R18n
R18n is an i18n tool to translate your Ruby application into several languages.
Use r18n-rails
, sinatra-r18n
or teamon’s merb_i18n
to localize Web applications and r18n-desktop
to localize desktop application.
Features
Ruby-style Syntax
R18n uses hierarchical, not English-centric, YAML format for translations by default:
user:
edit: Edit user
name: User name is %1
count: !!pl
1: There is 1 user
n: There are %1 users
To access translation you can call methods with the same names:
t.user.edit #=> "Edit user"
t.user.name('John') #=> "User name is John"
t.user.count(5) #=> "There are 5 users"
t.not.exists | 'default' #=> "default"
t.not.exists.translated? #=> false
If the translation key is the name of an Object method you can access it via hash index:
t[:methods] #=> "Methods"
Filters
You can add custom filters for YAML types or any translated string. Filters are cascading and can communicate with each other.
R18n already has filters for HTML escaping, lambdas, Textile and Markdown:
hi: !!markdown |
**Hi**, people!
greater: !!escape
1 < 2 is true
t.hi #=> "<p><strong>Hi</strong>, people!</p>"
t.greater #=> "1 < 2 is true"
Flexibility
Translation variables and pluralization (“1 comment”, “5 comments”) are filters too, so you can extend or replace them. For example, you can use the ‘named variables filter’ from the r18n-rails-api
gem:
greeting: "Hi, %{name}"
R18n::Filters.on(:named_variables)
t.greeting(name: 'John') #=> "Hi, John"
Flexible Locales
Locales extend the Locale class. For example, English locale extends the time formatters:
l Date.now, :full #=> "30th of November, 2009"
Russian has built-in pluralization without any lambdas in YAML:
t.user.count(1) #=> "1 пользователь"
t.user.count(2) #=> "2 пользователя"
t.user.count(5) #=> "5 пользователей"
Loaders
R18n can load translations from anywhere, not just from YAML files. You just need to create loader object with 2 methods: available
and load
:
class DBLoader
def available
Translation.find(:all).map(&:locale)
end
def load(locale)
Translation.find(locale).to_hash
end
end
R18n.set(user_locales, DBLoader.new)
You can also set a list of different translation locations or set extension locations which will be only used with application translation (useful for plugins).
Object Translation
You can translate any class, including ORM models (ActiveRecord, DataMapper, MongoMapper, Mongoid or others):
require 'r18n-core/translated'
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
include R18n::Translated
# Model has two normal properties: title_en and title_ru
translations :title
end
# For English users
product.title #=> "Anthrax"
# For Russian users
product.title #=> "Сибирская язва"
Localization
R18n can localize numbers and time:
l -5000 #=> "−5,000"
l Time.now #=> "30/11/2009 14:36"
l Time.now, :full #=> "30th of November, 2009 14:37"
l Time.now - 60, :human #=> "1 minute ago"
Several User Languages
If a particular locale is requested but missing, R18n will automatically take the next available language (according to the browser’s list of locales) and for cultures with two official languages (e.g., exUSSR) it takes the second language (e.g., if a translation isn’t available in Kazakh R18n will look for Russian):
i18n = R18n::I18n.new(['kk', 'de'], 'dir/with/translations')
i18n.locales #=> [Locale kk (Қазақша), Locale de (Deutsch),
# Locale ru (Русский), Locale en (English)]
i18n.kazakh #=> "Қазақша", main user language
i18n.deutsch #=> "Deutsch", not in Kazakh, use next user locale
i18n.russian #=> "Русский", not in kk and de, use Kazakh sublocale
i18n.english #=> "English", not in any user locales, use default
Agnostic
R18n has an agnostic core package and plugins with out-of-box support for Sinatra, Merb and desktop applications.
Usage
To add i18n support to your app, you can use the particular plugin for your environment: r18n-rails
, sinatra-r18n
or r18n-desktop
.
