strings.xml revision c39a6e0c51e182338deb8b63d07933b585134929
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> 2<!-- 3/* //device/apps/common/assets/res/any/strings.xml 4** 5** Copyright 2006, The Android Open Source Project 6** 7** Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 8** you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 9** You may obtain a copy of the License at 10** 11** http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 12** 13** Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 14** distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 15** WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 16** See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 17** limitations under the License. 18*/ 19--> 20<resources xmlns:xliff="urn:oasis:names:tc:xliff:document:1.2"> 21 <!-- Suffix added to a number to signify size in bytes. --> 22 <string name="byteShort">B</string> 23 <!-- Suffix added to a number to signify size in kilobytes. --> 24 <string name="kilobyteShort">KB</string> 25 <!-- Suffix added to a number to signify size in megabytes. --> 26 <string name="megabyteShort">MB</string> 27 <!-- Suffix added to a number to signify size in gigabytes. --> 28 <string name="gigabyteShort">GB</string> 29 <!-- Suffix added to a number to signify size in terabytes. --> 30 <string name="terabyteShort">TB</string> 31 <!-- Suffix added to a number to signify size in petabytes. --> 32 <string name="petabyteShort">PB</string> 33 34 <!-- Used in Contacts for a field that has no label and in Note Pad 35 for a note with no name. --> 36 <string name="untitled"><untitled></string> 37 38 <!-- Used to replace a range of characters in text that is too wide 39 for the space allocated to it. --> 40 <string name="ellipsis">\u2026</string> 41 42 <!-- How to display the lack of a phone number --> 43 <string name="emptyPhoneNumber">(No phone number)</string> 44 45 <!-- How to display the lack of a name --> 46 <string name="unknownName">(Unknown)</string> 47 48 <!-- What the UI should display for "voice mail" unless overridden by the SIM--> 49 <string name="defaultVoiceMailAlphaTag">Voicemail</string> 50 51 <!-- What the UI should display for "Msisdn" unless overridden by the SIM--> 52 <string name="defaultMsisdnAlphaTag">MSISDN1</string> 53 54 <!-- For GsmMmiCode.java --> <skip /> 55 <!-- Displayed when the user dialed an MMI code whose function 56 could not be performed. This will be displayed in a toast. --> 57 <string name="mmiError">Connection problem or invalid MMI code.</string> 58 <!-- Displayed when a phone feature such as call barring was activated. --> 59 <string name="serviceEnabled">Service was enabled.</string> 60 <!-- Displayed in front of the list of a set of service classes 61 (voice, data, fax, etc.) that were enabled. --> 62 <string name="serviceEnabledFor">Service was enabled for:</string> 63 <!-- Displayed when a phone feature such as call forwarding was deactivated. --> 64 <string name="serviceDisabled">Service has been disabled.</string> 65 <!-- Displayed when a phone property such as a SIM password was registered. --> 66 <string name="serviceRegistered">Registration was successful.</string> 67 <!-- Displayed when a phone property such as a SIM password was erased. --> 68 <string name="serviceErased">Erasure was successful.</string> 69 <!-- Displayed when a SIM password was entered incorrectly. --> 70 <string name="passwordIncorrect">Incorrect password.</string> 71 <!-- Displayed when a phone feature triggered by an MMI code is complete. --> 72 <string name="mmiComplete">MMI complete.</string> 73 <!-- Displayed when a SIM PIN password is entered incorrectly. --> 74 <string name="badPin">The old PIN you typed is not correct.</string> 75 <!-- Displayed when a SIM PUK password is entered incorrectly. --> 76 <string name="badPuk">The PUK you typed is not correct.</string> 77 <!-- Displayed when SIM PIN passwords are entered inconsistently. --> 78 <string name="mismatchPin">The PINs you entered do not match.</string> 79 <!-- Displayed when a SIM PIN password is too long or too short. --> 80 <string name="invalidPin">Type a PIN that is 4 to 8 numbers.</string> 81 <!-- Displayed to prompt the user to type the PUK password to unlock 82 the SIM card. --> 83 <string name="needPuk">Your SIM card is PUK-locked. Type the PUK code to unlock it.</string> 84 <string name="needPuk2">Type PUK2 to unblock SIM card.</string> 85 86 <!-- Displayed as the title for a success/failure report enabling/disabling caller ID. --> 87 <string name="ClipMmi">Incoming Caller ID</string> 88 <!-- Displayed as the title for a success/failure report enabling/disabling caller ID. --> 89 <string name="ClirMmi">Outgoing Caller ID</string> 90 <!-- Displayed as the title for a success/failure report enabling/disabling call forwarding. --> 91 <string name="CfMmi">Call forwarding</string> 92 <!-- Displayed as the title for a success/failure report enabling/disabling call waiting. --> 93 <string name="CwMmi">Call waiting</string> 94 <!-- Displayed as the title for a success/failure report enabling/disabling call barring. --> 95 <string name="BaMmi">Call barring</string> 96 <!-- Displayed as the title for a success/failure report changing the SIM password. --> 97 <string name="PwdMmi">Password change</string> 98 <!-- Displayed as the title for a success/failure report changing the SIM PIN. --> 99 <string name="PinMmi">PIN change</string> 100 101 <!-- Displayed to confirm to the user that caller ID will be restricted on the next call as usual. --> 102 <string name="CLIRDefaultOnNextCallOn">Caller ID defaults to restricted. Next call: Restricted</string> 103 <!-- Displayed to confirm to the user that caller ID will be not restricted on the next call even though it usually is. --> 104 <string name="CLIRDefaultOnNextCallOff">Caller ID defaults to restricted. Next call: Not restricted</string> 105 <!-- Displayed to confirm to the user that caller ID will not be restricted on the next call but usually is. --> 106 <string name="CLIRDefaultOffNextCallOn">Caller ID defaults to not restricted. Next call: Restricted</string> 107 <!-- Displayed to confirm to the user that caller ID will not be restricted on the next call or in general. --> 108 <string name="CLIRDefaultOffNextCallOff">Caller ID defaults to not restricted. Next call: Not restricted</string> 109 110 111 <!-- Displayed to tell the user that caller ID is not provisioned for their SIM. --> 112 <string name="serviceNotProvisioned">Service not provisioned.</string> 113 <!-- Displayed to tell the user that they cannot change the caller ID setting. --> 114 <string name="CLIRPermanent">The caller ID setting cannot be changed.</string> 115 116 <!-- Mappings between TS 27.007 +CFCC/+CLCK "service classes" and human-readable strings--> <skip /> 117 <!-- Example: Service was enabled for: Voice, Data --> 118 <string name="serviceClassVoice">Voice</string> 119 <!-- Example: Service was enabled for: Voice, Data --> 120 <string name="serviceClassData">Data</string> 121 <!-- Example: Service was enabled for: Voice, FAX --> 122 <string name="serviceClassFAX">FAX</string> 123 <!-- Example: Service was enabled for: Voice, SMS --> 124 <string name="serviceClassSMS">SMS</string> 125 <!-- Meaning: asynchronous data. Example: Service was enabled for: Voice, Async --> 126 <string name="serviceClassDataAsync">Async</string> 127 <!-- Meaning: synchronous data. Example: Service was enabled for: Voice, Async --> 128 <string name="serviceClassDataSync">Sync</string> 129 <!-- Meaning: packet data. Example: Service was enabled for: Voice, Packet --> 130 <string name="serviceClassPacket">Packet</string> 131 <!-- Meaning: unknown. Example: Service was enabled for: Voice, PAD --> 132 <string name="serviceClassPAD">PAD</string> 133 134 <!-- 135 {0} is one of "bearerServiceCode*" 136 {1} is dialing number 137 {2} is time in seconds 138 139 cfTemplateRegistered and cfTemplateRegisteredTime mean that a phone number 140 has been set but forwarding is not on. 141 --> <skip /> 142 <!-- Displayed when the call forwarding query was not able to be forwarded. --> 143 <string name="cfTemplateNotForwarded"><xliff:g id="bearer_service_code">{0}</xliff:g>: Not forwarded</string> 144 <!-- Displayed when the call forwarding query was forwarded. --> 145 <string name="cfTemplateForwarded"><xliff:g id="bearer_service_code">{0}</xliff:g>: <xliff:g id="dialing_number">{1}</xliff:g></string> 146 <!-- Displayed when the call forwarding query will be forwarded after some time. --> 147 <string name="cfTemplateForwardedTime"><xliff:g id="bearer_service_code">{0}</xliff:g>: <xliff:g id="dialing_number">{1}</xliff:g> after <xliff:g id="time_delay">{2}</xliff:g> seconds</string> 148 <!-- Displayed when the call forwarding query was set but forwarding is not enabled. --> 149 <string name="cfTemplateRegistered"><xliff:g id="bearer_service_code">{0}</xliff:g>: Not forwarded</string> 150 <!-- Displayed when the call forwarding query was set but forwarding is not enabled. --> 151 <string name="cfTemplateRegisteredTime"><xliff:g id="bearer_service_code">{0}</xliff:g>: Not forwarded</string> 152 153 <!-- android.net.http Error strings --> <skip /> 154 <!-- Displayed when a web request was successful. --> 155 <string name="httpErrorOk">OK</string> 156 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because we don't know the exact reason. --> 157 <string name="httpError">The Web page contains an error.</string> 158 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because the URL could not be found. --> 159 <string name="httpErrorLookup">The URL could not be found.</string> 160 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because the site's authentication scheme is not supported by us. --> 161 <string name="httpErrorUnsupportedAuthScheme">The site authentication scheme is not supported.</string> 162 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because the authentication failed. --> 163 <string name="httpErrorAuth">Authentication was unsuccessful.</string> 164 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because the authentication with the proxy failed. --> 165 <string name="httpErrorProxyAuth">Authentication via the proxy server was unsuccessful.</string> 166 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because there was a connection error. --> 167 <string name="httpErrorConnect">The connection to the server was unsuccessful.</string> 168 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because there was an input or output error. --> 169 <string name="httpErrorIO">The server failed to communicate. Try again later.</string> 170 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because the request timed out --> 171 <string name="httpErrorTimeout">The connection to the server timed out.</string> 172 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because the site tried to redirect us one too many times --> 173 <string name="httpErrorRedirectLoop">The page contains too many server redirects.</string> 174 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because the protocol of the server is not supported. --> 175 <string name="httpErrorUnsupportedScheme">The protocol is not supported.</string> 176 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because the a secure connection couldn't be made to the server.--> 177 <string name="httpErrorFailedSslHandshake">A secure connection could not be established.</string> 178 <!-- Displayed when a web request failed because the URL isn't in a valid form. --> 179 <string name="httpErrorBadUrl">The page could not be opened because the URL is invalid.</string> 180 <!-- Displayed when a request failed because we failed to open the file. --> 181 <string name="httpErrorFile">The file could not be accessed.</string> 182 <!-- Displayed when a request failed because the file wasn't found. --> 183 <string name="httpErrorFileNotFound">The requested file was not found.</string> 184 <!-- Displayed when a request failed because there are too many requests right now. --> 185 <string name="httpErrorTooManyRequests">Too many requests are being processed. Try again later.</string> 186 187 <!-- Sync notifications --> <skip /> 188 <!-- A notification is shown when there is a sync error. This is the text that will scroll through the notification bar (will be seen by the user as he uses another application). --> 189 <string name="contentServiceSync">Sync</string> 190 <!-- A notification is shown when there is a sync error. This is the title of the notification. It will be seen in the pull-down notification tray. --> 191 <string name="contentServiceSyncNotificationTitle">Sync</string> 192 <!-- A notification is shown when there is a sync error. This is the message of the notification. It describes the error, in this case is there were too many deletes. The argument is the type of content, for example Gmail or Calendar. It will be seen in the pull-down notification tray. --> 193 <string name="contentServiceTooManyDeletesNotificationDesc">Too many <xliff:g id="content_type">%s</xliff:g> deletes.</string> 194 195 <!-- If MMS discovers there isn't much space left on the device, it will show a toast with this message. --> 196 <string name="low_memory">Phone storage is full! Delete some files to free space.</string> 197 198 199 <!-- Display name for any time a piece of data refers to the owner of the phone. For example, this could be used in place of the phone's phone number. --> 200 <string name="me">Me</string> 201 202 <!-- Power Dialog --> <skip /> 203 <!-- Title for the Phone Options dialog to lock the screen, turn off the phone etc. --> 204 <string name="power_dialog">Phone options</string> 205 <!-- Button to turn on silent mode, within the Phone Options dialog --> 206 <string name="silent_mode">Silent mode</string> 207 <!-- Button to turn on the radio, within the Phone Options dialog --> 208 <string name="turn_on_radio">Turn on wireless</string> 209 <!-- Button to turn off the radio, within the Phone Options dialog --> 210 <string name="turn_off_radio">Turn off wireless</string> 211 <!-- Button to lock the screen, within the Phone Options dialog --> 212 <string name="screen_lock">Screen lock</string> 213 <!-- Button to turn off the phone, within the Phone Options dialog --> 214 <string name="power_off">Power off</string> 215 216 <!-- Shutdown Progress Dialog. This is shown if the user chooses to power off the phone. --> 217 <string name="shutdown_progress">Shutting down\u2026</string> 218 219 <!-- Shutdown Confirmation Dialog. When the user chooses to power off the phone, there will be a confirmation dialog. This is the message. --> 220 <string name="shutdown_confirm">Your phone will shut down.</string> 221 222 <!-- Recent Tasks dialog --> 223 <string name="no_recent_tasks">No recent applications.</string> 224 225 <!-- Title of the Global Actions Dialog --> 226 <string name="global_actions">Phone options</string> 227 228 <!-- label for item that locks the phone in the phone options dialog --> 229 <string name="global_action_lock">Screen lock</string> 230 231 <!-- label for item that turns off power in phone options dialog --> 232 <string name="global_action_power_off">Power off</string> 233 234 <!-- label for item that enables silent mode in phone options dialog --> 235 <string name="global_action_toggle_silent_mode">Silent mode</string> 236 237 <!-- status message in phone options dialog for when silent mode is enabled --> 238 <string name="global_action_silent_mode_on_status">Sound is OFF</string> 239 240 <!-- status message in phone options dialog for when silent mode is disabled --> 241 <string name="global_action_silent_mode_off_status">Sound is ON</string> 242 243 <!-- label for item that toggles airplane mode --> 244 <string name="global_actions_toggle_airplane_mode">Airplane mode</string> 245 246 <!-- status message in phone options dialog for when airplane mode is on --> 247 <string name="global_actions_airplane_mode_on_status">Airplane mode is ON</string> 248 249 <!-- status message in phone options dialog for when airplane mode is off --> 250 <string name="global_actions_airplane_mode_off_status">Airplane mode is OFF</string> 251 252 <!-- Displayed to the user to tell them that they have started up the phone in "safe mode" --> 253 <string name="safeMode">Safe mode</string> 254 255 <!-- Label for the Android system components when they are shown to the user. --> 256 <string name="android_system_label">Android System</string> 257 258 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 259 <string name="permgrouplab_costMoney">Services that cost you money</string> 260 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 261 <string name="permgroupdesc_costMoney">Allow applications to do things 262 that can cost you money.</string> 263 264 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 265 <string name="permgrouplab_messages">Your messages</string> 266 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 267 <string name="permgroupdesc_messages">Read and write your SMS, 268 e-mail, and other messages.</string> 269 270 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 271 <string name="permgrouplab_personalInfo">Your personal information</string> 272 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 273 <string name="permgroupdesc_personalInfo">Direct access to your contacts 274 and calendar stored on the phone.</string> 275 276 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 277 <string name="permgrouplab_location">Your location</string> 278 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 279 <string name="permgroupdesc_location">Monitor your physical location</string> 280 281 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 282 <string name="permgrouplab_network">Network communication</string> 283 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 284 <string name="permgroupdesc_network">Allow applications to access 285 various network features.