nodes help (#476)

This commit is contained in:
m2049r 2018-11-20 21:10:25 +01:00 committed by GitHub
parent acb7398dca
commit 2986dfeaa7
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23
18 changed files with 835 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -232,4 +232,53 @@
<h2>Transaktionsliste</h2>
<p>Eine Liste deiner Transaktionen. In View Wallets werden nur die eingehenden Transaktionen angezeigt.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -217,4 +217,53 @@
<h2>Λίστα Συναλλαγών</h2>
<p>Μια λίστα απο τις συναλλαγές του πορτοφολιού. Στα πορτοφόλια παρακολούθησης φαίνοντε μόνο οι εισερχόμενες συναλλαγές.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -255,4 +255,53 @@
<p>Es una lista con las transacciones del monedero. Ten en cuenta que en monederos de solo vista, únicamente se
mostrarán las transacciones entrantes y no las salientes, por lo tanto la suma no es indicativa de los fondos disponibles.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -249,4 +249,53 @@
<h2>Ülekannete ajalugu</h2>
<p>A list of the wallet transactions. In view wallets, only incoming transactions are shown.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -254,4 +254,53 @@
<p>Une listes des transactions du portefeuille. Dans un portefeuille dAudit, seules les
transactions entrantes sont affichées.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -239,4 +239,53 @@
<p>A tárcához tartozó tranzakciók listája. A csak megtekintésre szolgáló tárcák esetében kizárólag
a bejövő tranzakciók kerülnek megjelenítésre.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -238,4 +238,53 @@
<p>Una lista delle transazioni relative al portafoglio. Nei portafogli solo-visualizzazione, vengono visualizzate solo
le transazioni in ingresso.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -237,4 +237,53 @@
<h2>Transaksjonsliste</h2>
<p>En liste over lommeboktransaksjonene. In view lommebøker, kan man bare se innkommende transaksjoner.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -163,5 +163,55 @@
Lees meer over wisselgeld op https://getmonero.org/resources/moneropedia/change.html
<h2>Transactielijst</h2>
<p>Een lijst van de transacties van de portemonnee. In een alleen-lezen portemonnee worden alleen binnenkomende transacties weergegeven.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -232,4 +232,53 @@
<h2>Lista de transações</h2>
<p>Lista de transações da carteira. Nas carteiras \"somente leitura\", somente as transações de entrada aparecem.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -240,4 +240,53 @@
<p>Uma lista de transacções da carteira. Em carteiras de visualização, apenas são mostradas transacções
de depósito.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -225,4 +225,53 @@
<p>O listă a tranzacțiilor portofelului. În portofele create folosind cheia de vizualizare,
doar tranzacțiile primite vor fi afișate.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -243,4 +243,53 @@
<p>Список транзакций, проведённых с использованием этого кошелька. В кошельках просмотра можно увидеть
только входящие транзакции.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -220,4 +220,53 @@
<h2>Zoznam Transakcií</h2>
<p>Zoznam transakcií v peňaženke. V prípade prezeracej peňaženky budú zobrazené iba prichádzajúce transakcie.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -220,4 +220,53 @@
<h2>Transaktionlista</h2>
<p>En lista av plånbokens transaktioner. I vis-plånböcker, visas bara inkommande transaktioner.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -198,4 +198,53 @@
<h2>交易列表</h2>
<p>钱包交易的列表。在唯读钱包中,仅会显示接收到的交易。</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -188,4 +188,53 @@
<h2>交易列表</h2>
<p>錢包交易的列表。在唯讀錢包中,僅會顯示接收到的交易。</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo
to choose the best one for you!</p>
<h2>What&apos;s a Node?</h2>
<p>Monerujo uses a Remote Node (sometimes also called Daemon) to communicate with
the Monero Network without having to download and store a copy of the
whole blockchain itself.<p>
<h2>Node List</h2>
<p>If the list is empty, you can either add new nodes manually or let Monerujo
scan the network for you. Or both. Read on&#8230;</p>
<p>The node list shows all currently known nodes. Additionally, the timestamp
of the latest block known to each node is shown under the node name. An icon
representing the node&apos;s response behaviour
(which indicates the level of connectivity to be expected)
is shown next to each node.</p>
<p>Any node in the list can be bookmarked for later use.
Nodes which are not bookmarked will be forgotten.<p>
<p>Monerujo will choose the optimal bookmarked node each time you use it.
It does this by checking the blockheight (how up-to-date
is the node?) as well as the response behaviour (how fast does the node respond to requests?).</p>
<p>The list is sorted by these characteristics, so the top node would be the one Monerujo
would choose right now. The bottom of the list would show very slow or unavailable nodes.</p>
<h2>Add a Node</h2>
<p>By touching the &quot;Add Node&quot; button at the bottom, you will be asked to
enter the node details in the following dialog.
The &quot;Address&quot; is the hostname or IP-address of the node - this is the only
mandatory entry.
Enter the &quot;Port&quot; if the node runs on a non-default port (e.g. 18089).
You can also optionally name the node, so you can identify it easier later on.
Some nodes require credentials to use them. Enter the provided username &amp;
password in the appropriate fields. Now you can &quot;Test&quot; these setting.
The &quot;Test Results&quot; will display the blockheight, response time and actual IP used.
The result may also be an error - usually because the hostname provided is
not reachable in a sensible amount of time or the credentials are incorrect.
Or the hostname/port combination does not point to an actual Monero Node!
Once the test passes (no error) - you&apos;re set to press &quot;OK&quot; to save &amp;
bookmark this node.</p>
<h2>Scan for Nodes</h2>
<p>Additionally, you can scan the network for nodes. Monerujo will start
scanning the network for Remote Nodes on port 18089. It begins by asking your
bookmarked nodes for other peers in the Monero P2P network and then continues
by asking those for their peers, and so on. If you have no bookmarked nodes
(or they don&apos;t tell us about their peers),
Monerujo will go straight to the Monero seed nodes hardcoded into Monero. The
scan stops when it finds 10 remote nodes in total.</p>
]]></string>
</resources>

View File

@ -238,7 +238,7 @@
<p>A list of the wallet transactions. In view wallets, only incoming transactions are shown.</p>
]]></string>
<string name="help_node" translatable="false"><![CDATA[
<string name="help_node"><![CDATA[
<h1>Nodes</h1>
<h2>TL;DR</h2>
<p>Refresh the nodes list by pulling down &amp; bookmark 3&#8211;5 nodes to allow Monerujo