If you develop you own plugin or want to use only core gem, you will need to create an I18n object and by using R18n.set
or, for the current thread, by using R18n.thread_set
:
R18n.set('en', 'path/to/translations')
You can add helpers to access the current R18n object:
include R18n::Helpers
t.yes #=> "Yes"
l Time.now, :human #=> "now"
r18n.locale.code #=> "en"
Translation
Translation files are in YAML format by default and have names like en.yml (English) or en-us.yml (USA English dialect) with language/country code (RFC 3066).
In your translation files you can use:
-
Strings
robot: This is a robot percent: "Percent sign (%)"
-
Numbers
number: 123 float: 12.45
-
Pluralizable messages
robots: !!pl 0: No robots 1: One robot n: %1 robots
-
Filters
filtered: !!custom_type This content will be processed by a filter
To get the translated string use a method with the key name or square brackets
-
for keys, which is the same with Object methods (
class
,inspect
, etc):
t.robot #=> "This is a robot"
t[:robot] #=> "This is a robot"
Translation may be hierarchical:
t.post.add #=> "Add post"
t[:post][:add] #=> "Add post"
If the locale isn’t found in the user’s requested locale, R18n will search for it in sublocales or in another locale, which the user also can accept:
t.not.in.english #=> "В английском нет"
The translated string has a locale
method for determining its locale (Locale instance or code string if locale is’t supported in R18n):
i18n.not.in.english.locale #=> Locale ru (Русский)
You can include parameters in the translated string by specifying arguments:
name: "My name is %1"
t.name('John') #=> "My name is John"
Pluralizable messages get their item count from the first argument:
t.robots(0) #=> "No robots"
t.robots(1) #=> "One robot"
t.robots(50) #=> "50 robots"
If there isn’t a pluralization for a particular number, translation will be use n
. If there isn’t a locale file for translation, it will use the English pluralization rule (0, 1 and n
).
You can check if the key has a translation:
t.post.add.translated? #=> true
t.not.exists.translated? #=> false
You can set a default value for untranslated strings:
t.not.exists | 'default' #=> "default"
You can query the translation keys:
t.counties._keys.each do |county|
puts t.counties[county]
end
R18n already has translations for common words for most built in locales. See base/
the source.
t.yes #=> "Yes"
t.cancel #=> "Cancel"
t.delete #=> "Delete"
Filters
You can also add you own filters for translations: escape HTML entities, convert from Markdown syntax, etc. Filters can be passive, only being processed when loaded.
friendship: !!gender
f: She adds a friend
m: He adds a friend
R18n::Filters.add('gender', :user_gender) do |content, config, user|
if user.female?
content['f']
else
content['m']
end
end
t.friendship(anne) #=> "She adds a friend"
To create a filter you pass the following to R18n::Filters.add
:
-
Filter target. YAML type (
!!type
),String
for all translations ofR18n::Untranslated
for missing translations. -
Optional filter name, to disable, enable or delete it later by
R18n::Filters.off
,R18n::Filters.on
andR18n::Filters.delete
. -
Hash with options:
-
:passive => true
to filter translations only on load; -
:position
within the list of current filters of this type (by default a new filter will be inserted into last position).
-
The filter will receive at least two arguments:
-
Translation (possibly already filtered by other filters for this type earlier in the list).
-
A Hash with translation
locale
andpath
. -
Parameters from translation request will be in the remaining arguments.
HTML Escape
R18n contains 2 filters to escape HTML entities: by YAML type and global. If you need to escape HTML in some translations, just set !!escape
YAML type:
greater: !!escape
1 < 2 is true
t.greater #=> "1 < 2 is true"
If you develop web application and want to escape HTML in all translations, just activate the global escape filter:
R18n::Filters.on(:global_escape_html)
If you enable global HTML escape, you may still use !!html
YAML type to disable escaping on some values:
warning: !!html
<b>Warning</b>
R18n::Filters.on(:global_escape_html)
t.warning #=> "<b>Warning</b>"
Markdown
To use Markdown in your translations you must install the Maruku gem:
hi: !!markdown
**Hi**, people!
t.hi #=> "<p><strong>Hi</strong>, people!</p>"
Textile
To use Textile in your translations you must install the RedCloth gem:
alarm: !!textile
It will delete _all_ users!
t.alarm #=> "<p>It will delete <em>all</em> users!</p>"
Lambdas
You can use lambdas in your translations.
sum: !!proc |x, y| x + y
t.sum(1, 2) #=> 3
If this is unsafe in your application (for example, user can change translations), you can disable it:
R18n::Filters.off(:procedure)
Localization
You can print numbers and floats according to the rules of the user locale:
l -12000.5 #=> "−12,000.5"
Number and float formatters will also put real typographic minus and put non-breakable thin spaces (for locale, which use it as digit separator).