</string> 286 287 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 288 <string name="permgrouplab_accounts">Your Google accounts</string> 289 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 290 <string name="permgroupdesc_accounts">Access the available Google accounts.</string> 291 292 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 293 <string name="permgrouplab_hardwareControls">Hardware controls</string> 294 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 295 <string name="permgroupdesc_hardwareControls">Direct access to hardware on 296 the handset.</string> 297 298 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 299 <string name="permgrouplab_phoneCalls">Phone calls</string> 300 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 301 <string name="permgroupdesc_phoneCalls">Monitor, record, and process 302 phone calls.</string> 303 304 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 305 <string name="permgrouplab_systemTools">System tools</string> 306 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 307 <string name="permgroupdesc_systemTools">Lower-level access and control 308 of the system.</string> 309 310 <!-- Title of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 311 <string name="permgrouplab_developmentTools">Development tools</string> 312 <!-- Description of a category of application permissions, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 313 <string name="permgroupdesc_developmentTools">Features only needed for 314 application developers.</string> 315 316 <!-- Permissions --> 317 318 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 319 <string name="permlab_statusBar">disable or modify status bar</string> 320 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 321 <string name="permdesc_statusBar">Allows application to disable 322 the status bar or add and remove system icons.</string> 323 324 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 325 <string name="permlab_expandStatusBar">expand/collapse status bar</string> 326 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 327 <string name="permdesc_expandStatusBar">Allows application to 328 expand or collapse the status bar.</string> 329 330 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 331 <string name="permlab_processOutgoingCalls">intercept outgoing calls</string> 332 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 333 <string name="permdesc_processOutgoingCalls">Allows application to 334 process outgoing calls and change the number to be dialed. Malicious 335 applications may monitor, redirect, or prevent outgoing calls.</string> 336 337 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 338 <string name="permlab_receiveSms">receive SMS</string> 339 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 340 <string name="permdesc_receiveSms">Allows application to receive 341 and process SMS messages. Malicious applications may monitor 342 your messages or delete them without showing them to you.</string> 343 344 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 345 <string name="permlab_receiveMms">receive MMS</string> 346 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 347 <string name="permdesc_receiveMms">Allows application to receive 348 and process MMS messages. Malicious applications may monitor 349 your messages or delete them without showing them to you.</string> 350 351 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 352 <string name="permlab_sendSms">send SMS messages</string> 353 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 354 <string name="permdesc_sendSms">Allows application to send SMS 355 messages. Malicious applications may cost you money by sending 356 messages without your confirmation.</string> 357 358 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 359 <string name="permlab_readSms">read SMS or MMS</string> 360 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 361 <string name="permdesc_readSms">Allows application to read 362 SMS messages stored on your phone or SIM card. Malicious applications 363 may read your confidential messages.</string> 364 365 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 366 <string name="permlab_writeSms">edit SMS or MMS</string> 367 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 368 <string name="permdesc_writeSms">Allows application to write 369 to SMS messages stored on your phone or SIM card. Malicious applications 370 may delete your messages.</string> 371 372 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 373 <string name="permlab_receiveWapPush">receive WAP</string> 374 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 375 <string name="permdesc_receiveWapPush">Allows application to receive 376 and process WAP messages. Malicious applications may monitor 377 your messages or delete them without showing them to you.</string> 378 379 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 380 <string name="permlab_getTasks">retrieve running applications</string> 381 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 382 <string name="permdesc_getTasks">Allows application to retrieve 383 information about currently and recently running tasks. May allow 384 malicious applications to discover private information about other applications.</string> 385 386 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 387 <string name="permlab_reorderTasks">reorder running applications</string> 388 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 389 <string name="permdesc_reorderTasks">Allows an application to move 390 tasks to the foreground and background. Malicious applications can force 391 themselves to the front without your control.</string> 392 393 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 394 <string name="permlab_setDebugApp">enable application debugging</string> 395 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 396 <string name="permdesc_setDebugApp">Allows an application to turn 397 on debugging for another application. Malicious applications can use this 398 to kill other applications.</string> 399 400 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 401 <string name="permlab_changeConfiguration">change your UI settings</string> 402 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 403 <string name="permdesc_changeConfiguration">Allows an application to 404 change the current configuration, such as the locale or overall font 405 size.</string> 406 407 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 408 <string name="permlab_restartPackages">restart other applications</string> 409 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 410 <string name="permdesc_restartPackages">Allows an application to 411 forcibly restart other applications.</string> 412 413 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 414 <string name="permlab_setProcessForeground">keep from being stopped</string> 415 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 416 <string name="permdesc_setProcessForeground">Allows an application to make 417 any process run in the foreground, so it can\'t be killed. 418 Should never be needed for normal applications.</string> 419 420 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 421 <string name="permlab_forceBack">force application to close</string> 422 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 423 <string name="permdesc_forceBack">Allows an application to force any 424 activity that is in the foreground to close and go back. 425 Should never be needed for normal applications.</string> 426 427 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 428 <string name="permlab_dump">retrieve system internal state</string> 429 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 430 <string name="permdesc_dump">Allows application to retrieve 431 internal state of the system. Malicious applications may retrieve 432 a wide variety of private and secure information that they should 433 never normally need.</string> 434 435 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 436 <string name="permlab_addSystemService">publish low-level services</string> 437 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 438 <string name="permdesc_addSystemService">Allows application to publish 439 its own low-level system services. Malicious applications may hijack 440 the system, and steal or corrupt any data on it.</string> 441 442 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 443 <string name="permlab_runSetActivityWatcher">monitor and control all application launching</string> 444 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 445 <string name="permdesc_runSetActivityWatcher">Allows an application to 446 monitor and control how the system launches activities. 447 Malicious applications may completely compromise the system. This 448 permission is only needed for development, never for normal 449 phone usage.</string> 450 451 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 452 <string name="permlab_broadcastPackageRemoved">send package removed broadcast</string> 453 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 454 <string name="permdesc_broadcastPackageRemoved">Allows an application to 455 broadcast a notification that an application package has been removed. 456 Malicious applications may use this to kill any other running 457 application.</string> 458 459 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 460 <string name="permlab_broadcastSmsReceived">send SMS-received broadcast</string> 461 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 462 <string name="permdesc_broadcastSmsReceived">Allows an application to 463 broadcast a notification that an SMS message has been received. 464 Malicious applications may use this to forge incoming SMS messages.</string> 465 466 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 467 <string name="permlab_broadcastWapPush">send WAP-PUSH-received broadcast</string> 468 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 469 <string name="permdesc_broadcastWapPush">Allows an application to 470 broadcast a notification that a WAP PUSH message has been received. 471 Malicious applications may use this to forge MMS message receipt or to 472 silently replace the content of any web page with malicious variants.</string> 473 474 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 475 <string name="permlab_setProcessLimit">limit number of running processes</string> 476 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 477 <string name="permdesc_setProcessLimit">Allows an application 478 to control the maximum number of processes that will run. Never 479 needed for normal applications.</string> 480 481 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 482 <string name="permlab_setAlwaysFinish">make all background applications close</string> 483 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 484 <string name="permdesc_setAlwaysFinish">Allows an application 485 to control whether activities are always finished as soon as they 486 go to the background. Never needed for normal applications.</string> 487 488 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 489 <string name="permlab_fotaUpdate">automatically install system updates</string> 490 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 491 <string name="permdesc_fotaUpdate">Allows an application to receive 492 notifications about pending system updates and trigger their 493 installation. Malicious applications may use this to corrupt the system 494 with unauthorized updates, or generally interfere with the update 495 process.</string> 496 497 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 498 <string name="permlab_batteryStats">modify battery statistics</string> 499 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 500 <string name="permdesc_batteryStats">Allows the modification of 501 collected battery statistics. Not for use by normal applications.</string> 502 503 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 504 <string name="permlab_internalSystemWindow">display unauthorized windows</string> 505 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 506 <string name="permdesc_internalSystemWindow">Allows the creation of 507 windows that are intended to be used by the internal system 508 user interface. Not for use by normal applications.</string> 509 510 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 511 <string name="permlab_systemAlertWindow">display system-level alerts</string> 512 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 513 <string name="permdesc_systemAlertWindow">Allows an application to 514 show system alert windows. Malicious applications can take over the 515 entire screen of the phone.</string> 516 517 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 518 <string name="permlab_setAnimationScale">modify global animation speed</string> 519 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 520 <string name="permdesc_setAnimationScale">Allows an application to change 521 the global animation speed (faster or slower animations) at any time.</string> 522 523 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 524 <string name="permlab_manageAppTokens">manage application tokens</string> 525 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 526 <string name="permdesc_manageAppTokens">Allows applications to 527 create and manage their own tokens, bypassing their normal 528 Z-ordering. Should never be needed for normal applications.</string> 529 530 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 531 <string name="permlab_injectEvents">press keys and control buttons</string> 532 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 533 <string name="permdesc_injectEvents">Allows an application to deliver 534 its own input events (key presses, etc.) to other applications. Malicious 535 applications can use this to take over the phone.</string> 536 537 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 538 <string name="permlab_readInputState">record what you type and actions you take</string> 539 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 540 <string name="permdesc_readInputState">Allows applications to watch the 541 keys you press even when interacting with another application (such 542 as entering a password). Should never be needed for normal applications.</string> 543 544 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 545 <string name="permlab_bindInputMethod">bind to an input method</string> 546 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 547 <string name="permdesc_bindInputMethod">Allows the holder to bind to the top-level 548 interface of an input method. Should never be needed for normal applications.</string> 549 550 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 551 <string name="permlab_setOrientation">change screen orientation</string> 552 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 553 <string name="permdesc_setOrientation">Allows an application to change 554 the rotation of the screen at any time. Should never be needed for 555 normal applications.</string> 556 557 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 558 <string name="permlab_signalPersistentProcesses">send Linux signals to applications</string> 559 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 560 <string name="permdesc_signalPersistentProcesses">Allows application to request that the 561 supplied signal be sent to all persistent processes.</string> 562 563 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 564 <string name="permlab_persistentActivity">make application always run</string> 565 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 566 <string name="permdesc_persistentActivity">Allows an application to make 567 parts of itself persistent, so the system can\'t use it for other 568 applications.</string> 569 570 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 571 <string name="permlab_deletePackages">delete applications</string> 572 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 573 <string name="permdesc_deletePackages">Allows an application to delete 574 Android packages. Malicious applications can use this to delete important applications.</string> 575 576 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 577 <string name="permlab_clearAppUserData">delete other applications\' data</string> 578 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 579 <string name="permdesc_clearAppUserData">Allows an application to clear user data.</string> 580 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 581 <string name="permlab_deleteCacheFiles">delete other applications\' caches</string> 582 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 583 <string name="permdesc_deleteCacheFiles">Allows an application to delete 584 cache files.</string> 585 586 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 587 <string name="permlab_getPackageSize">measure application storage space</string> 588 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 589 <string name="permdesc_getPackageSize">Allows an application to retrieve 590 its code, data, and cache sizes</string> 591 592 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 593 <string name="permlab_installPackages">directly install applications</string> 594 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 595 <string name="permdesc_installPackages">Allows an application to install new or updated 596 Android packages. Malicious applications can use this to add new applications with arbitrarily 597 powerful permissions.