Disable Chrome's page translation on the commandline
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3
down vote
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I build a dual monitor dashboard with Google Chrome (V. 60.0.3112.78) under CentOS 7. Everything is working with the exception that I am not able to disable Chrome's translation feature via the command line.
I already start Chrome with --disable-translate
but Chrome asks still if it should translate the page or not.
google-chrome kiosk dashboard google-translate
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up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I build a dual monitor dashboard with Google Chrome (V. 60.0.3112.78) under CentOS 7. Everything is working with the exception that I am not able to disable Chrome's translation feature via the command line.
I already start Chrome with --disable-translate
but Chrome asks still if it should translate the page or not.
google-chrome kiosk dashboard google-translate
There are 2 ways to do that (that I know of). The first one is through--disable-translate
that you already tried and the second one is through the browser settings (Languages ....). Now why 1st one fails? if there's already another instance of Chrome running, running it from the command-line will ignore the switches passed in the command, so you won't be able to pass the--disable-translate
switch. You'll need to close all instances first.
– Jimmy_A
Aug 4 '17 at 8:27
--disable-translate
seems to be ignored on this computer by Chrome. Unfortunately I can't use the browser settings as there are multiple instances of Chrome are running, each with a temporary directory as home directory.
– Oliver F.
Aug 6 '17 at 8:18
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I build a dual monitor dashboard with Google Chrome (V. 60.0.3112.78) under CentOS 7. Everything is working with the exception that I am not able to disable Chrome's translation feature via the command line.
I already start Chrome with --disable-translate
but Chrome asks still if it should translate the page or not.
google-chrome kiosk dashboard google-translate
I build a dual monitor dashboard with Google Chrome (V. 60.0.3112.78) under CentOS 7. Everything is working with the exception that I am not able to disable Chrome's translation feature via the command line.
I already start Chrome with --disable-translate
but Chrome asks still if it should translate the page or not.
google-chrome kiosk dashboard google-translate
google-chrome kiosk dashboard google-translate
asked Aug 4 '17 at 7:17
Oliver F.
15617
15617
There are 2 ways to do that (that I know of). The first one is through--disable-translate
that you already tried and the second one is through the browser settings (Languages ....). Now why 1st one fails? if there's already another instance of Chrome running, running it from the command-line will ignore the switches passed in the command, so you won't be able to pass the--disable-translate
switch. You'll need to close all instances first.
– Jimmy_A
Aug 4 '17 at 8:27
--disable-translate
seems to be ignored on this computer by Chrome. Unfortunately I can't use the browser settings as there are multiple instances of Chrome are running, each with a temporary directory as home directory.
– Oliver F.
Aug 6 '17 at 8:18
add a comment |
There are 2 ways to do that (that I know of). The first one is through--disable-translate
that you already tried and the second one is through the browser settings (Languages ....). Now why 1st one fails? if there's already another instance of Chrome running, running it from the command-line will ignore the switches passed in the command, so you won't be able to pass the--disable-translate
switch. You'll need to close all instances first.
– Jimmy_A
Aug 4 '17 at 8:27
--disable-translate
seems to be ignored on this computer by Chrome. Unfortunately I can't use the browser settings as there are multiple instances of Chrome are running, each with a temporary directory as home directory.
– Oliver F.
Aug 6 '17 at 8:18
There are 2 ways to do that (that I know of). The first one is through
--disable-translate
that you already tried and the second one is through the browser settings (Languages ....). Now why 1st one fails? if there's already another instance of Chrome running, running it from the command-line will ignore the switches passed in the command, so you won't be able to pass the --disable-translate
switch. You'll need to close all instances first.– Jimmy_A
Aug 4 '17 at 8:27
There are 2 ways to do that (that I know of). The first one is through
--disable-translate
that you already tried and the second one is through the browser settings (Languages ....). Now why 1st one fails? if there's already another instance of Chrome running, running it from the command-line will ignore the switches passed in the command, so you won't be able to pass the --disable-translate
switch. You'll need to close all instances first.– Jimmy_A
Aug 4 '17 at 8:27
--disable-translate
seems to be ignored on this computer by Chrome. Unfortunately I can't use the browser settings as there are multiple instances of Chrome are running, each with a temporary directory as home directory.– Oliver F.
Aug 6 '17 at 8:18
--disable-translate
seems to be ignored on this computer by Chrome. Unfortunately I can't use the browser settings as there are multiple instances of Chrome are running, each with a temporary directory as home directory.– Oliver F.
Aug 6 '17 at 8:18
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
After searching for a while I found out, that the --disable-translate
flagt has been removed from Chrome.
The proposal to remove this flag is available online at https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/forum/#!topic/chromium-reviews/nOgks4a7_uI.
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
If you have control over the web content being displayed (it seems you do), you can place this meta tag in the <head>
section:
<meta name="google" content="notranslate">
That will stop Chrome poping up the translation dialog.
Still if it's not your web page, you can install the ModHeader extension to modify the response headers yourself:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/modheader/idgpnmonknjnojddfkpgkljpfnnfcklj
See also:
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7228972/disable-chrome-translation-bar-on-my-website
This is correct, unfortunately I don't have access to the source files.
– Oliver F.
Jul 20 at 8:11
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
As of chromium version 60.0.3112.89, --disable-translate doesn't work anymore.
