Units API.

See the Weblate's Web API documentation for detailed description of the API.

GET /api/units/615117/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, PUT, PATCH, DELETE, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "translation": "https://translate-dev.freebsd.org/api/translations/documentation/articlessolid-state_index/en/?format=api",
    "source": [
        "The scope of this article will be limited to solid state disk devices made from flash memory.  Flash memory is a solid state memory (no moving parts) that is non-volatile (the memory maintains data even after all power sources have been disconnected).  Flash memory can withstand tremendous physical shock and is reasonably fast (the flash memory solutions covered in this article are slightly slower than a EIDE hard disk for write operations, and much faster for read operations).  One very important aspect of flash memory, the ramifications of which will be discussed later in this article, is that each sector has a limited rewrite capacity.  You can only write, erase, and write again to a sector of flash memory a certain number of times before the sector becomes permanently unusable.  Although many flash memory products automatically map bad blocks, and although some even distribute write operations evenly throughout the unit, the fact remains that there exists a limit to the amount of writing that can be done to the device.  Competitive units have between 1,000,000 and 10,000,000 writes per sector in their specification.  This figure varies due to the temperature of the environment."
    ],
    "previous_source": "",
    "target": [
        "The scope of this article will be limited to solid state disk devices made from flash memory.  Flash memory is a solid state memory (no moving parts) that is non-volatile (the memory maintains data even after all power sources have been disconnected).  Flash memory can withstand tremendous physical shock and is reasonably fast (the flash memory solutions covered in this article are slightly slower than a EIDE hard disk for write operations, and much faster for read operations).  One very important aspect of flash memory, the ramifications of which will be discussed later in this article, is that each sector has a limited rewrite capacity.  You can only write, erase, and write again to a sector of flash memory a certain number of times before the sector becomes permanently unusable.  Although many flash memory products automatically map bad blocks, and although some even distribute write operations evenly throughout the unit, the fact remains that there exists a limit to the amount of writing that can be done to the device.  Competitive units have between 1,000,000 and 10,000,000 writes per sector in their specification.  This figure varies due to the temperature of the environment."
    ],
    "id_hash": 7692969916142658774,
    "content_hash": 7692969916142658774,
    "location": "documentation/content/en/articles/solid-state/_index.adoc:69",
    "context": "",
    "note": "type: Plain text",
    "flags": "",
    "labels": [],
    "state": 100,
    "fuzzy": false,
    "translated": true,
    "approved": false,
    "position": 9,
    "has_suggestion": false,
    "has_comment": false,
    "has_failing_check": false,
    "num_words": 193,
    "source_unit": "https://translate-dev.freebsd.org/api/units/615117/?format=api",
    "priority": 100,
    "id": 615117,
    "web_url": "https://translate-dev.freebsd.org/translate/documentation/articlessolid-state_index/en/?checksum=eac2eb612f7324d6",
    "url": "https://translate-dev.freebsd.org/api/units/615117/?format=api",
    "explanation": "",
    "extra_flags": "",
    "pending": false,
    "timestamp": "2021-03-20T20:42:53.393275Z"
}