</string> 598 599 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 600 <string name="permlab_clearAppCache">delete all application cache data</string> 601 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 602 <string name="permdesc_clearAppCache">Allows an application to free phone storage 603 by deleting files in application cache directory. Access is very 604 restricted usually to system process.</string> 605 606 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 607 <string name="permlab_readLogs">read system log files</string> 608 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 609 <string name="permdesc_readLogs">Allows an application to read from the 610 system\'s various log files. This allows it to discover general 611 information about what you are doing with the phone, but they should 612 not contain any personal or private information.</string> 613 614 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 615 <string name="permlab_diagnostic">read/write to resources owned by diag</string> 616 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 617 <string name="permdesc_diagnostic">Allows an application to read and write to 618 any resource owned by the diag group; for example, files in /dev. This could 619 potentially affect system stability and security. This should be ONLY be used 620 for hardware-specific diagnostics by the manufacturer or operator.</string> 621 622 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 623 <string name="permlab_changeComponentState">enable or disable application components</string> 624 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 625 <string name="permdesc_changeComponentState">Allows an application to change whether a 626 component of another application is enabled or not. Malicious applications can use this 627 to disable important phone capabilities. Care must be used with permission, as it is 628 possible to get application components into an unusable, inconsistent, or unstable state. 629 </string> 630 631 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 632 <string name="permlab_setPreferredApplications">set preferred applications</string> 633 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 634 <string name="permdesc_setPreferredApplications">Allows an application to 635 modify your preferred applications. This can allow malicious applications 636 to silently change the applications that are run, spoofing your 637 existing applications to collect private data from you.</string> 638 639 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 640 <string name="permlab_writeSettings">modify global system settings</string> 641 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 642 <string name="permdesc_writeSettings">Allows an application to modify the 643 system\'s settings data. Malicious applications can corrupt your system\'s 644 configuration.</string> 645 646 <string name="permlab_writeSecureSettings">modify secure system settings</string> 647 <string name="permdesc_writeSecureSettings">Allows an application to modify the 648 system's secure settings data. Not for use by normal applications.</string> 649 650 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 651 <string name="permlab_writeGservices">modify the Google services map</string> 652 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 653 <string name="permdesc_writeGservices">Allows an application to modify the 654 Google services map. Not for use by normal applications.</string> 655 656 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 657 <string name="permlab_receiveBootCompleted">automatically start at boot</string> 658 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 659 <string name="permdesc_receiveBootCompleted">Allows an application to 660 have itself started as soon as the system has finished booting. 661 This can make it take longer to start the phone and allow the 662 application to slow down the overall phone by always running.</string> 663 664 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 665 <string name="permlab_broadcastSticky">send sticky broadcast</string> 666 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 667 <string name="permdesc_broadcastSticky">Allows an application to send 668 sticky broadcasts, which remain after the broadcast ends. 669 Malicious applications can make the phone slow or unstable by causing it 670 to use too much memory.</string> 671 672 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 673 <string name="permlab_readContacts">read contact data</string> 674 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 675 <string name="permdesc_readContacts">Allows an application to read all 676 of the contact (address) data stored on your phone. Malicious applications 677 can use this to send your data to other people.</string> 678 679 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 680 <string name="permlab_writeContacts">write contact data</string> 681 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 682 <string name="permdesc_writeContacts">Allows an application to modify the 683 contact (address) data stored on your phone. Malicious 684 applications can use this to erase or modify your contact data.</string> 685 686 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 687 <string name="permlab_writeOwnerData">write owner data</string> 688 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 689 <string name="permdesc_writeOwnerData">Allows an application to modify the 690 phone owner data stored on your phone. Malicious 691 applications can use this to erase or modify owner data.</string> 692 693 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 694 <string name="permlab_readOwnerData">read owner data</string> 695 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 696 <string name="permdesc_readOwnerData">Allows an application read the 697 phone owner data stored on your phone. Malicious 698 applications can use this to read phone owner data.</string> 699 700 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 701 <string name="permlab_readCalendar">read calendar data</string> 702 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 703 <string name="permdesc_readCalendar">Allows an application to read all 704 of the calendar events stored on your phone. Malicious applications 705 can use this to send your calendar events to other people.</string> 706 707 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 708 <string name="permlab_writeCalendar">write calendar data</string> 709 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 710 <string name="permdesc_writeCalendar">Allows an application to modify the 711 calendar events stored on your phone. Malicious 712 applications can use this to erase or modify your calendar data.</string> 713 714 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 715 <string name="permlab_accessMockLocation">mock location sources for testing</string> 716 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 717 <string name="permdesc_accessMockLocation">Create mock location sources for testing. 718 Malicious applications can use this to override the location and/or status returned by real 719 location sources such as GPS or Network providers.</string> 720 721 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 722 <string name="permlab_accessLocationExtraCommands">access extra location provider commands</string> 723 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 724 <string name="permdesc_accessLocationExtraCommands">Access extra location provider commands. 725 Malicious applications could use this to interfere with the operation of the GPS 726 or other location sources.</string> 727 728 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 729 <string name="permlab_accessFineLocation">fine (GPS) location</string> 730 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 731 <string name="permdesc_accessFineLocation">Access fine location sources such as the 732 Global Positioning System on the phone, where available. 733 Malicious applications can use this to determine where you are, and may 734 consume additional battery power.</string> 735 736 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 737 <string name="permlab_accessCoarseLocation">coarse (network-based) location</string> 738 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 739 <string name="permdesc_accessCoarseLocation">Access coarse location sources such as the cellular 740 network database to determine an approximate phone location, where available. Malicious 741 applications can use this to determine approximately where you are.</string> 742 743 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 744 <string name="permlab_accessSurfaceFlinger">access SurfaceFlinger</string> 745 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 746 <string name="permdesc_accessSurfaceFlinger">Allows application to use 747 SurfaceFlinger low-level features.</string> 748 749 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 750 <string name="permlab_readFrameBuffer">read frame buffer</string> 751 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 752 <string name="permdesc_readFrameBuffer">Allows application to use 753 read the content of the frame buffer.</string> 754 755 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 756 <string name="permlab_modifyAudioSettings">change your audio settings</string> 757 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 758 <string name="permdesc_modifyAudioSettings">Allows application to modify 759 global audio settings such as volume and routing.</string> 760 761 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 762 <string name="permlab_recordAudio">record audio</string> 763 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 764 <string name="permdesc_recordAudio">Allows application to access 765 the audio record path.</string> 766 767 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 768 <string name="permlab_camera">take pictures</string> 769 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 770 <string name="permdesc_camera">Allows application to take pictures 771 with the camera. This allows the application at any time to collect 772 images the camera is seeing.</string> 773 774 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 775 <string name="permlab_brick">permanently disable phone</string> 776 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 777 <string name="permdesc_brick">Allows the application to 778 disable the entire phone permanently. This is very dangerous.</string> 779 780 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 781 <string name="permlab_reboot">force phone reboot</string> 782 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 783 <string name="permdesc_reboot">Allows the application to 784 force the phone to reboot.</string> 785 786 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 787 <string name="permlab_mount_unmount_filesystems">mount and unmount filesystems</string> 788 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 789 <string name="permdesc_mount_unmount_filesystems">Allows the application to mount and 790 unmount filesystems for removable storage.</string> 791 792 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 793 <string name="permlab_mount_format_filesystems">format external storage</string> 794 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 795 <string name="permdesc_mount_format_filesystems">Allows the application to format removable storage.</string> 796 797 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 798 <string name="permlab_vibrate">control vibrator</string> 799 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 800 <string name="permdesc_vibrate">Allows the application to control 801 the vibrator.</string> 802 803 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 804 <string name="permlab_flashlight">control flashlight</string> 805 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 806 <string name="permdesc_flashlight">Allows the application to control 807 the flashlight.</string> 808 809 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 810 <string name="permlab_hardware_test">test hardware</string> 811 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 812 <string name="permdesc_hardware_test">Allows the application to control 813 various peripherals for the purpose of hardware testing.</string> 814 815 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 816 <string name="permlab_callPhone">directly call phone numbers</string> 817 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 818 <string name="permdesc_callPhone">Allows the application to call 819 phone numbers without your intervention. Malicious applications may 820 cause unexpected calls on your phone bill. Note that this does not 821 allow the application to call emergency numbers.</string> 822 823 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 824 <string name="permlab_callPrivileged">directly call any phone numbers</string> 825 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 826 <string name="permdesc_callPrivileged">Allows the application to call 827 any phone number, including emergency numbers, without your intervention. 828 Malicious applications may place unnecessary and illegal calls to emergency 829 services.</string> 830 831 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 832 <string name="permlab_locationUpdates">control location update notifications</string> 833 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 834 <string name="permdesc_locationUpdates">Allows enabling/disabling location 835 update notifications from the radio. Not for use by normal applications.</string> 836 837 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 838 <string name="permlab_checkinProperties">access checkin properties</string> 839 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 840 <string name="permdesc_checkinProperties">Allows read/write access to 841 properties uploaded by the checkin service. Not for use by normal 842 applications.</string> 843 844 845 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 846 <string name="permlab_bindGadget">choose widgets</string> 847 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 848 <string name="permdesc_bindGadget">Allows the application to tell the system 849 which widgets can be used by which application. With this permission, 850 applications can give access to personal data to other applications. 851 Not for use by normal applications.</string> 852 853 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 854 <string name="permlab_modifyPhoneState">modify phone state</string> 855 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 856 <string name="permdesc_modifyPhoneState">Allows the application to control the 857 phone features of the device. An application with this permission can switch 858 networks, turn the phone radio on and off and the like without ever notifying 859 you.</string> 860 861 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 862 <string name="permlab_readPhoneState">read phone state</string> 863 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 864 <string name="permdesc_readPhoneState">Allows the application to access the phone 865 features of the device. An application with this permission can determine the phone 866 number of this phone, whether a call is active, the number that call is connected to 867 and the like.</string> 868 869 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 870 <string name="permlab_wakeLock">prevent phone from sleeping</string> 871 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 872 <string name="permdesc_wakeLock">Allows an application to prevent 873 the phone from going to sleep.</string> 874 875 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 876 <string name="permlab_devicePower">power phone on or off</string> 877 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 878 <string name="permdesc_devicePower">Allows the application to turn the 879 phone on or off.</string> 880 881 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 882 <string name="permlab_factoryTest">run in factory test mode</string> 883 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 884 <string name="permdesc_factoryTest">Run as a low-level manufacturer test, 885 allowing complete access to the phone hardware. Only available 886 when a phone is running in manufacturer test mode.</string> 887 888 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 889 <string name="permlab_setWallpaper">set wallpaper</string> 890 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 891 <string name="permdesc_setWallpaper">Allows the application 892 to set the system wallpaper.</string> 893 894 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 895 <string name="permlab_setWallpaperHints">set wallpaper size hints</string> 896 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 897 <string name="permdesc_setWallpaperHints">Allows the application 898 to set the system wallpaper size hints.</string> 899 900 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 901 <string name="permlab_masterClear">reset system to factory defaults</string> 902 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 903 <string name="permdesc_masterClear">Allows an application to completely 904 reset the system to its factory settings, erasing all data, 905 configuration, and installed applications.