on use of the site and so familiarity with the language or reasonable knowledge of the sites reputation.
As one responder mentioned, students can google whatever question they have in their native language. While this can be a great tactic it doesn't always point to quality information.
Thanks!
Over a third of programming language were developed in English speaking countries. But some of the well-known, highly-used coding languages were developed in non-English speaking countries e.g. Switzerland (PASCAL), Denmark (PHP), Japan (Ruby), Brazil (Lua), and The Netherlands (Python).
Python is user-friendly. Although often used as a high-level programming language, Python is also ideal for beginner programmers as it will teach you the fundamentals of programming. Fairly straightforward and simplistic, Python is also much cleaner and readable in comparison to other coding languages.
In addition to these four widely available, multilingual programming languages, there are several dozen, maybe a hundred or so, programming languages that are available in a language or two other than English, such as Qalb (Arabic), Chinese Python, farsinet (Persian), Hindawi Programming System (Bengali, Gujarati, and ...
http://cnprog.com/ is a site you might want to check out. It's a Chinese clone of StackOverflow.
Edit: I found some more. http://www.askdev.ru/ and http://throwcatch.me/ are Russian versions of StackOverflow. http://codekicker.de/ is in German and http://www.salonit.pl/ is Polish.
It's not a generic Q&A site like Stack Overflow, but as a resource, the language's documentation has to count, right? The PHP docs are available in English, Bulgarian, Portuguese, German, French, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Romanian and Turkish, plus they have archives of other languages which aren't listed as "active" any more, so they're probably well out-of-date but might still be helpful.
Suggest that the students type their doubts, or keywords of subjects, into Google or other search engine, in their native languages.
That's how I find material in Portuguese at least. I'm Brazilian.
In the bigger language groups in the class, a few pioneers are bound to give the rest the links.
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