You can translate months and week day names in Time, Date and DateTime by the strftime
method:
l Time.now, '%B' #=> "September"
R18n has some built-in time formats for locales: :human
, :full
and :standard
(the default):
l Time.now, :human #=> "now"
l Time.now, :full #=> "August 9th, 2009 21:47"
l Time.now #=> "08/09/2009 21:41"
l Time.now.to_date #=> "08/09/2009"
Model
You can add i18n support to any classes, including ORM models (ActiveRecord, DataMapper, MongoMapper, Mongoid or others):
require 'r18n-core/translated'
class Product
include DataMapper::Resource
property :title_ru, String
property :title_en, String
include R18n::Translated
translations :title
end
# For example, user only knows Russian
# Set English (default) title
product.title_en = "Anthrax"
product.title #=> "Anthrax"
# Set value for user locale (Russian)
product.title = "Сибирская язва"
product.title #=> "Сибирская язва"
product.title_en #=> "Anthrax"
product.title_ru #=> "Сибирская язва"
See R18n::Translated for documentation.
Locale
All supported locales are stored in R18n gem in locales
directory. If you want to add your locale, please fork this project and send a pull request or email me at [email protected].
To get information about a locale create an R18n::Locale instance:
locale = R18n::Locale.load('en')
You can then get the following from the locale:
-
Locale title and RFC 3066 code:
locale.title #=> "English" locale.code #=> "en"
-
Language direction (left to right, or right to left for Arabic and Hebrew):
locale.ltr? #=> true
-
Week start day (
:monday
or:sunday
):locale.week_start #=> :sunday
Loaders
You can load translations from anywhere, not just from YAML files. To load translation you must create loader class with 2 methods:
-
available
– return array of locales of available translations; -
load(locale)
– return Hash of translation.
Pass its instance to R18n::I18n.new
:
R18n.set('en', MyLoader.new(loader_param))
You can set your default loader and pass it to R18n::I18n.new
as the only constructor argument:
R18n.default_loader = MyLoader
R18n.set('en', loader_param)
If you want to load a translation with some type for filter, use R18n::Typed
struct:
# Loader will return something like:
{ 'users' => R18n::Typed.new('pl', { 1 => '1 user', 'n' => '%1 users' }) }
# To use pluralization filter (+pl+ type):
t.users(5) #=> "5 users"
Extension Translations
For r18n plugin you can add loaders with translations, which will be used with application translations. For example, DB plugin may place translations for error messages in extension directory. R18n contain translations for base words as extension directory too.
R18n.extension_places << R18n::Loader::YAML.new('./error_messages/')
Add Locale
If R18n hasn’t got locale file for your language, please add it. It’s very simple:
-
Create the file code.rb in the locales/ directory for your language and describe locale. Just copy from another locale and change the values.
-
If your country has alternate languages (for example, in exUSSR countries most people also know Russian), add
sublocales %{another_locale en}
.
-
-
Create in base/ file code.yml for your language and translate the base messages. Just copy file from language, which you know, and rewrite values.
-
If your language needs some special logic (for example, different pluralization or time formatters) you can extend Locale class methods.
-
Send a pull request via GitHub (github.com/ai/r18n) or just write email with the files to me ([email protected]).
Code is RFC 3066 code for your language (for example, “en” for English and “fr-CA” for Canadian French). Email me with any questions you may have, you will find other contact addresses at sitnik.ru.
License
R18n is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License version 3. See the LICENSE file or www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl.html.
Author
Andrey “A.I.” Sitnik <[email protected]>