</string> 906 907 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 908 <string name="permlab_setTimeZone">set time zone</string> 909 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 910 <string name="permdesc_setTimeZone">Allows an application to change 911 the phone\'s time zone.</string> 912 913 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 914 <string name="permlab_getAccounts">discover known accounts</string> 915 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 916 <string name="permdesc_getAccounts">Allows an application to get 917 the list of accounts known by the phone.</string> 918 919 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 920 <string name="permlab_accessNetworkState">view network state</string> 921 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 922 <string name="permdesc_accessNetworkState">Allows an application to view 923 the state of all networks.</string> 924 925 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 926 <string name="permlab_createNetworkSockets">full Internet access</string> 927 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 928 <string name="permdesc_createNetworkSockets">Allows an application to 929 create network sockets.</string> 930 931 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 932 <string name="permlab_writeApnSettings">write Access Point Name settings</string> 933 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 934 <string name="permdesc_writeApnSettings">Allows an application to modify the APN 935 settings, such as Proxy and Port of any APN.</string> 936 937 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 938 <string name="permlab_changeNetworkState">change network connectivity</string> 939 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 940 <string name="permdesc_changeNetworkState">Allows an application to change 941 the state network connectivity.</string> 942 943 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 944 <string name="permlab_changeBackgroundDataSetting">change background data usage setting</string> 945 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 946 <string name="permdesc_changeBackgroundDataSetting">Allows an application to change 947 the background data usage setting.</string> 948 949 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 950 <string name="permlab_accessWifiState">view Wi-Fi state</string> 951 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 952 <string name="permdesc_accessWifiState">Allows an application to view 953 the information about the state of Wi-Fi.</string> 954 955 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 956 <string name="permlab_changeWifiState">change Wi-Fi state</string> 957 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 958 <string name="permdesc_changeWifiState">Allows an application to connect 959 to and disconnect from Wi-Fi access points, and to make changes to 960 configured Wi-Fi networks.</string> 961 962 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 963 <string name="permlab_bluetoothAdmin">bluetooth administration</string> 964 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 965 <string name="permdesc_bluetoothAdmin">Allows an application to configure 966 the local Bluetooth phone, and to discover and pair with remote 967 devices.</string> 968 969 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 970 <string name="permlab_bluetooth">create Bluetooth connections</string> 971 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 972 <string name="permdesc_bluetooth">Allows an application to view 973 configuration of the local Bluetooth phone, and to make and accept 974 connections with paired devices.</string> 975 976 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 977 <string name="permlab_disableKeyguard">disable keylock</string> 978 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 979 <string name="permdesc_disableKeyguard">Allows an application to disable 980 the keylock and any associated password security. A legitimate example of 981 this is the phone disabling the keylock when receiving an incoming phone call, 982 then re-enabling the keylock when the call is finished.</string> 983 984 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 985 <string name="permlab_readSyncSettings">read sync settings</string> 986 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 987 <string name="permdesc_readSyncSettings">Allows an application to read the sync settings, 988 such as whether sync is enabled for Contacts.</string> 989 990 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 991 <string name="permlab_writeSyncSettings">write sync settings</string> 992 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 993 <string name="permdesc_writeSyncSettings">Allows an application to modify the sync 994 settings, such as whether sync is enabled for Contacts.</string> 995 996 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 997 <string name="permlab_readSyncStats">read sync statistics</string> 998 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 999 <string name="permdesc_readSyncStats">Allows an application to read the sync stats; e.g., the 1000 history of syncs that have occurred.</string> 1001 1002 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 1003 <string name="permlab_subscribedFeedsRead">read subscribed feeds</string> 1004 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 1005 <string name="permdesc_subscribedFeedsRead">Allows an application to get details about the currently synced feeds.</string> 1006 1007 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 1008 <string name="permlab_subscribedFeedsWrite">write subscribed feeds</string> 1009 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 1010 <string name="permdesc_subscribedFeedsWrite">Allows an application to modify 1011 your currently synced feeds. This could allow a malicious application to 1012 change your synced feeds.</string> 1013 1014 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 1015 <string name="permlab_readDictionary">read user defined dictionary</string> 1016 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 1017 <string name="permdesc_readDictionary">Allows an application to read any private 1018 words, names and phrases that the user may have stored in the user dictionary.</string> 1019 1020 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 1021 <string name="permlab_writeDictionary">write to user defined dictionary</string> 1022 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 1023 <string name="permdesc_writeDictionary">Allows an application to write new words into the 1024 user dictionary.</string> 1025 1026 <!-- The order of these is important, don't reorder without changing Contacts.java --> <skip /> 1027 <!-- Phone number types from android.provider.Contacts. This could be used when adding a new phone number for a contact, for example. --> 1028 <string-array name="phoneTypes"> 1029 <item>Home</item> 1030 <item>Mobile</item> 1031 <item>Work</item> 1032 <item>Work Fax</item> 1033 <item>Home Fax</item> 1034 <item>Pager</item> 1035 <item>Other</item> 1036 <item>Custom</item> 1037 </string-array> 1038 1039 <!-- The order of these is important, don't reorder without changing Contacts.java --> <skip /> 1040 <!-- Email address types from android.provider.Contacts. This could be used when adding a new e-mail address for a contact, for example. --> 1041 <string-array name="emailAddressTypes"> 1042 <item>Home</item> 1043 <item>Work</item> 1044 <item>Other</item> 1045 <item>Custom</item> 1046 </string-array> 1047 1048 <!-- The order of these is important, don't reorder without changing Contacts.java --> <skip /> 1049 <!-- Postal address types from android.provider.Contacts. This could be used when adding a new address for a contact, for example. --> 1050 <string-array name="postalAddressTypes"> 1051 <item>Home</item> 1052 <item>Work</item> 1053 <item>Other</item> 1054 <item>Custom</item> 1055 </string-array> 1056 1057 <!-- The order of these is important, don't reorder without changing Contacts.java --> <skip /> 1058 <!-- Instant Messenger ID types from android.provider.Contacts. This could be used when adding a new IM for a contact, for example. --> 1059 <string-array name="imAddressTypes"> 1060 <item>Home</item> 1061 <item>Work</item> 1062 <item>Other</item> 1063 <item>Custom</item> 1064 </string-array> 1065 1066 <!-- The order of these is important, don't reorder without changing Contacts.java --> <skip /> 1067 <!-- Organization types from android.provider.Contacts. This could be used when adding a new organization for a contact, for example. --> 1068 <string-array name="organizationTypes"> 1069 <item>Work</item> 1070 <item>Other</item> 1071 <item>Custom</item> 1072 </string-array> 1073 1074 <!-- The order of these is important, don't reorder without changing Contacts.java --> <skip /> 1075 <!-- Instant Message protocols/providers from android.provider.Contacts --> 1076 <string-array name="imProtocols"> 1077 <item>AIM</item> 1078 <item>Windows Live</item> 1079 <item>Yahoo</item> 1080 <item>Skype</item> 1081 <item>QQ</item> 1082 <item>Google Talk</item> 1083 <item>ICQ</item> 1084 <item>Jabber</item> 1085 </string-array> 1086 1087 <!-- Instructions telling the user to enter their pin to unlock the keyguard. 1088 Displayed in one line in a large font. --> 1089 <string name="keyguard_password_enter_pin_code">Enter PIN code</string> 1090 1091 <!-- Instructions telling the user that they entered the wrong pin while trying 1092 to unlock the keyguard. Displayed in one line in a large font. --> 1093 <string name="keyguard_password_wrong_pin_code">Incorrect PIN code!</string> 1094 1095 <!-- Instructions telling the user how to unlock the phone. --> 1096 <string name="keyguard_label_text">To unlock, press Menu then 0.</string> 1097 1098 <!-- This can be used in any application wanting to disable the text "Emergency number" --> 1099 <string name="emergency_call_dialog_number_for_display">Emergency number</string> 1100 1101 <!-- 1102 *** touch based lock / unlock *** 1103 --> <skip /> 1104 1105 <!-- On the keyguard screen, it shows the carrier the phone is connected to. This is displayed if the phone is not connected to a carrier.--> 1106 <string name="lockscreen_carrier_default">(No service)</string> 1107 1108 <!-- Shown in the lock screen to tell the user that the screen is locked. --> 1109 <string name="lockscreen_screen_locked">Screen locked.</string> 1110 1111 <!-- when pattern lock is enabled, tell them about the emergency dial --> 1112 <string name="lockscreen_instructions_when_pattern_enabled">Press Menu to unlock or place emergency call.</string> 1113 1114 <!-- On the keyguard screen, when pattern lock is disabled, only tell them to press menu to unlock. This is shown in small font at the bottom. --> 1115 <string name="lockscreen_instructions_when_pattern_disabled">Press Menu to unlock.</string> 1116 1117 <!-- On the unlock pattern screen, shown at the top of the unlock screen to tell the user what to do. Below this text is the place for theu ser to draw the pattern. --> 1118 <string name="lockscreen_pattern_instructions">Draw pattern to unlock</string> 1119 <!-- Button at the bottom of the unlock screen to make an emergency call. --> 1120 <string name="lockscreen_emergency_call">Emergency call</string> 1121 <!-- Shown to confirm that the user entered their lock pattern correctly. --> 1122 <string name="lockscreen_pattern_correct">Correct!</string> 1123 <!-- On the unlock pattern screen, shown when the user enters the wrong lock pattern and must try again. --> 1124 <string name="lockscreen_pattern_wrong">Sorry, try again</string> 1125 1126 <!-- When the lock screen is showing and the phone plugged in, show the current 1127 charge %. --> 1128 <string name="lockscreen_plugged_in">Charging (<xliff:g id="number">%d</xliff:g><xliff:g id="percent">%%</xliff:g>)</string> 1129 1130 <!-- When the lock screen is showing and the battery is low, warn user to plug 1131 in the phone soon. --> 1132 <string name="lockscreen_low_battery">Connect your charger.</string> 1133 1134 <!-- Shown in the lock screen when there is no SIM card. --> 1135 <string name="lockscreen_missing_sim_message_short">No SIM card.</string> 1136 <!-- Shown in the lock screen when there is no SIM card. --> 1137 <string name="lockscreen_missing_sim_message">No SIM card in phone.</string> 1138 <!-- Shown in the lock screen to ask the user to insert a SIM card. --> 1139 <string name="lockscreen_missing_sim_instructions">Please insert a SIM card.</string> 1140 1141 1142 <!-- When the user inserts a sim card from an unsupported network, it becomes network 1143 locked --> 1144 <string name="lockscreen_network_locked_message">Network locked</string> 1145 1146 1147 <!-- When the user enters a wrong sim pin too many times, it becomes 1148 PUK locked (Pin Unlock Kode) --> 1149 <string name="lockscreen_sim_puk_locked_message">SIM card is PUK-locked.</string> 1150 <!-- Shown in the lock screen when the SIM has become PUK locked and the user must call customer care to unlock it. --> 1151 <string name="lockscreen_sim_puk_locked_instructions">Please contact Customer Care.</string> 1152 1153 <!-- Shown in the lock screen to tell the user that their SIM is locked and they must unlock it. --> 1154 <string name="lockscreen_sim_locked_message">SIM card is locked.</string> 1155 1156 <!-- For the unlock screen, When the user enters a sim unlock code, it takes a little while to check 1157 whether it is valid, and to unlock the sim if it is valid. we display a 1158 progress dialog in the meantime. this is the emssage. --> 1159 <string name="lockscreen_sim_unlock_progress_dialog_message">Unlocking SIM card\u2026</string> 1160 1161 <!-- For the unlock screen, Information message shown in dialog when user has too many failed attempts --> 1162 <string name="lockscreen_too_many_failed_attempts_dialog_message"> 1163 You have incorrectly drawn your unlock pattern <xliff:g id="number">%d</xliff:g> times. 1164 \n\nPlease try again in <xliff:g id="number">%d</xliff:g> seconds. 1165 </string> 1166 1167 <!-- For the unlock screen, Information message shown in dialog when user is almost at the limit 1168 where they will be locked out and may have to enter an alternate username/password to unlock the phone --> 1169 <string name="lockscreen_failed_attempts_almost_glogin"> 1170 You have incorrectly drawn your unlock pattern <xliff:g id="number">%d</xliff:g> times. 1171 After <xliff:g id="number">%d</xliff:g> more unsuccessful attempts, 1172 you will be asked to unlock your phone using your Google sign-in.\n\n 1173 Please try again in <xliff:g id="number">%d</xliff:g> seconds. 1174 </string> 1175 1176 <!-- On the unlock screen, countdown message shown while user is waiting to try again after too many 1177 failed attempts --> 1178 <string name="lockscreen_too_many_failed_attempts_countdown">Try again in <xliff:g id="number">%d</xliff:g> seconds.</string> 1179 1180 <!-- On the unlock screen, message shown on button that appears once it's apparent the user may have forgotten 1181 their lock gesture --> 1182 <string name="lockscreen_forgot_pattern_button_text">Forgot pattern?</string> 1183 1184 <!-- Title of the unlock screen that uses your Google login and password --> 1185 <string name="lockscreen_glogin_too_many_attempts">Too many pattern attempts!</string> 1186 <!-- In the unlock screen, message telling the user that they need to use their Google login and password to unlock the phone --> 1187 <string name="lockscreen_glogin_instructions">To unlock, sign in with your Google account</string> 1188 <!-- Hint caption for the username field when unlocking the phone using login and password --> 1189 <string name="lockscreen_glogin_username_hint">Username (email)</string> 1190 <!-- Hint caption for the password field when unlocking the phone using login and password --> 1191 <string name="lockscreen_glogin_password_hint">Password</string> 1192 <!-- Button to try to unlock the phone using username and password --> 1193 <string name="lockscreen_glogin_submit_button">Sign in</string> 1194 <!-- Displayed to the user when unlocking the phone with a username and password fails. --> 1195 <string name="lockscreen_glogin_invalid_input">Invalid username or password.</string> 1196 1197 <!-- A format string for 12-hour time of day (example: "12:30 PM"). --> 1198 <string name="status_bar_time_format">"<xliff:g id="hour" example="12">h</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="minute" example="30">mm</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="ampm" example="AM">AA</xliff:g>"</string> 1199 1200 <!-- A format string for 12-hour time of day, with lower-case "am" or "pm" (example: "12:30pm"). --> 1201 <string name="hour_minute_ampm">"<xliff:g id="hour" example="12">%-l</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="minute" example="30">%M</xliff:g><xliff:g id="ampm" example="am">%P</xliff:g>"</string> 1202 1203 <!-- A format string for 12-hour time of day, with capital "AM" or "PM" (example: "12:30PM"). --> 1204 <string name="hour_minute_cap_ampm">"<xliff:g id="hour" example="12">%-l</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="minute" example="30">%M</xliff:g><xliff:g id="ampm" example="AM">%p</xliff:g>"</string> 1205 1206 <!-- A format string for 12-hour time of day, just the hour, not the minute, with lower-case "am" or "pm" (example: "3pm"). --> 1207 <string name="hour_ampm">"<xliff:g id="hour" example="3">%-l</xliff:g><xliff:g id="ampm" example="pm">%P</xliff:g>"</string> 1208 1209 <!-- A format string for 12-hour time of day, just the hour, not the minute, with capital "AM" or "PM" (example: "3PM"). --> 1210 <string name="hour_cap_ampm">"<xliff:g id="hour" example="3">%-l</xliff:g><xliff:g id="ampm" example="PM">%p</xliff:g>"</string> 1211 1212 <!