1.0.4 • Published 5 years ago

i18n-node-yaml v1.0.4

Weekly downloads
64
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
5 years ago

npm version

i18n-node-yaml

Motivations

Yet another translation module for node? Not quite.

I created this repo for two main reasons:

1. Lack of YAML support in the main translation module

Despite having been PRed it was never merged, which induces a lack of maintenance.

Most people agree that YAML is a better format for writing translations as content is naturally aligned, and require few special character tweaks.

It means a non-techie could definitely maintain his own version of a translation file, at very little risks.

2. Inverted translation position

Get content organised files:

# translations.yml

hello:
  world:
    en: Hello World
    fr: Bonjour le monde
foo:
  bar: Foo bar

Instead of what all translation module I have ever used do: language organised files:

# en.yml

hello:
  world: Hello World
foo:
  bar: Foo bar

and

# fr.yml

hello:
  world: Bonjour le monde
foo:
  bar: Foo bar

I can't find how this structure can be easily maintainable. I already asked the question on SO, without much success. :s

Having translated myself several websites, I have always found super efficient to manage one file.

Here are the immediate advantages I get:

  • No need to duplicate if word is international/not translatable (eg. foo.bar)
  • 1 single file to edit when tree structure moves (and it regularly does)
  • Visually obvious which translations are missing
  • Instant evaluation of the necessity to translate (eg. English Contact will do at first then will be translated by Kontact in German eventually)
  • Super easy to translate : the original source is only 1 line above! No need fancy software to do that.
  • Files are organized by content, not translations

I'd be curious to hear some cons on this, but I hardly can see any!

Install

Nothing fancy:

npm install i18n-node-yaml --save

Usage

Quick start

Inspired by its grand-bother, the syntax goes:

// app.js
const i18n = require('i18n-node-yaml')({
  debug: app.get('environment') !== 'production',
  translationFolder: __dirname + '/translations',
  locales: ['en_US', 'fr_FR'],
  defaultLocale: 'en_US',
  queryParameters: ['lang'],
});

i18n.ready.catch(err => {
  console.error('Failed loading translations', err);
});

app.use(i18n.middleware);

Translations become available in the req/res objects with:

// Any controller

req.t('translations.hello.world');
// OR
res.locals.t('translations.foo.bar');

The res.locals.t syntax makes it accessible in an ejs/pug view immediately:

// index.pug
html(lang=getLanguage())
  head
    meta(property='og:locale', content=getLocale())
    for language in getLocales().filter(lang => lang !== getLocale())
      meta(property='og:locale:alternate', content=language)
  body
    p= t('translations.hello.world')

Set the locale/language

There are 4 successive ways to set/detect locale in the middleware.

  1. Query parameter: Querying /whatever?lang=en, modifies the locale for the current query, and updates the cookie for the next ones.
  2. Cookie: If absent, the middleware looks for the cookie value
  3. Header: If absent, it goes for the best match from the accept-language header.
  4. Default locale: If none of the above matched, then defaultLocale is used.

The ?lang= query parameter can be changed within the options by updating the queryParameters (note that this is an array, multiple values can be accepted).

API:

  • getLocale(): returns the current locale. Eg. 'en_US'
  • getLanguage(): returns the current langage. Eg. 'en'
  • getLocales(): returns an array of available locales: Eg. ['en_US', 'fr_FR']
  • getLanguages(): returns an array of available languages: Eg. ['en', 'fr']
  • t(root, path, data, locale):

    • root (type: Object, optional) : is the object to get translations from. It is optional as by default its value is the whole translations tree. But it can be useful in the case of an array of values:

      # elements.yml
      
      list:
        - key: foo
          value:
            en: I am crazy
            fr: Je suis fou
        - key: bar
          value:
            en: I like bars
            fr: J'aime les bars
        - key: baz
          value:
            en: I'm downstairs
            fr: Je suis en baz
      //- index.pug
      each element in t('elements.list')
        p(data-key=t(element, 'key'))= t(element, 'value')
    • path (type: string, required) : is the dot-separated succession of keys to access the value from the root. If root is not set, path becomes the first argument

      You can write, back to the example above: t('elements.list.0.value') but you are more likely to loop over the values of the array

    • data (type: object, optional) : allows to make string interpolation in translations.

      Eg.

      # emails.yml
      
      welcome:
        en: |
          Welcome ${name},
          Click on this [link](${link}) to continue.
          Best
        fr: |
          Bienvenue ${name},
          Cliquez sur ce [lien](${link}) pour poursuivre.
          Bien à vous

      Then t('emails.welcome', {name: 'Robert', link: 'http://example.com'}) will work as expected.

    • locale (type: string, optional) : most of the time you will use the selected locale in the middleware, but it is possible to override it: t('translations.hello.world', {}, 'fr').

TODOs

Feel free to contribute.

The most urgent topic will probably be:

  • deal with pluralization (I haven't had the need until now)

Licence: MIT

Copyright 2017 Augustin RIEDINGER

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

1.0.4

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1.0.2

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1.0.1

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1.0.0

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