module I18n::Base
Public Instance Methods
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 386 def available_locales_initialized? config.available_locales_initialized? end
Gets I18n
configuration object.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 57 def config Thread.current[:i18n_config] ||= I18n::Config.new end
Sets I18n
configuration object.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 62 def config=(value) Thread.current[:i18n_config] = value end
Tells the backend to load translations now. Used in situations like the Rails production environment. Backends can implement whatever strategy is useful.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 91 def eager_load! config.backend.eager_load! end
Raises an InvalidLocale
exception when the passed locale is not available.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 380 def enforce_available_locales!(locale) if locale != false && config.enforce_available_locales raise I18n::InvalidLocale.new(locale) if !locale_available?(locale) end end
Returns true if a translation exists for a given key, otherwise returns false.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 265 def exists?(key, _locale = nil, locale: _locale, **options) locale ||= config.locale raise Disabled.new('exists?') if locale == false raise I18n::ArgumentError if (key.is_a?(String) && key.empty?) || key.nil? config.backend.exists?(locale, key, options) end
Returns an array of interpolation keys for the given translation key
Examples
Suppose we have the following:
I18n.t 'example.zero' == 'Zero interpolations' I18n.t 'example.one' == 'One interpolation %{foo}' I18n.t 'example.two' == 'Two interpolations %{foo} %{bar}' I18n.t 'example.three' == ['One %{foo}', 'Two %{bar}', 'Three %{baz}'] I18n.t 'example.one', locale: :other == 'One interpolation %{baz}'
Then we can expect the following results:
I18n.interpolation_keys('example.zero') #=> [] I18n.interpolation_keys('example.one') #=> ['foo'] I18n.interpolation_keys('example.two') #=> ['foo', 'bar'] I18n.interpolation_keys('example.three') #=> ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'] I18n.interpolation_keys('one', scope: 'example', locale: :other) #=> ['baz'] I18n.interpolation_keys('does-not-exist') #=> [] I18n.interpolation_keys('example') #=> []
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 254 def interpolation_keys(key, **options) raise I18n::ArgumentError if !key.is_a?(String) || key.empty? return [] unless exists?(key, **options.slice(:locale, :scope)) translation = translate(key, **options.slice(:locale, :scope)) interpolation_keys_from_translation(translation) .flatten.compact end
Returns true when the passed locale, which can be either a String or a Symbol, is in the list of available locales. Returns false otherwise.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 375 def locale_available?(locale) I18n.config.available_locales_set.include?(locale) end
Localizes certain objects, such as dates and numbers to local formatting.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 335 def localize(object, locale: nil, format: nil, **options) locale ||= config.locale raise Disabled.new('l') if locale == false enforce_available_locales!(locale) format ||= :default config.backend.localize(locale, object, format, options) end
Merges the given locale, key and scope into a single array of keys. Splits keys that contain dots into multiple keys. Makes sure all keys are Symbols.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 363 def normalize_keys(locale, key, scope, separator = nil) separator ||= I18n.default_separator [ *normalize_key(locale, separator), *normalize_key(scope, separator), *normalize_key(key, separator) ] end
Tells the backend to reload translations. Used in situations like the Rails development environment. Backends can implement whatever strategy is useful.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 83 def reload! config.clear_available_locales_set config.backend.reload! end
Translates, pluralizes and interpolates a given key using a given locale, scope, and default, as well as interpolation values.
LOOKUP
Translation data is organized as a nested hash using the upper-level keys as namespaces. E.g., ActionView ships with the translation: :date => {:formats => {:short => "%b %d"}}
.
Translations can be looked up at any level of this hash using the key argument and the scope option. E.g., in this example I18n.t :date
returns the whole translations hash {:formats => {:short => "%b %d"}}
.
Key can be either a single key or a dot-separated key (both Strings and Symbols work). E.g., the short format can be looked up using both:
I18n.t 'date.formats.short' I18n.t :'date.formats.short'
Scope can be either a single key, a dot-separated key or an array of keys or dot-separated keys. Keys and scopes can be combined freely. So these examples will all look up the same short date format:
I18n.t 'date.formats.short' I18n.t 'formats.short', :scope => 'date' I18n.t 'short', :scope => 'date.formats' I18n.t 'short', :scope => %w(date formats)
INTERPOLATION
Translations can contain interpolation variables which will be replaced by values passed to translate
as part of the options hash, with the keys matching the interpolation variable names.
E.g., with a translation :foo => "foo %{bar}"
the option value for the key bar
will be interpolated into the translation:
I18n.t :foo, :bar => 'baz' # => 'foo baz'
PLURALIZATION
Translation data can contain pluralized translations. Pluralized translations are arrays of singular/plural versions of translations like ['Foo', 'Foos']
.
Note that I18n::Backend::Simple
only supports an algorithm for English pluralization rules. Other algorithms can be supported by custom backends.