-- The text for the button in the notification window-shade that clears 1213 all of the currently visible notifications. --> 1214 <string name="status_bar_clear_all_button">Clear notifications</string> 1215 1216 <!-- The label in the bar at the top of the status bar when there are no notifications 1217 showing. --> 1218 <string name="status_bar_no_notifications_title">No notifications</string> 1219 1220 <!-- The label for the group of notifications for ongoing events in the opened version of 1221 the status bar. An ongoing call is the prime example of this. The MP3 music player 1222 might be another example. --> 1223 <string name="status_bar_ongoing_events_title">Ongoing</string> 1224 1225 <!-- The label for the group of notifications for recent events in the opened version of 1226 the status bar. Recently received text messsages (SMS), emails, calendar alerts, etc. --> 1227 <string name="status_bar_latest_events_title">Notifications</string> 1228 1229 <!-- The big percent text in the middle of the battery icon that appears when you plug in 1230 the charger. --> 1231 <string name="battery_status_text_percent_format"><xliff:g id="number" example="50">%d</xliff:g><xliff:g id="percent" example="%">%%</xliff:g></string> 1232 1233 <!-- The big percent text in the middle of the battery icon that appears when you plug in 1234 the charger. This indicates the current status of the battery. --> 1235 <string name="battery_status_charging">Charging\u2026</string> 1236 1237 <!-- When the battery is low, this is displayed to the user in a dialog. The title of the low battery alert. --> 1238 <string name="battery_low_title">Please connect charger</string> 1239 1240 <!-- When the battery is low, this is displayed to the user in a dialog. The subtitle of the low battery alert. --> 1241 <string name="battery_low_subtitle">The battery is getting low:</string> 1242 1243 <!-- A message that appears when the battery level is getting low in a dialog. This is appened to the subtitle of the low battery alert. --> 1244 <string name="battery_low_percent_format">less than <xliff:g id="number">%d%%</xliff:g> 1245 remaining.</string> 1246 1247 1248 <!-- Title of the alert when something went wrong in the factory test. --> 1249 <string name="factorytest_failed">Factory test failed</string> 1250 <!-- Error message displayed when a non-system application tries to start a factory test. --> 1251 <string name="factorytest_not_system">The FACTORY_TEST action 1252 is only supported for packages installed in /system/app.</string> 1253 <!-- Error message displayed when the factory test could not be started. --> 1254 <string name="factorytest_no_action">No package was found that provides the 1255 FACTORY_TEST action.</string> 1256 <!-- Button to restart the device after the factory test. --> 1257 <string name="factorytest_reboot">Reboot</string> 1258 1259 <!-- Do not translate. WebView User Agent string --> 1260 <string name="web_user_agent"><xliff:g id="x">Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android %s) 1261 AppleWebKit/528.5+ (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/3.1.2 Mobile Safari/525.20.1</xliff:g></string> 1262 1263 <!-- Title for a JavaScript dialog. "The page at <url of current page> says:" --> 1264 <string name="js_dialog_title">The page at \'<xliff:g id="title">%s</xliff:g>\' says:</string> 1265 <!-- Default title for a javascript dialog --> 1266 <string name="js_dialog_title_default">JavaScript</string> 1267 <!-- Message in a javascript dialog asking if the user wishes to leave the 1268 current page --> 1269 <string name="js_dialog_before_unload">Navigate away from this page?\n\n<xliff:g id="message">%s</xliff:g>\n\nSelect OK to continue, or Cancel to stay on the current page.</string> 1270 1271 <!-- Title of the WebView save password dialog. If the user enters a password in a form on a website, a dialog will come up asking if they want to save the password. --> 1272 <string name="save_password_label">Confirm</string> 1273 1274 <!-- If the user enters a password in a form on a website, a dialog will come up asking if they want to save the password. Text in the save password dialog, asking if the browser should remember a password. --> 1275 <string name="save_password_message">Do you want the browser to remember this password?</string> 1276 <!-- If the user enters a password in a form on a website, a dialog will come up asking if they want to save the password. Button in the save password dialog, saying not to remember this password. --> 1277 <string name="save_password_notnow">Not now</string> 1278 <!-- If the user enters a password in a form on a website, a dialog will come up asking if they want to save the password. Button in the save password dialog, saying to remember this password. --> 1279 <string name="save_password_remember">Remember</string> 1280 <!-- Button in the save password dialog, saying never to remember this password. This should be short. Should be "Never for this site". But it is too long, use "Never" instead --> 1281 <string name="save_password_never">Never</string> 1282 1283 <!-- Displayed to the user when they do not have permission to open a particular web page. --> 1284 <string name="open_permission_deny">You do not have permission to open this page.</string> 1285 1286 <!-- Displayed to the user to confirm that they have copied text from a web page to the clipboard. --> 1287 <string name="text_copied">Text copied to clipboard.</string> 1288 1289 <!-- Menu item displayed at the end of a menu to allow users to see another page worth of menu items. This is shown on any app's menu as long as the app has too many items in the menu.--> 1290 <string name="more_item_label">More</string> 1291 <!-- Prepended to the shortcut for a menu item to indicate that the user should hold the MENU button together with the shortcut to invoke the item. For example, if the shortcut to open a new tab in browser is MENU and B together, then this would be prepended to the letter "B" --> 1292 <string name="prepend_shortcut_label">Menu+</string> 1293 <!-- Displayed in place of the regular shortcut letter when a menu item has Menu+space for the shortcut. --> 1294 <string name="menu_space_shortcut_label">space</string> 1295 <!-- Displayed in place of the regular shortcut letter when a menu item has Menu+enter for the shortcut. --> 1296 <string name="menu_enter_shortcut_label">enter</string> 1297 <!-- Displayed in place of the regular shortcut letter when a menu item has Menu+delete for the shortcut. --> 1298 <string name="menu_delete_shortcut_label">delete</string> 1299 1300 <!-- Strings used for search bar --><skip /> 1301 1302 <!-- This is the default button label in the system-wide search UI. 1303 It is also used by the home screen's search "widget". It should be short --> 1304 <string name="search_go">Search</string> 1305 1306 <!-- String used to display the date. This is shown instead of a date if the date is today's date. --> 1307 <string name="today">Today</string> 1308 <!-- String used to display the date. This is shown instead of a date if the date is yesterday's date. --> 1309 <string name="yesterday">Yesterday</string> 1310 <!-- String used to display the date. This is shown instead of a date if the date is tomorrow's date. --> 1311 <string name="tomorrow">Tomorrow</string> 1312 <!-- String used to display the date. This is the string to say something happened 1 month ago. --> 1313 <string name="oneMonthDurationPast">1 month ago</string> 1314 <!-- String used to display the date. This is the string to say something happened more than 1 month ago. --> 1315 <string name="beforeOneMonthDurationPast">Before 1 month ago</string> 1316 1317 <!-- This is used to express that something occurred some number of seconds in the past (e.g., 5 seconds ago). --> 1318 <plurals name="num_seconds_ago"> 1319 <item quantity="one">1 second ago</item> 1320 <item quantity="other"><xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> seconds ago</item> 1321 </plurals> 1322 1323 <!-- This is used to express that something occurred some number of minutes in the past (e.g., 5 minutes ago). --> 1324 <plurals name="num_minutes_ago"> 1325 <item quantity="one">1 minute ago</item> 1326 <item quantity="other"><xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> minutes ago</item> 1327 </plurals> 1328 1329 <!-- This is used to express that something occurred some number of hours in the past (e.g., 5 hours ago). --> 1330 <plurals name="num_hours_ago"> 1331 <item quantity="one">1 hour ago</item> 1332 <item quantity="other"><xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> hours ago</item> 1333 </plurals> 1334 1335 <!-- This is used to express that something occurred some number of days in the past (e.g., 5 days ago). --> 1336 <plurals name="num_days_ago"> 1337 <item quantity="one">yesterday</item> 1338 <item quantity="other"><xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> days ago</item> 1339 </plurals> 1340 1341 <!-- This is used to express that something will occur some number of seconds in the future (e.g., in 5 seconds). --> 1342 <plurals name="in_num_seconds"> 1343 <item quantity="one">in 1 second</item> 1344 <item quantity="other">in <xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> seconds</item> 1345 </plurals> 1346 1347 <!-- This is used to express that something will occur some number of minutes in the future (e.g., in 5 minutes). --> 1348 <plurals name="in_num_minutes"> 1349 <item quantity="one">in 1 minute</item> 1350 <item quantity="other">in <xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> minutes</item> 1351 </plurals> 1352 1353 <!-- This is used to express that something will occur some number of hours in the future (e.g., in 5 hours). --> 1354 <plurals name="in_num_hours"> 1355 <item quantity="one">in 1 hour</item> 1356 <item quantity="other">in <xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> hours</item> 1357 </plurals> 1358 1359 <!-- This is used to express that something will occur some number of days in the future (e.g., in 5 days). --> 1360 <plurals name="in_num_days"> 1361 <item quantity="one">tomorrow</item> 1362 <item quantity="other">in <xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> days</item> 1363 </plurals> 1364 1365 <!-- This is used to express that something occurred some number of abbreviated seconds in the past (e.g., 5 secs ago). --> 1366 <plurals name="abbrev_num_seconds_ago"> 1367 <item quantity="one">1 sec ago</item> 1368 <item quantity="other"><xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> secs ago</item> 1369 </plurals> 1370 1371 <!-- This is used to express that something occurred some number of abbreviated minutes in the past (e.g., 5 mins ago). --> 1372 <plurals name="abbrev_num_minutes_ago"> 1373 <item quantity="one">1 min ago</item> 1374 <item quantity="other"><xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> mins ago</item> 1375 </plurals> 1376 1377 <!-- This is used to express that something occurred some number of abbreviated hours in the past (e.g., 5 hrs ago). --> 1378 <plurals name="abbrev_num_hours_ago"> 1379 <item quantity="one">1 hour ago</item> 1380 <item quantity="other"><xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> hours ago</item> 1381 </plurals> 1382 1383 <!-- This is used to express that something occurred some number of abbreviated days in the past (e.g., 5 days ago). --> 1384 <plurals name="abbrev_num_days_ago"> 1385 <item quantity="one">yesterday</item> 1386 <item quantity="other"><xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> days ago</item> 1387 </plurals> 1388 1389 <!-- This is used to express that something will occur some number of abbreviated seconds in the future (e.g., in 5 secs). --> 1390 <plurals name="abbrev_in_num_seconds"> 1391 <item quantity="one">in 1 sec</item> 1392 <item quantity="other">in <xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> secs</item> 1393 </plurals> 1394 1395 <!-- This is used to express that something will occur some number of abbreviated minutes in the future (e.g., in 5 mins). --> 1396 <plurals name="abbrev_in_num_minutes"> 1397 <item quantity="one">in 1 min</item> 1398 <item quantity="other">in <xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> mins</item> 1399 </plurals> 1400 1401 <!-- This is used to express that something will occur some number of abbreviated hours in the future (e.g., in 5 hrs). --> 1402 <plurals name="abbrev_in_num_hours"> 1403 <item quantity="one">in 1 hour</item> 1404 <item quantity="other">in <xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> hours</item> 1405 </plurals> 1406 1407 <!-- This is used to express that something will occur some number of abbreviated days in the future (e.g., in 5 days). --> 1408 <plurals name="abbrev_in_num_days"> 1409 <item quantity="one">tomorrow</item> 1410 <item quantity="other">in <xliff:g id="count">%d</xliff:g> days</item> 1411 </plurals> 1412 1413 <!-- String used to display the date. Preposition for date display ("on May 29") --> 1414 <string name="preposition_for_date">on %s</string> 1415 <!-- String used to display the date. Preposition for time display ("at 2:33am") --> 1416 <string name="preposition_for_time">at %s</string> 1417 <!-- String used to display the date. Preposition for year display ("in 2008") --> 1418 <string name="preposition_for_year">in %s</string> 1419 1420 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time: singular day --> 1421 <string name="day">day</string> 1422 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time: plural days --> 1423 <string name="days">days</string> 1424 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time: singular hour --> 1425 <string name="hour">hour</string> 1426 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time: plural hours --> 1427 <string name="hours">hours</string> 1428 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time: singular minute --> 1429 <string name="minute">min</string> 1430 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time: plural minutes --> 1431 <string name="minutes">mins</string> 1432 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time. --> 1433 <string name="second">sec</string> 1434 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time. --> 1435 <string name="seconds">secs</string> 1436 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time. --> 1437 <string name="week">week</string> 1438 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time. --> 1439 <string name="weeks">weeks</string> 1440 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time. --> 1441 <string name="year">year</string> 1442 <!-- Appened to express the value is this unit of time. --> 1443 <string name="years">years</string> 1444 1445 <!-- Used in the list of which days of the week a calendar event recurrs on --> 1446 <string name="sunday">Sunday</string> 1447 <!-- Used in the list of which days of the week a calendar event recurrs on --> 1448 <string name="monday">Monday</string> 1449 <!-- Used in the list of which days of the week a calendar event recurrs on --> 1450 <string name="tuesday">Tuesday</string> 1451 <!-- Used in the list of which days of the week a calendar event recurrs on --> 1452 <string name="wednesday">Wednesday</string> 1453 <!-- Used in the list of which days of the week a calendar event recurrs on --> 1454 <string name="thursday">Thursday</string> 1455 <!-- Used in the list of which days of the week a calendar event recurrs on --> 1456 <string name="friday">Friday</string> 1457 <!-- Used in the list of which days of the week a calendar event recurrs on --> 1458 <string name="saturday">Saturday</string> 1459 1460 <!-- Calendar spinner item, to select that an event recurs every weekday. --> 1461 <string name="every_weekday">"Every weekday (Mon\u2013Fri)"</string> 1462 <!-- Calendar spinner item, to select that an event recurs every day. --> 1463 <string name="daily">Daily</string> 1464 <!-- Calendar spinner item, to select that an event recurs every week on a particular day of the week. --> 1465 <string name="weekly">"Weekly on <xliff:g id="day">%s</xliff:g>"</string> 1466 <!-- Calendar spinner item, to select that an event recurs every month. --> 1467 <string name="monthly">Monthly</string> 1468 <!-- Calendar spinner item, to select that an event recurs every year. --> 1469 <string name="yearly">Yearly</string> 1470 1471 1472 <!-- Title for error alert when a video cannot be played. it can be used by any app. --> 1473 <string name="VideoView_error_title">Cannot play video</string> 1474 <!-- Text for error alert when a video container is not valid for progressive download/playback. --> 1475 <string name="VideoView_error_text_invalid_progressive_playback">Sorry, this video is not valid for streaming to this device.</string> 1476 <!-- Text for error alert when a video cannot be played. it can be used by any app. --> 1477 <string name="VideoView_error_text_unknown">Sorry, this video cannot be played.</string> 1478 <!-- Button to close error alert when a video cannot be played --> 1479 <string name="VideoView_error_button">OK</string> 1480 1481 1482 <!-- AM - as in morning - as in 10:30 AM --> 1483 <string name="am">"AM"</string> 1484 1485 <!-- PM - as in afternoon - as in 10:30 PM --> 1486 <string name="pm">"PM"</string> 1487 1488 1489 <!-- Numeric form of the day. Example: "12/31/2007" --> 1490 <string name="numeric_date">"<xliff:g id="month" example="12">%m</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day" example="31">%d</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="year" example="2008">%Y</xliff:g>"</string> 1491 1492 <!