The workaround, if you have access, is to remove the lang from html tag or set it to "en".
Why the hell did they remove it?!!
– David D.
Apr 28 at 13:40
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
After searching for a while I found out, that the --disable-translate
flagt has been removed from Chrome.
The proposal to remove this flag is available online at https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/forum/#!topic/chromium-reviews/nOgks4a7_uI.
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
After searching for a while I found out, that the --disable-translate
flagt has been removed from Chrome.
The proposal to remove this flag is available online at https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/forum/#!topic/chromium-reviews/nOgks4a7_uI.
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
After searching for a while I found out, that the --disable-translate
flagt has been removed from Chrome.
The proposal to remove this flag is available online at https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/forum/#!topic/chromium-reviews/nOgks4a7_uI.
After searching for a while I found out, that the --disable-translate
flagt has been removed from Chrome.
The proposal to remove this flag is available online at https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/forum/#!topic/chromium-reviews/nOgks4a7_uI.
answered Jan 12 at 16:01
Oliver F.
15617
15617
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
If you have control over the web content being displayed (it seems you do), you can place this meta tag in the <head>
section:
<meta name="google" content="notranslate">
That will stop Chrome poping up the translation dialog.
Still if it's not your web page, you can install the ModHeader extension to modify the response headers yourself:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/modheader/idgpnmonknjnojddfkpgkljpfnnfcklj
See also:
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7228972/disable-chrome-translation-bar-on-my-website
This is correct, unfortunately I don't have access to the source files.
– Oliver F.
Jul 20 at 8:11
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
If you have control over the web content being displayed (it seems you do), you can place this meta tag in the <head>
section:
<meta name="google" content="notranslate">
That will stop Chrome poping up the translation dialog.
Still if it's not your web page, you can install the ModHeader extension to modify the response headers yourself:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/modheader/idgpnmonknjnojddfkpgkljpfnnfcklj
See also:
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7228972/disable-chrome-translation-bar-on-my-website
This is correct, unfortunately I don't have access to the source files.
– Oliver F.
Jul 20 at 8:11
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
If you have control over the web content being displayed (it seems you do), you can place this meta tag in the <head>
section:
<meta name="google" content="notranslate">
That will stop Chrome poping up the translation dialog.
Still if it's not your web page, you can install the ModHeader extension to modify the response headers yourself:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/modheader/idgpnmonknjnojddfkpgkljpfnnfcklj
See also:
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7228972/disable-chrome-translation-bar-on-my-website
If you have control over the web content being displayed (it seems you do), you can place this meta tag in the <head>
section:
<meta name="google" content="notranslate">
That will stop Chrome poping up the translation dialog.
Still if it's not your web page, you can install the ModHeader extension to modify the response headers yourself:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/modheader/idgpnmonknjnojddfkpgkljpfnnfcklj
See also:
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7228972/disable-chrome-translation-bar-on-my-website
edited Nov 25 at 14:23
answered Jul 11 at 7:39
Xtreme Biker
1415
1415
This is correct, unfortunately I don't have access to the source files.
– Oliver F.
Jul 20 at 8:11
add a comment |
This is correct, unfortunately I don't have access to the source files.
– Oliver F.
Jul 20 at 8:11
This is correct, unfortunately I don't have access to the source files.
– Oliver F.
Jul 20 at 8:11
This is correct, unfortunately I don't have access to the source files.
– Oliver F.
Jul 20 at 8:11
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
As of chromium version 60.0.3112.89, --disable-translate doesn't work anymore.
The workaround, if you have access, is to remove the lang from html tag or set it to "en".
Why the hell did they remove it?!!
– David D.
Apr 28 at 13:40
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
As of chromium version 60.0.3112.89, --disable-translate doesn't work anymore.
The workaround, if you have access, is to remove the lang from html tag or set it to "en".
Why the hell did they remove it?!!
– David D.
Apr 28 at 13:40
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
As of chromium version 60.0.3112.89, --disable-translate doesn't work anymore.
The workaround, if you have access, is to remove the lang from html tag or set it to "en".
As of chromium version 60.0.3112.89, --disable-translate doesn't work anymore.
The workaround, if you have access, is to remove the lang from html tag or set it to "en".
answered Jan 30 at 9:28
Miguel Pynto
212
212
Why the hell did they remove it?!!
– David D.
Apr 28 at 13:40
add a comment |
Why the hell did they remove it?!!
– David D.
Apr 28 at 13:40
Why the hell did they remove it?!!
– David D.
Apr 28 at 13:40
Why the hell did they remove it?!!
– David D.
Apr 28 at 13:40
add a comment |
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There are 2 ways to do that (that I know of). The first one is through
--disable-translate
that you already tried and the second one is through the browser settings (Languages ....). Now why 1st one fails? if there's already another instance of Chrome running, running it from the command-line will ignore the switches passed in the command, so you won't be able to pass the--disable-translate
switch. You'll need to close all instances first.– Jimmy_A
Aug 4 '17 at 8:27
--disable-translate
seems to be ignored on this computer by Chrome. Unfortunately I can't use the browser settings as there are multiple instances of Chrome are running, each with a temporary directory as home directory.– Oliver F.
Aug 6 '17 at 8:18