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FastGettext / Rails integration.

Translate via FastGettext, use any other I18n backend as extension/fallback.

Rails does: I18n.t('syntax.with.lots.of.dots') with nested yml files We do: _('Just translate my damn text!') with simple, flat mo/po/yml files or directly from db To use I18n calls add a syntax.with.lots.of.dots translation.

See it working in the example application.

Setup

Installation

# Gemfile
gem 'gettext_i18n_rails'
Optional:

Add gettext if you want to find translations or build .mo files

# Gemfile
gem 'gettext', '>=3.0.2', :require => false
Add first language:

Add the first language using:

rake gettext:add_language[XX]

or

LANGUAGE=[XX] rake gettext:add_language

where XX is the ISO 639-1 2-letter code for the language you want to create.

This will also create the locale directory (where the translations are being stored) and run gettext:find to find any strings marked for translation.

You can, of course, add more languages using the same command.

Locales & initialisation

Copy default locales with dates/sentence-connectors/AR-errors you want from e.g. rails i18n into 'config/locales'

To initialize:

# config/initializers/fast_gettext.rb
FastGettext.add_text_domain 'app', :path => 'locale', :type => :po
FastGettext.default_available_locales = ['en','de'] #all you want to allow
FastGettext.default_text_domain = 'app'

And in your application:

# app/controllers/application_controller.rb
class ApplicationController < ...
  before_action :set_gettext_locale

Translating

Performance is almost the same for all backends since translations are cached after first use.

Option A: .po files

FastGettext.add_text_domain 'app', :path => 'locale', :type => :po
  • use some _('translations')
  • run rake gettext:find, to let GetText find all translations used
  • (optional) run rake gettext:store_model_attributes, to parse the database for columns that can be translated
  • if this is your first translation: cp locale/app.pot locale/de/app.po for every locale you want to use
  • translate messages in 'locale/de/app.po' (leave msgstr blank and msgstr == msgid)

New translations will be marked "fuzzy", search for this and remove it, so that they will be used. Obsolete translations are marked with ~#, they usually can be removed since they are no longer needed

Unfound translations with rake gettext:find

Dynamic translations like _("x"+"u") cannot be found. You have 4 options:

  • add N_('xu') somewhere else in the code, so the parser sees it
  • add N_('xu') in a totally separate file like locale/unfound_translations.rb, so the parser sees it
  • use the gettext_test_log rails plugin to find all translations that where used while testing
  • add a Logger to a translation Chain, so every unfound translations is logged (example)

Option B: Traditional .po/.mo files

FastGettext.add_text_domain 'app', :path => 'locale'
  • follow Option A
  • run rake gettext:pack to write binary GetText .mo files

Option C: Database

Most scalable method, all translators can work simultaneously and online.

Easiest to use with the translation database Rails engine. Translations can be edited under /translation_keys

FastGettext::TranslationRepository::Db.require_models
FastGettext.add_text_domain 'app', :type => :db, :model => TranslationKey

I18n

I18n.locale <==> FastGettext.locale.to_sym
I18n.locale = :de <==> FastGettext.locale = 'de'

Any call to I18n that matches a gettext key will be translated through FastGettext.

Namespaces

Car|Model means Model in namespace Car. You do not have to translate this into english "Model", if you use the namespace-aware translation

s_('Car|Model') == 'Model' #when no translation was found

XSS / html_safe

If you trust your translators and all your usages of % on translations:

# config/environment.rb
GettextI18nRails.translations_are_html_safe = true

String % vs html_safe is buggy
My recommended fix is: require 'gettext_i18n_rails/string_interpolate_fix'

  • safe stays safe (escape added strings)
  • unsafe stays unsafe (do not escape added strings)

ActiveRecord - error messages

ActiveRecord error messages are translated through Rails::I18n, but model names and model attributes are translated through FastGettext. Therefore a validation error on a BigCar's wheels_size needs _('big car') and _('BigCar|Wheels size') to display localized.

The model/attribute translations can be found through rake gettext:store_model_attributes, (which ignores some commonly untranslated columns like id,type,xxx_count,...).

Error messages can be translated through FastGettext, if the ':message' is a translation-id or the matching Rails I18n key is translated.

Option A:

Define a translation for "I need my rating!" and use it as message.

validates_inclusion_of :rating, :in=>1..5, :message=>N_('I need my rating!')

Option B:

validates_inclusion_of :rating, :in=>1..5

Make a translation for the I18n key: activerecord.errors.models.rating.attributes.rating.inclusion

Option C:

Add a translation to each config/locales/*.yml files

en:
  activerecord:
    errors:
      models:
        rating:
          attributes:
            rating:
              inclusion: " -- please choose!"

The rails I18n guide can help with Option B and C.

Plurals

FastGettext supports pluralization

n_('Apple','Apples',3) == 'Apples'

Abnormal plurals like e.g. Polish that has 4 different can also be addressed, see FastGettext Readme

Customizing list of translatable files

When you run

rake gettext:find

by default the following files are going to be scanned for translations: {app,lib,config,locale}/**/*.{rb,erb,haml,slim}. If you want to specify a different list, you can redefine files_to_translate in the gettext namespace in a file like lib/tasks/gettext.rake:

namespace :gettext do
  def files_to_translate
    Dir.glob("{app,lib,config,locale}/**/*.{rb,erb,haml,slim,rhtml}")
  end
end

Customizing text domains setup task

By default a single application text domain is created (named app or if you load the environment the value of FastGettext.text_domain is being used).

If you want to have multiple text domains or change the definition of the text domains in any way, you can do so by overriding the :setup task in a file like lib/tasks/gettext.rake:

# Remove the provided gettext setup task
Rake::Task["gettext:setup"].clear

namespace :gettext do
  task :setup => [:environment] do
    domains = Application.config.gettext["domains"]

    domains.each do |domain, options|
      files = Dir.glob(options["paths"])

      GetText::Tools::Task.define do |task|
        task.package_name = options["name"]
        task.package_version = "1.0.0"
        task.domain = options["name"]
        task.po_base_directory = locale_path
        task.mo_base_directory = locale_path
        task.files = files
        task.enable_description = false
        task.msgmerge_options = gettext_msgmerge_options
        task.msgcat_options = gettext_msgcat_options
        task.xgettext_options = gettext_xgettext_options
      end
    end
  end
end

Changing msgmerge, msgcat, and xgettext options

The default options for parsing and create .po files are:

--sort-by-msgid --no-location --no-wrap

These options sort the translations by the msgid (original / source string), don't add location information in the po file and don't wrap long message lines into several lines.

If you want to override them you can put the following into an initializer like config/initializers/gettext.rb:

Rails.application.config.gettext_i18n_rails.msgmerge = %w[--no-location]
Rails.application.config.gettext_i18n_rails.msgcat = %w[--no-location]
Rails.application.config.gettext_i18n_rails.xgettext = %w[--no-location]

or

Rails.application.config.gettext_i18n_rails.default_options = %w[--no-location]

to override both.

You can see the available options by running rgettext -h, rmsgcat -f and rxgettext -h.

Use I18n instead Gettext to ActiveRecord/ActiveModel translations

If you want to disable translations to model name and attributes you can put the following into an initializer like config/initializers/gettext.rb:

Rails.application.config.gettext_i18n_rails.use_for_active_record_attributes = false

And now you can use your I18n yaml files instead.

Using your translations from javascript

If want to use your .PO files on client side javascript you should have a look at the GettextI18nRailsJs extension.

Michael Grosser
[email protected]
License: MIT
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