-- Format indicating a range of time, from a time on one day to a time on another day. 1493 Example: "Mon, Dec 31, 2007, 8am - Tue, Jan 1, 2008, 5pm" --> 1494 <string name="wday1_date1_time1_wday2_date2_time2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Monday">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="date1" example="December 31, 2007">%2$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8am">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Tuesday">%4$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="date2" example="January 1, 2008">%5$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5pm">%6$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1495 1496 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates, from one date to another. 1497 Example: "Mon, Dec 31, 2007 - Tue, Jan 1, 2008" --> 1498 <string name="wday1_date1_wday2_date2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Monday">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="date1" example="Dec 31, 2007">%2$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Thursday">%4$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="date2" example="Jan 1, 2008">%5$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1499 1500 <!-- Format indicating a range of time, from a time on one day to a time on another day. 1501 Example: "Dec 31, 2007, 8am - Jan 1, 2008, 5pm" --> 1502 <string name="date1_time1_date2_time2">"<xliff:g id="date1" example="Dec 31, 2007">%2$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8am">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="date2" example="Jan 1, 2008">%5$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5pm">%6$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1503 1504 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates, from one date to another. 1505 Example: "Dec 31, 2007 - Jan 1, 2008" --> 1506 <string name="date1_date2">"<xliff:g id="date1" example="Dec 31, 2007">%2$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="date2" example="Jan 1, 2008">%5$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1507 1508 <!-- Format indicating a range of times, from one time to another. 1509 Example: "10:00 - 11:00 am" --> 1510 <string name="time1_time2">"<xliff:g id="time1" example="10:00">%1$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="time2" example="11:00">%2$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1511 1512 <!-- Format indicating a range of times on a particular date. 1513 Example: "8:00 - 11:00 am, Mon, Dec 31, 2007" --> 1514 <string name="time_wday_date">"<xliff:g id="time_range" example="8:00 - 11:00 am">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="weekday" example="Mon">%2$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="date" example="Dec 31, 2007">%3$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1515 1516 <!-- Format indicating a weekday and date. 1517 Example: "Mon, Dec 31, 2007" --> 1518 <string name="wday_date">"<xliff:g id="weekday" example="Monday">%2$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="date" example="Dec 31, 2007">%3$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1519 1520 <!-- Format indicating a range of times on a particular date. 1521 Example: "8:00 - 11:00 am, Dec 31, 2007" --> 1522 <string name="time_date">"<xliff:g id="time_range" example="8:00 - 11:00 am">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="date" example="Dec 31, 2007">%3$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1523 1524 <!-- Format indicating a specific date and time. 1525 Example: "Dec 31, 2007, 11:00 am" --> 1526 <string name="date_time">"<xliff:g id="date" example="Dec 31, 2007">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time" example="11:00 am">%2$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1527 1528 <!-- Format indicating a relative expression and time. 1529 Example: "4 hours ago, 11:00 am" --> 1530 <string name="relative_time">"<xliff:g id="date" example="4 hours ago">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time" example="11:00 am">%2$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1531 1532 <!-- Format indicating a range of times on a particular day of the week. 1533 Example: "8:00 - 11:00 am, Mon" --> 1534 <string name="time_wday">"<xliff:g id="time_range" example="8:00 - 11:00 am">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="weekday" example="Mon">%2$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1535 1536 <!-- Date format string used in contexts where the user has said they 1537 want the month first, as used in the USA, with the month fully 1538 spelled out. You can remove the comma or add a period, 1539 or make other punctuation changes appropriate for your locale. --> 1540 <string name="full_date_month_first" format="date"><xliff:g id="month" example="December">MMMM</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day" example="31">d</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year" example="1972">yyyy</xliff:g></string> 1541 1542 <!-- Date format string used in contexts where the user has said they 1543 want the day of the month first, as used in Europe, with the month 1544 fully spelled out. You can remove the comma or add a period, 1545 or make other punctuation changes appropriate for your locale. --> 1546 <string name="full_date_day_first" format="date"><xliff:g id="day" example="31">d</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="month" example="December">MMMM</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year" example="1972">yyyy</xliff:g></string> 1547 1548 <!-- Date format string used in contexts where the user has said they 1549 want the month first, as used in the USA, with the month 1550 abbreviated. You can remove the comma or add a period, 1551 or make other punctuation changes appropriate for your locale. --> 1552 <string name="medium_date_month_first" format="date"><xliff:g id="month" example="Dec.">MMM</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day" example="31">d</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year" example="1972">yyyy</xliff:g></string> 1553 1554 <!-- Date format string used in contexts where the user has said they 1555 want the day of the month first, as used in Europe, with the month 1556 abbreviated. You can remove the comma or add a period, 1557 or make other punctuation changes appropriate for your locale. --> 1558 <string name="medium_date_day_first" format="date"><xliff:g id="day" example="31">d</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="month" example="December">MMM</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year" example="1972">yyyy</xliff:g></string> 1559 1560 <!-- Time format string used in the status bar when the user has said they 1561 want a 12-hour clock with AM and PM. 1562 You can remove the colon 1563 or make other punctuation changes appropriate for your locale. --> 1564 <string name="twelve_hour_time_format" format="date"><xliff:g id="hour" example="11">h</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="minute" example="59">mm</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="ampm" example="AM">a</xliff:g></string> 1565 1566 <!-- Time format string used in the status bar when the user has said they 1567 want a 24-hour clock. 1568 You can remove the colon 1569 or make other punctuation changes appropriate for your locale. --> 1570 <string name="twenty_four_hour_time_format" format="date"><xliff:g id="hour" example="23">HH</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="minute" example="59">mm</xliff:g></string> 1571 1572 <!-- Quoted name for 12pm, lowercase --> 1573 <string name="noon">"noon"</string> 1574 <!-- Quoted name for 12pm, uppercase first letter --> 1575 <string name="Noon">"Noon"</string> 1576 <!-- Quoted name for 12am, lowercase --> 1577 <string name="midnight">"midnight"</string> 1578 <!-- Quoted name for 12am, uppercase first letter --> 1579 <string name="Midnight">"Midnight"</string> 1580 1581 <!-- Date format for month and day of month. 1582 Example: "October 9". --> 1583 <string name="month_day">"<xliff:g id="month" example="October">%B</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day" example="9">%-d</xliff:g>"</string> 1584 1585 <!-- Date format for month alone. 1586 Example: "October" --> 1587 <string name="month">"<xliff:g id="month" example="October">%B</xliff:g>"</string> 1588 1589 <!-- Date format for month, day, and year. 1590 Example: "October 9, 2007" --> 1591 <string name="month_day_year">"<xliff:g id="month" example="October">%B</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day" example="9">%-d</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year" example="2007">%Y</xliff:g>"</string> 1592 1593 <!-- Date format for month and year. 1594 Example: "October 2007" --> 1595 <string name="month_year">"<xliff:g id="month" example="October">%B</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="year" example="2007">%Y</xliff:g>"</string> 1596 1597 <!-- A format string for 24-hour time of day (example "23:59"). --> 1598 <string name="time_of_day">"<xliff:g id="hour" example="23">%H</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="minute" example="59">%M</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="second" example="59">%S</xliff:g>"</string> 1599 1600 <!-- Format string for date and 24-hour time of day. 1601 Example: 23:59:15 Jan 31 2008 --> 1602 <string name="date_and_time">"<xliff:g id="hour" example="23">%H</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="minute" example="59">%M</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="second" example="59">%S</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="month" example="Jan">%B</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day" example="31">%-d</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year" example="2008">%Y</xliff:g>"</string> 1603 1604 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates in the same year. 1605 Example: "Oct 31 - Nov 3" --> 1606 <string name="same_year_md1_md2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1607 1608 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates in the same year, with weekday. 1609 Example: "Wed, Oct 31 - Sat, Nov 3" --> 1610 <string name="same_year_wday1_md1_wday2_md2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1611 1612 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates in the same year. 1613 Example: "Oct 31 - Nov 3, 2007" --> 1614 <string name="same_year_mdy1_mdy2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1615 1616 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates in the same year, with weekdays. 1617 Example: "Wed, Oct 31 - Sat, Nov 3, 2007" --> 1618 <string name="same_year_wday1_mdy1_wday2_mdy2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1619 1620 <!-- Format indicating a range of time from a time on one day to a time on another. 1621 Example: "Oct 31, 8:00am - Nov 3, 5:00pm" --> 1622 <string name="same_year_md1_time1_md2_time2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1623 1624 <!-- Format indicating a range of time from a time on one day to a time on another, with weekdays. 1625 Example: "Wed, Oct 31, 8:00am - Sat, Nov 3, 5:00pm" --> 1626 <string name="same_year_wday1_md1_time1_wday2_md2_time2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id ="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1627 1628 <!-- Format indicating a range of time from a time on one day to a time on another, with years and weekdays. 1629 Example: "Oct 31, 2007, 8:00am - Nov 3, 2007, 5:00pm" --> 1630 <string name="same_year_mdy1_time1_mdy2_time2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year1" example="2007">%4$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1631 1632 <!-- Format indicating a range of time from a time on one day to a time on another. 1633 Example: "Wed, Oct 31, 2007, 8:00am - Sat, Nov 3, 2007, 5:00pm" --> 1634 <string name="same_year_wday1_mdy1_time1_wday2_mdy2_time2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year1" example="2007">%4$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1635 1636 1637 <!-- Format indicating a range of (numeric) dates. 1638 Example: "10/31 - 11/3" --> 1639 <string name="numeric_md1_md2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="10">%2$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="11">%7$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day2" example="30">%8$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1640 1641 <!-- Format indicating a range of (numeric) dates. 1642 Example: "Wed, 10/31 - Sat, 11/3" --> 1643 <string name="numeric_wday1_md1_wday2_md2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="10">%2$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="11">%7$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day2" example="30">%8$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1644 1645 <!-- Format indicating a range of (numeric) dates. 1646 Example: "10/31/2007 - 11/3/2007" --> 1647 <string name="numeric_mdy1_mdy2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="10">%2$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="year1" example="2007">%4$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="11">%7$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day2" example="30">%8$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1648 1649 <!-- Format indicating a range of (numeric) dates. 1650 Example: "Wed, 10/31/2007 - Sat, 11/3/2007" --> 1651 <string name="numeric_wday1_mdy1_wday2_mdy2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="10">%2$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="year1" example="2007">%4$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="11">%7$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day2" example="30">%8$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1652 1653 <!-- Format indicating a range of (numeric) dates and times. 1654 Example: "10/31, 8:00am - 11/3, 5:00pm" --> 1655 <string name="numeric_md1_time1_md2_time2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="10">%2$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="11">%7$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day2" example="30">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1656 1657 <!-- Format indicating a range of (numeric) dates and times. 1658 Example: "Wed, 10/31, 8:00am - Sat, 11/3, 5:00pm" --> 1659 <string name="numeric_wday1_md1_time1_wday2_md2_time2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="10">%2$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="11">%7$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day2" example="30">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1660 1661 <!-- Format indicating a range of (numeric) dates and times. 1662 Example: "10/31/2007, 8:00am - 11/3/2007, 5:00pm" --> 1663 <string name="numeric_mdy1_time1_mdy2_time2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="10">%2$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="year1" example="2007">%4$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="11">%7$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day2" example="30">%8$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1664 1665 <!-- Format indicating a range of (numeric) dates and times. 1666 Example: "Wed, 10/31/2007, 8:00am - Sat, 11/3/2007, 5:00pm" --> 1667 <string name="numeric_wday1_mdy1_time1_wday2_mdy2_time2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="10">%2$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="year1" example="2007">%4$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="11">%7$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="day2" example="30">%8$s</xliff:g>/<xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1668 1669 1670 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates. 1671 Example: "Oct 9 - 10" --> 1672 <string name="same_month_md1_md2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1673 1674 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates. 1675 Example: "Tue, Oct 9 - Wed, Oct 10" --> 1676 <string name="same_month_wday1_md1_wday2_md2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1677 1678 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates. 1679 Example: "Oct 9 - 10, 2007" --> 1680 <string name="same_month_mdy1_mdy2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1681 1682 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates. 1683 Example: "Tue, Oct 9, 2007 - Wed, Oct 10, 2007" --> 1684 <string name="same_month_wday1_mdy1_wday2_mdy2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year1" example="2007">%4$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1685 1686 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates and times. 1687 Example: "Oct 9, 8:00am - Oct 10, 5:00pm" --> 1688 <string name="same_month_md1_time1_md2_time2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1689 1690 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates and times. 1691 Example: "Tue, Oct 9, 8:00am - Wed, Oct 10, 5:00pm" --> 1692 <string name="same_month_wday1_md1_time1_wday2_md2_time2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1693 1694 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates and times. 1695 Example: "Oct 9, 2007, 8:00am - Oct 10, 2007, 5:00pm" --> 1696 <string name="same_month_mdy1_time1_mdy2_time2">"<xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year1" example="2007">%4$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1697 1698 <!-- Format indicating a range of dates and times. 