This returns the singular version of a pluralized translation:
I18n.t :foo, :count => 1 # => 'Foo'
These both return the plural version of a pluralized translation:
I18n.t :foo, :count => 0 # => 'Foos' I18n.t :foo, :count => 2 # => 'Foos'
The :count
option can be used both for pluralization and interpolation. E.g., with the translation :foo => ['%{count} foo', '%{count} foos']
, count will be interpolated to the pluralized translation:
I18n.t :foo, :count => 1 # => '1 foo'
DEFAULTS
This returns the translation for :foo
or default
if no translation was found:
I18n.t :foo, :default => 'default'
This returns the translation for :foo
or the translation for :bar
if no translation for :foo
was found:
I18n.t :foo, :default => :bar
Returns the translation for :foo
or the translation for :bar
or default
if no translations for :foo
and :bar
were found.
I18n.t :foo, :default => [:bar, 'default']
BULK LOOKUP
This returns an array with the translations for :foo
and :bar
.
I18n.t [:foo, :bar]
Can be used with dot-separated nested keys:
I18n.t [:'baz.foo', :'baz.bar']
Which is the same as using a scope option:
I18n.t [:foo, :bar], :scope => :baz
LAMBDAS
Both translations and defaults can be given as Ruby lambdas. Lambdas will be called and passed the key and options.
E.g. assuming the key :salutation
resolves to:
lambda { |key, options| options[:gender] == 'm' ? "Mr. #{options[:name]}" : "Mrs. #{options[:name]}" }
Then I18n.t(:salutation, :gender => 'w', :name => 'Smith')
will result in “Mrs. Smith”.
Note that the string returned by lambda will go through string interpolation too, so the following lambda would give the same result:
lambda { |key, options| options[:gender] == 'm' ? "Mr. %{name}" : "Mrs. %{name}" }
It is recommended to use/implement lambdas in an “idempotent” way. E.g. when a cache layer is put in front of I18n.translate it will generate a cache key from the argument values passed to translate
. Therefore your lambdas should always return the same translations/values per unique combination of argument values.
Ruby 2.7+ keyword arguments warning
This method uses keyword arguments. There is a breaking change in ruby that produces warning with ruby 2.7 and won’t work as expected with ruby 3.0 The “hash” parameter must be passed as keyword argument.
Good:
I18n.t(:salutation, :gender => 'w', :name => 'Smith') I18n.t(:salutation, **{ :gender => 'w', :name => 'Smith' }) I18n.t(:salutation, **any_hash)
Bad:
I18n.t(:salutation, { :gender => 'w', :name => 'Smith' }) I18n.t(:salutation, any_hash)
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 211 def translate(key = nil, throw: false, raise: false, locale: nil, **options) # TODO deprecate :raise locale ||= config.locale raise Disabled.new('t') if locale == false enforce_available_locales!(locale) backend = config.backend if key.is_a?(Array) key.map do |k| translate_key(k, throw, raise, locale, backend, options) end else translate_key(key, throw, raise, locale, backend, options) end end
Wrapper for translate
that adds :raise => true
. With this option, if no translation is found, it will raise I18n::MissingTranslationData
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 230 def translate!(key, **options) translate(key, **options, raise: true) end
Transliterates UTF-8 characters to ASCII. By default this method will transliterate only Latin strings to an ASCII approximation:
I18n.transliterate("Ærøskøbing") # => "AEroskobing" I18n.transliterate("日本語") # => "???"
It’s also possible to add support for per-locale transliterations. I18n
expects transliteration rules to be stored at i18n.transliterate.rule
.
Transliteration rules can either be a Hash or a Proc. Procs must accept a single string argument. Hash rules inherit the default transliteration rules, while Procs do not.
Examples
Setting a Hash in <locale>.yml:
i18n: transliterate: rule: ü: "ue" ö: "oe"
Setting a Hash using Ruby:
store_translations(:de, i18n: { transliterate: { rule: { 'ü' => 'ue', 'ö' => 'oe' } } })
Setting a Proc:
translit = lambda {|string| MyTransliterator.transliterate(string) } store_translations(:xx, :i18n => {:transliterate => {:rule => translit})
Transliterating strings:
I18n.locale = :en I18n.transliterate("Jürgen") # => "Jurgen" I18n.locale = :de I18n.transliterate("Jürgen") # => "Juergen" I18n.transliterate("Jürgen", :locale => :en) # => "Jurgen" I18n.transliterate("Jürgen", :locale => :de) # => "Juergen"
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 324 def transliterate(key, throw: false, raise: false, locale: nil, replacement: nil, **options) locale ||= config.locale raise Disabled.new('transliterate') if locale == false enforce_available_locales!(locale) config.backend.transliterate(locale, key, replacement) rescue I18n::ArgumentError => exception handle_exception((throw && :throw || raise && :raise), exception, locale, key, options) end
Executes block with given I18n.locale set.
# File lib/i18n.rb, line 346 def with_locale(tmp_locale = nil) if tmp_locale == nil yield else current_locale = self.locale self.locale = tmp_locale begin yield ensure self.locale = current_locale end end end