Units API.

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

GET /api/units/99420/?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/freebsd-doc/articles_linux-emulation/en/?format=api",
    "source": [
        "<trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> is an operating system with a long history that has influenced almost every other operating system currently in use. Starting in the 1960s, its development continues to this day (although in different projects). <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> development soon forked into two main ways: the BSDs and System III/V families. They mutually influenced themselves by growing a common <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> standard. Among the contributions originated in BSD we can name virtual memory, TCP/IP networking, FFS, and many others. The System V branch contributed to SysV interprocess communication primitives, copy-on-write, etc. <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> itself does not exist any more but its ideas have been used by many other operating systems world wide thus forming the so called <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark>-like operating systems. These days the most influential ones are <trademark class=\"registered\">Linux</trademark>, Solaris, and possibly (to some extent) FreeBSD. There are in-company <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> derivatives (AIX, HP-UX etc.), but these have been more and more migrated to the aforementioned systems. Let us summarize typical <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> characteristics."
    ],
    "previous_source": "",
    "target": [
        "<trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> is an operating system with a long history that has influenced almost every other operating system currently in use. Starting in the 1960s, its development continues to this day (although in different projects). <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> development soon forked into two main ways: the BSDs and System III/V families. They mutually influenced themselves by growing a common <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> standard. Among the contributions originated in BSD we can name virtual memory, TCP/IP networking, FFS, and many others. The System V branch contributed to SysV interprocess communication primitives, copy-on-write, etc. <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> itself does not exist any more but its ideas have been used by many other operating systems world wide thus forming the so called <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark>-like operating systems. These days the most influential ones are <trademark class=\"registered\">Linux</trademark>, Solaris, and possibly (to some extent) FreeBSD. There are in-company <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> derivatives (AIX, HP-UX etc.), but these have been more and more migrated to the aforementioned systems. Let us summarize typical <trademark class=\"registered\">UNIX</trademark> characteristics."
    ],
    "id_hash": -6508884325728105615,
    "content_hash": -6508884325728105615,
    "location": "article.translate.xml:122",
    "context": "",
    "note": "(itstool) path: sect2/para",
    "flags": "",
    "labels": [],
    "state": 100,
    "fuzzy": false,
    "translated": true,
    "approved": false,
    "position": 23,
    "has_suggestion": false,
    "has_comment": false,
    "has_failing_check": false,
    "num_words": 164,
    "source_unit": "https://translate-dev.freebsd.org/api/units/99420/?format=api",
    "priority": 100,
    "id": 99420,
    "web_url": "https://translate-dev.freebsd.org/translate/freebsd-doc/articles_linux-emulation/en/?checksum=25abcc30f8de4b71",
    "url": "https://translate-dev.freebsd.org/api/units/99420/?format=api",
    "explanation": "",
    "extra_flags": "",
    "pending": false,
    "timestamp": "2019-10-20T12:10:38.199734Z"
}