1699 Example: "Tue, Oct 9, 2007, 8:00am - Wed, Oct 10, 2007, 5:00pm" --> 1700 <string name="same_month_wday1_mdy1_time1_wday2_mdy2_time2">"<xliff:g id="weekday1" example="Wed">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month1" example="Oct">%2$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day1" example="31">%3$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year1" example="2007">%4$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time1" example="8:00am">%5$s</xliff:g> \u2013 <xliff:g id="weekday2" example="Sat">%6$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="month2" example="Nov">%7$s</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day2" example="3">%8$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year2" example="2007">%9$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="time2" example="5:00pm">%10$s</xliff:g>"</string> 1701 1702 <!-- Format string for abbreviated month, day, and year. 1703 Example: "Oct 9, 2007" --> 1704 <string name="abbrev_month_day_year">"<xliff:g id="month" example="Oct">%b</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day" example="9">%-d</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="year" example="2007">%Y</xliff:g>"</string> 1705 1706 <!-- Format string for abbreviated month and year. 1707 Example: "Oct 2007" --> 1708 <string name="abbrev_month_year">"<xliff:g id="month" example="Oct">%b</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="year" example="2007">%Y</xliff:g>"</string> 1709 1710 <!-- Format string for abbreviated month and day. 1711 Example: "Oct 9" --> 1712 <string name="abbrev_month_day">"<xliff:g id="month" example="Oct">%b</xliff:g> <xliff:g id="day" example="31">%-d</xliff:g>"</string> 1713 1714 <!-- Format string for abbreviated month alone. 1715 Example: "Oct" --> 1716 <string name="abbrev_month">"<xliff:g id="month" example="Oct">%b</xliff:g>"</string> 1717 1718 <!-- The full spelled out version of the day of the week. --> 1719 <string name="day_of_week_long_sunday">Sunday</string> 1720 1721 <!-- The full spelled out version of the day of the week. --> 1722 <string name="day_of_week_long_monday">Monday</string> 1723 1724 <!-- The full spelled out version of the day of the week. --> 1725 <string name="day_of_week_long_tuesday">Tuesday</string> 1726 1727 <!-- The full spelled out version of the day of the week. --> 1728 <string name="day_of_week_long_wednesday">Wednesday</string> 1729 1730 <!-- The full spelled out version of the day of the week. --> 1731 <string name="day_of_week_long_thursday">Thursday</string> 1732 1733 <!-- The full spelled out version of the day of the week. --> 1734 <string name="day_of_week_long_friday">Friday</string> 1735 1736 <!-- The full spelled out version of the day of the week. --> 1737 <string name="day_of_week_long_saturday">Saturday</string> 1738 1739 1740 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Three characters typically in western languages. 1741 In US English: "Sun" stands for Sunday --> 1742 <string name="day_of_week_medium_sunday">Sun</string> 1743 1744 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Three characters typically in western languages. 1745 In US English: "Mon" stands for Monday --> 1746 <string name="day_of_week_medium_monday">Mon</string> 1747 1748 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Three characters typically in western languages. 1749 In US English: "Tue" stands for Tuesday --> 1750 <string name="day_of_week_medium_tuesday">Tue</string> 1751 1752 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Three characters typically in western languages. 1753 In US English: "Wed" stands for Wednesday --> 1754 <string name="day_of_week_medium_wednesday">Wed</string> 1755 1756 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Three characters typically in western languages. 1757 In US English: "Thu" stands for Thursday --> 1758 <string name="day_of_week_medium_thursday">Thu</string> 1759 1760 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Three characters typically in western languages. 1761 In US English: "Fri" stands for Friday --> 1762 <string name="day_of_week_medium_friday">Fri</string> 1763 1764 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Three characters typically in western languages. 1765 In US English: "Sat" stands for Saturday --> 1766 <string name="day_of_week_medium_saturday">Sat</string> 1767 1768 1769 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Two characters typically in western languages. 1770 In US English: "Su" stands for Sunday --> 1771 <string name="day_of_week_short_sunday">Su</string> 1772 1773 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Two characters typically in western languages. 1774 In US English: "Mo" stands for Monday --> 1775 <string name="day_of_week_short_monday">Mo</string> 1776 1777 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Two characters typically in western languages. 1778 In US English: "Tu" stands for Tuesday --> 1779 <string name="day_of_week_short_tuesday">Tu</string> 1780 1781 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Two characters typically in western languages. 1782 In US English: "We" stands for Wednesday --> 1783 <string name="day_of_week_short_wednesday">We</string> 1784 1785 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Two characters typically in western languages. 1786 In US English: "Th" stands for Thursday --> 1787 <string name="day_of_week_short_thursday">Th</string> 1788 1789 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Two characters typically in western languages. 1790 In US English: "Fr" stands for Friday --> 1791 <string name="day_of_week_short_friday">Fr</string> 1792 1793 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. Two characters typically in western languages. 1794 In US English: "Sa" stands for Saturday --> 1795 <string name="day_of_week_short_saturday">Sa</string> 1796 1797 1798 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character if that is unique. Two if necessary. 1799 In US English: "Su" stands for Sunday --> 1800 <string name="day_of_week_shorter_sunday">Su</string> 1801 1802 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character if that is unique. Two if necessary. 1803 In US English: "M" stands for Monday --> 1804 <string name="day_of_week_shorter_monday">M</string> 1805 1806 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character if that is unique. Two if necessary. 1807 In US English: "Tu" stands for Tuesday --> 1808 <string name="day_of_week_shorter_tuesday">Tu</string> 1809 1810 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character if that is unique. Two if necessary. 1811 In US English: "W" stands for Wednesday --> 1812 <string name="day_of_week_shorter_wednesday">W</string> 1813 1814 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character if that is unique. Two if necessary. 1815 In US English: "Th" stands for Thursday --> 1816 <string name="day_of_week_shorter_thursday">Th</string> 1817 1818 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character if that is unique. Two if necessary. 1819 In US English: "F" stands for Friday --> 1820 <string name="day_of_week_shorter_friday">F</string> 1821 1822 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character if that is unique. Two if necessary. 1823 In US English: "Sa" stands for Saturday --> 1824 <string name="day_of_week_shorter_saturday">Sa</string> 1825 1826 1827 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1828 to be unique. 1829 In US English: "S" stands for Sunday --> 1830 <string name="day_of_week_shortest_sunday">S</string> 1831 1832 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1833 to be unique. 1834 In US English: "M" stands for Monday --> 1835 <string name="day_of_week_shortest_monday">M</string> 1836 1837 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1838 to be unique. 1839 In US English: "T" stands for Tuesday --> 1840 <string name="day_of_week_shortest_tuesday">T</string> 1841 1842 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1843 to be unique. 1844 In US English: "W" stands for Wednesday --> 1845 <string name="day_of_week_shortest_wednesday">W</string> 1846 1847 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1848 to be unique. 1849 In US English: "T" stands for Thursday --> 1850 <string name="day_of_week_shortest_thursday">T</string> 1851 1852 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1853 to be unique. 1854 In US English: "F" stands for Friday --> 1855 <string name="day_of_week_shortest_friday">F</string> 1856 1857 <!-- An abbreviated day of the week. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1858 to be unique. 1859 In US English: "S" stands for Saturday --> 1860 <string name="day_of_week_shortest_saturday">S</string> 1861 1862 1863 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1864 <string name="month_long_january">January</string> 1865 1866 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1867 <string name="month_long_february">February</string> 1868 1869 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1870 <string name="month_long_march">March</string> 1871 1872 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1873 <string name="month_long_april">April</string> 1874 1875 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1876 <string name="month_long_may">May</string> 1877 1878 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1879 <string name="month_long_june">June</string> 1880 1881 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1882 <string name="month_long_july">July</string> 1883 1884 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1885 <string name="month_long_august">August</string> 1886 1887 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1888 <string name="month_long_september">September</string> 1889 1890 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1891 <string name="month_long_october">October</string> 1892 1893 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1894 <string name="month_long_november">November</string> 1895 1896 <!-- The full spelled out version of the month. --> 1897 <string name="month_long_december">December</string> 1898 1899 1900 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1901 In US English: "Jan" stands for January. --> 1902 <string name="month_medium_january">Jan</string> 1903 1904 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1905 In US English: "Feb" stands for February. --> 1906 <string name="month_medium_february">Feb</string> 1907 1908 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1909 In US English: "Mar" stands for March. --> 1910 <string name="month_medium_march">Mar</string> 1911 1912 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1913 In US English: "Apr" stands for April. --> 1914 <string name="month_medium_april">Apr</string> 1915 1916 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1917 In US English: "May" stands for May. --> 1918 <string name="month_medium_may">May</string> 1919 1920 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1921 In US English: "Jun" stands for June. --> 1922 <string name="month_medium_june">Jun</string> 1923 1924 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1925 In US English: "Jul" stands for July. --> 1926 <string name="month_medium_july">Jul</string> 1927 1928 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1929 In US English: "Aug" stands for August. --> 1930 <string name="month_medium_august">Aug</string> 1931 1932 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1933 In US English: "Sep" stands for September. --> 1934 <string name="month_medium_september">Sep</string> 1935 1936 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1937 In US English: "Oct" stands for October. --> 1938 <string name="month_medium_october">Oct</string> 1939 1940 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1941 In US English: "Nov" stands for November. --> 1942 <string name="month_medium_november">Nov</string> 1943 1944 <!-- An abbreviated month name. 1945 In US English: "Dec" stands for December. --> 1946 <string name="month_medium_december">Dec</string> 1947 1948 1949 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1950 to be unique. 1951 In US English: "J" stands for January --> 1952 <string name="month_shortest_january">J</string> 1953 1954 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1955 to be unique. 1956 In US English: "F" stands for February. --> 1957 <string name="month_shortest_february">F</string> 1958 1959 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1960 to be unique. 1961 In US English: "M" stands for March. --> 1962 <string name="month_shortest_march">M</string> 1963 1964 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1965 to be unique. 1966 In US English: "A" stands for April. --> 1967 <string name="month_shortest_april">A</string> 1968 1969 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1970 to be unique. 1971 In US English: "M" stands for May. --> 1972 <string name="month_shortest_may">M</string> 1973 1974 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1975 to be unique. 1976 In US English: "J" stands for June. --> 1977 <string name="month_shortest_june">J</string> 1978 1979 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1980 to be unique. 1981 In US English: "J" stands for July. --> 1982 <string name="month_shortest_july">J</string> 1983 1984 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1985 to be unique. 1986 In US English: "A" stands for August. --> 1987 <string name="month_shortest_august">A</string> 1988 1989 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1990 to be unique. 1991 In US English: "S" stands for September. --> 1992 <string name="month_shortest_september">S</string> 1993 1994 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 1995 to be unique. 1996 In US English: "O" stands for October. --> 1997 <string name="month_shortest_october">O</string> 1998 1999 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 2000 to be unique. 2001 In US English: "N" stands for November. --> 2002 <string name="month_shortest_november">N</string> 2003 2004 <!-- An abbreviated month name. One character long if it makes sense. Does not have 2005 to be unique. 2006 In US English: "D" stands for December. --> 2007 <string name="month_shortest_december">D</string> 2008 2009 <!-- Format string for durations like "01:23" (1 minute, 23 seconds) --> 2010 <string name="elapsed_time_short_format_mm_ss"><xliff:g id="minutes" example="1">%1$02d</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="seconds" example="23">%2$02d</xliff:g></string> 2011 2012 <!-- Format string for times like "1:43:33" (1 hour, 43 minutes, 33 seconds) --> 2013 <string name="elapsed_time_short_format_h_mm_ss"><xliff:g id="hours" example="1">%1$d</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="minutes" example="43">%2$02d</xliff:g>:<xliff:g id="seconds" example="33">%3$02d</xliff:g></string> 2014 2015 <!-- Item on EditText context menu. This action is used to select all text in the edit field. --> 2016 <string name="selectAll">Select all</string> 2017 2018 <!-- Item on EditText context menu. This action is used to start selecting text in the edit field. --> 2019 <string name="selectText">Select text</string> 2020 2021 <!-- Item on EditText context menu. This action is used to start selecting text in the edit field. --> 2022 <string name="stopSelectingText">Stop selecting text</string> 2023 2024 <!-- Item on EditText context menu. This action is used to cut selected the text into the clipboard. --> 2025 <string name="cut">Cut</string> 2026 2027 <!-- Item on EditText context menu. This action is used to cut all the text into the clipboard. --> 2028 <string name="cutAll">Cut all</string> 2029 2030 <!-- Item on EditText context menu. This action is used to cut selected the text into the clipboard. --> 2031 <string name="copy">Copy</string> 2032 2033 <!-- Item on EditText context menu. This action is used to copy all the text into the clipboard. --> 2034 <string name="copyAll">Copy all</string> 2035 2036 <!-- Item on EditText context menu. This action is used t o paste from the clipboard into the eidt field --> 2037 <string name="paste">Paste</string> 2038 2039 <!-- Item on EditText context menu. This action is used to copy a URL from the edit field into the clipboard. --> 2040 <string name="copyUrl">Copy URL</string> 2041 2042 <!-- EditText context menu --> 2043 <string name="inputMethod">Input Method</string> 2044 2045 <!-- Item on EditText context menu, used to add a word to the 2046 input method dictionary. --> 2047 <string name="addToDictionary">"Add \"%s\" to dictionary</string> 2048 2049 <!-- Title for EditText context menu --> 2050 <string name="editTextMenuTitle">Edit text</string> 2051 2052 <!-- If the device is getting low on internal storage, a notification is shown to the user. This is the title of that notification. --> 2053 <string name="low_internal_storage_view_title">Low on space</string> 2054 <!-- If the device is getting low on internal storage, a notification is shown to the user. This is the message of that notification. --> 2055 <string name="low_internal_storage_view_text">Phone storage space is getting low.</string> 2056 2057 <!-- Preference framework strings. --> 2058 <string name="ok">OK</string> 2059 <!-- Preference framework strings. --> 2060 <string name="cancel">Cancel</string> 2061 <!-- Preference framework strings. --> 2062 <string name="yes">OK</string> 2063 <!-- Preference framework strings. --> 2064 <string name="no">Cancel</string> 2065 <!-- This is the generic "attention" string to be used in attention dialogs. Typically 2066 combined with setIcon(android.R.drawable.ic_dialog_alert) --> 2067 <string name="dialog_alert_title">Attention</string> 2068 2069 <!-- Default text for a button that can be toggled on and off. --> 2070 <string name="capital_on">ON</string> 2071 <!-- Default text for a button that can be toggled on and off. --> 2072 <string name="capital_off">OFF</string> 2073 2074 <!-- Title of intent resolver dialog when selecting an application to run. --> 2075 <string name="whichApplication">Complete action using</string> 2076 <!-- Option to always use the selected application resolution in the future. See the "Complete action using" dialog title--> 2077 <string name="alwaysUse">Use by default for this action.</string> 2078 <!-- Text displayed when the user selects the check box for setting default application. See the "Use by default for this action" check box. --> 2079 <string name="clearDefaultHintMsg">Clear default in Home Settings > Applications > Manage applications.</string> 2080 <!-- Default title for the activity chooser, when one is not given. Android allows multiple activities to perform an action. for example, there may be many ringtone pickers installed. A dialog is shown to the user allowing him to pick which activity should be used. This is the title. --> 2081 <string name="chooseActivity">Select an action</string> 2082 <!-- Text to display when there are no activities found to display in the 2083 activity chooser. See the "Select an action" title. --> 2084 <string name="noApplications">No applications can perform this action.</string> 2085 <!-- Title of the alert when an application has crashed. --> 2086 <string name="aerr_title">Sorry!</string> 2087 <!-- Text of the alert that is displayed when an application is not responding. --> 2088 <string name="aerr_application">The application <xliff:g id="application">%1$s</xliff:g> 2089 (process <xliff:g id="process">%2$s</xliff:g>) has stopped unexpectedly. Please try again.</string> 2090 <!-- Text of the alert that is displayed when an application has crashed. --> 2091 <string name="aerr_process">The process <xliff:g id="process">%1$s</xliff:g> has 2092 stopped unexpectedly. Please try again.</string> 2093 <!-- Title of the alert when an application is not responding. --> 2094 <string name="anr_title">Sorry!</string> 2095 <!-- Text of the alert that is displayed when an application is not responding. --> 2096 <string name="anr_activity_application">Activity <xliff:g id="activity">%1$s</xliff:g> (in application <xliff:g id="application">%2$s</xliff:g>) is not responding.</string> 2097 <!-- Text of the alert that is displayed when an application is not responding. --> 2098 <string name="anr_activity_process">Activity <xliff:g id="activity">%1$s</xliff:g> (in process <xliff:g id="process">%2$s</xliff:g>) is not responding.</string> 2099 <!-- Text of the alert that is displayed when an application is not responding. --> 2100 <string name="anr_application_process">Application <xliff:g id="application">%1$s</xliff:g> (in process <xliff:g id="process">%2$s</xliff:g>) is not responding.</string> 2101 <!-- Text of the alert that is displayed when an application is not responding. --> 2102 <string name="anr_process">Process <xliff:g id="process">%1$s</xliff:g> is not responding.</string> 2103 <!-- Button allowing the user to close an application that is not responding. This will kill the application. --> 2104 <string name="force_close">Force close</string> 2105 <!-- Button allowing the user to choose to wait for an application that is not responding to become responsive again. --> 2106 <string name="wait">Wait</string> 2107 <!-- Button allowing a developer to connect a debugger to an application that is not responding. --> 2108 <string name="debug">Debug</string> 2109 2110 <!-- Displayed in the title of the chooser for things to do with text that 2111 is to be sent to another application. For example, I can send text through SMS or IM. A dialog with those choices would be shown, and this would be the title. --> 2112 <string name="sendText">Select an action for text</string> 2113 2114 <!-- Title of the dialog where the user is adjusting the phone ringer volume --> 2115 <string name="volume_ringtone">Ringer volume</string> 2116 <!-- Title of the dialog where the user is adjusting the music volume --> 2117 <string name="volume_music">Media volume</string> 2118 <!-- Hint shown in the volume toast to inform the user that the media audio is playing through Bluetooth. --> 2119 <string name="volume_music_hint_playing_through_bluetooth">Playing through Bluetooth</string> 2120 <!-- Title of the dialog where the user is adjusting the phone call volume --> 2121 <string name="volume_call">In-call volume</string> 2122 <!-- Title of the dialog where the user is adjusting the phone call volume when connected on bluetooth--> 2123 <string name="volume_bluetooth_call">Bluetooth in-call volume</string> 2124 <!-- Title of the dialog where the user is adjusting the audio volume for alarms --> 2125 <string name="volume_alarm">Alarm volume</string> 2126 <!-- Title of the dialog where the user is adjusting the audio volume for notifications --> 2127 <string name="volume_notification">Notification volume</string> 2128 <!-- Title of the dialog where the user is adjusting the general audio volume --> 2129 <string name="volume_unknown">Volume</string> 2130 2131 <!-- Ringtone picker strings --> <skip /> 2132 <!-- Choice in the ringtone picker. If chosen, the default ringtone will be used. --> 2133 <string name="ringtone_default">Default ringtone</string> 2134 <!-- Choice in the ringtone picker. If chosen, the default ringtone will be used. This fills in the actual ringtone's title into the message. --> 2135 <string name="ringtone_default_with_actual">Default ringtone (<xliff:g id="actual_ringtone">%1$s</xliff:g>)</string> 2136 <!-- Choice in the ringtone picker. If chosen, there will be silence instead of a ringtone played. --> 2137 <string name="ringtone_silent">Silent</string> 2138 <!-- The title of the ringtone picker dialog. --> 2139 <string name="ringtone_picker_title">Ringtones</string> 2140 <!-- If there is ever a ringtone set for some setting, but that ringtone can no longer be resolved, t his is shown instead. For example, if the ringtone was on a SD card and it had been removed, this woudl be shown for ringtones on that SD card. --> 2141 <string name="ringtone_unknown">Unknown ringtone</string> 2142 2143 <!-- A notification is shown when there are open wireless networks nearby. This is the notification's title. --> 2144 <plurals name="wifi_available"> 2145 <item quantity="one">Wi-Fi network available</item> 2146 <item quantity="other">Wi-Fi networks available</item> 2147 </plurals> 2148 <!-- A notification is shown when there are open wireless networks nearby. This is the notification's message. --> 2149 <plurals name="wifi_available_detailed"> 2150 <item quantity="one">Open Wi-Fi network available</item> 2151 <item quantity="other">Open Wi-Fi networks available</item> 2152 </plurals> 2153 2154 <!-- Name of the dialog that lets the user choose an accented character to insert --> 2155 <string name="select_character">Insert character</string> 2156 2157 <!-- SMS per-application rate control Dialog --> <skip /> 2158 <!-- See SMS_DIALOG. This is shown if the current application's name cannot be figuerd out. --> 2159 <string name="sms_control_default_app_name">Unknown application</string> 2160 <!-- SMS_DIALOG: An SMS dialog is shown if an application tries to send too many SMSes. This is the title of that dialog. --> 2161 <string name="sms_control_title">Sending SMS messages</string> 2162 <!-- See SMS_DIALOG. This is the message shown in that dialog. --> 2163 <string name="sms_control_message">A large number of SMS messages are being sent. Select \"OK\" to continue, or \"Cancel\" to stop sending.</string> 2164 <!-- See SMS_DIALOG. This is a button choice to allow sending the SMSes. --> 2165 <string name="sms_control_yes">OK</string> 2166 <!-- See SMS_DIALOG. This is a button choice to disallow sending the SMSes.. --> 2167 <string name="sms_control_no">Cancel</string> 2168 2169 <!-- Name of the button in the date/time picker to accept the date/time change --> 2170 <string name="date_time_set">Set</string> 2171 2172 <!-- Security Permissions strings--> 2173 <!-- The default permission group for any permissions that have not explicitly set a group. --> 2174 <string name="default_permission_group">Default</string> 2175 <!-- Do not translate. --> 2176 <string name="permissions_format"><xliff:g id="perm_line1">%1$s</xliff:g>, <xliff:g id="perm_line2">%2$s</xliff:g></string> 2177 <!-- Shown for an application when it doesn't require any permission grants. --> 2178 <string name="no_permissions">No permissions required</string> 2179 <!-- When installing an application, the less-dangerous permissions are hidden. If the user showed those, this is the text to hide them again. --> 2180 <string name="perms_hide"><b>Hide</b></string> 2181 <!-- When installing an application, the less-dangerous permissions are hidden. This is the text to show those. --> 2182 <string name="perms_show_all"><b>Show all</b></string> 2183 2184 <!-- Shown when there is content loading from the internet into a dialog. --> 2185 <string name="googlewebcontenthelper_loading">Loading\u2026</string> 2186 2187 <!-- USB storage dialog strings --> 2188 <!-- This is the label for the activity, and should never be visible to the user. --> 2189 <!-- See USB_STORAGE. USB_STORAGE_DIALOG: After the user selects the notification, a dialog is shown asking if he wants to mount. This is the title. --> 2190 <string name="usb_storage_title">USB connected</string> 2191 <!-- See USB_STORAGE. This is the message. --> 2192 <string name="usb_storage_message">You have connected your phone to your computer via USB. Select \"Mount\" if you want to copy files between your computer and your phone\'s SD card.</string> 2193 <!-- See USB_STORAGE. This is the button text to mount the phone on the computer. --> 2194 <string name="usb_storage_button_mount">Mount</string> 2195 <!-- See USB_STORAGE. This is the button text to ignore the plugging in of the phone.. --> 2196 <string name="usb_storage_button_unmount">Don\'t mount</string> 2197 <!-- See USB_STORAGE_DIALOG. If there was an error mounting, this is the text. --> 2198 <string name="usb_storage_error_message">There is a problem using your SD card for USB storage.</string> 2199 <!-- USB_STORAGE: When the user connects the phone to a computer via USB, we show a notification asking if he wants to share files across. This is the title --> 2200 <string name="usb_storage_notification_title">USB connected</string> 2201 <!-- See USB_STORAGE. This is the message. --> 2202 <string name="usb_storage_notification_message">Select to copy files to/from your computer.</string> 2203 <!-- USB_STORAGE_STOP: While USB storage is enabled, we show a notification dialog asking if he wants to stop. This is the title --> 2204 <string name="usb_storage_stop_notification_title">Turn off USB storage</string> 2205 <!-- See USB_STORAGE. This is the message. --> 2206 <string name="usb_storage_stop_notification_message">Select to turn off USB storage.</string> 2207 2208 <!-- USB storage stop dialog strings --> 2209 <!-- This is the label for the activity, and should never be visible to the user. --> 2210 <!-- See USB_STORAGE_STOP. USB_STORAGE_STOP_DIALOG: After the user selects the notification, a dialog is shown asking if he wants to stop usb storage. This is the title. --> 2211 <string name="usb_storage_stop_title">Turn off USB storage</string> 2212 <!-- See USB_STORAGE_STOP. This is the message. --> 2213 <string name="usb_storage_stop_message">Before turning off USB storage, make sure you have unmounted on the USB host. Select \"Turn Off\" to turn off USB storage.</string> 2214 <!-- See USB_STORAGE_STOP. This is the button text to stop usb storage. --> 2215 <string name="usb_storage_stop_button_mount">Turn Off</string> 2216 <!-- See USB_STORAGE_STOP. This is the button text to cancel stoping usb storage. --> 2217 <string name="usb_storage_stop_button_unmount">Cancel</string> 2218 <!-- See USB_STORAGE_STOP_DIALOG. If there was an error stopping, this is the text. --> 2219 <string name="usb_storage_stop_error_message">We've encountered a problem turning off USB storage. Check to make sure you have unmounted the USB host, then try again.</string> 2220 2221 <!-- External media format dialog strings --> 2222 <!-- This is the label for the activity, and should never be visible to the user. --> 2223 <!-- See EXTMEDIA_FORMAT. EXTMEDIA_FORMAT_DIALOG: After the user selects the notification, a dialog is shown asking if he wants to format the SD card. This is the title. --> 2224 <string name="extmedia_format_title">Format SD card</string> 2225 <!-- See EXTMEDIA_FORMAT. This is the message. --> 2226 <string name="extmedia_format_message">Are you sure you want to format the SD card? All data on your card will be lost.</string> 2227 <!-- See EXTMEDIA_FORMAT. This is the button text to format the sd card. --> 2228 <string name="extmedia_format_button_format">Format</string> 2229 2230 <!-- Used to replace %s in urls retreived from the signin server with locales. For Some --> 2231 <!-- devices we don't support all the locales we ship to and need to replace the '%s' with a --> 2232 <!-- locale string based on mcc values. By default (0-length string) we don't replace the %s --> 2233 <!-- at all and later replace it with a locale string based on the users chosen locale --> 2234 <!-- DO NOT TRANSLATE --> 2235 <string name="locale_replacement">""</string> 2236 2237 <!-- Title of the pop-up dialog in which the user switches input method components. --> 2238 <string name="select_input_method">Select Input Method</string> 2239 2240 <string name="fast_scroll_alphabet">\u0020ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ</string> 2241 <string name="fast_scroll_numeric_alphabet">\u00200123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ</string> 2242 2243 <string name="candidates_style"><u>candidates</u></string> 2244 2245 <!-- External media notification strings --> 2246 <!-- Shown when external media is being checked --> 2247 <string name="ext_media_checking_notification_title">Preparing SD card</string> 2248 <string name="ext_media_checking_notification_message">Checking for errors</string> 2249 2250 <!-- Shown when external media is blank (or unsupported filesystem) --> 2251 <string name="ext_media_nofs_notification_title">Blank SD card</string> 2252 <string name="ext_media_nofs_notification_message">The SD card is blank or using an unsupported filesystem.</string> 2253 2254 <!-- Shown when external media is unmountable (corrupt)) --> 2255 <string name="ext_media_unmountable_notification_title">Damaged SD card</string> 2256 <string name="ext_media_unmountable_notification_message">The SD card is damaged. You may have to reformat your card.</string> 2257 2258 <!-- Shown when external media is unsafely removed --> 2259 <string name="ext_media_badremoval_notification_title">SD card unexpectedly removed</string> 2260 <string name="ext_media_badremoval_notification_message">Unmount SD card before removing to avoid data loss.</string> 2261 2262 <!-- Shown when external media has been safely removed --> 2263 <string name="ext_media_safe_unmount_notification_title">SD card safe to remove</string> 2264 <string name="ext_media_safe_unmount_notification_message">The SD card can now be safely removed.</string> 2265 2266 <!-- Shown when external media is missing --> 2267 <string name="ext_media_nomedia_notification_title">Removed SD card</string> 2268 <string name="ext_media_nomedia_notification_message">The SD has been removed. Insert a new SD card to increase your device storage.</string> 2269 2270 <!-- Shown in LauncherActivity when the requested target Intent didn't return any matching Activities, leaving the list empty. --> 2271 <string name="activity_list_empty">No matching activities found</string> 2272 2273 <!-- permission attributes related to package usage statistics --> 2274 <!-- Title of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 2275 <string name="permlab_pkgUsageStats">update component usage statistics</string> 2276 <!-- Description of an application permission, listed so the user can choose whether they want to allow the application to do this. --> 2277 <string name="permdesc_pkgUsageStats">Allows the modification of collected component usage statistics. Not for use by normal applications.</string> 2278 2279 <!-- Shown in the tutorial for tap twice for zoom control. --> 2280 <string name="tutorial_double_tap_to_zoom_message_short">Tap twice for zoom control</string> 2281 2282 <!-- Shown in gadget hosts (e.g. the home screen) when there was an error inflating 2283 the gadget. --> 2284 <string name="gadget_host_error_inflating">Error inflating widget</string> 2285 2286 <!-- Long label for a button on a full-screen input method for the "Go" action. --> 2287 <string name="ime_action_go">Go</string> 2288 2289 <!-- Long label for a button on a full-screen input method for the "Search" action. --> 2290 <string name="ime_action_search">Search</string> 2291 2292 <!-- Long label for a button on a full-screen input method for the "Send" action. --> 2293 <string name="ime_action_send">Send</string> 2294 2295 <!-- Long label for a button on a full-screen input method for the "Next" action. --> 2296 <string name="ime_action_next">Next</string> 2297 2298 <!-- Long label for a button on a full-screen input method for the "Done" action. --> 2299 <string name="ime_action_done">Done</string> 2300 2301 <!-- Long label for a button on a full-screen input method for an unknown action. --> 2302 <string name="ime_action_default">Execute</string> 2303 2304</resources> 2305