@lingui/core - The core i18n functionality¶
@lingui/core
package provides the main i18n object which manages message catalogs,
active locale as well as translation and formatting of messages.
Installation¶
npm install --save @lingui/core
# Or using yarn
# yarn add @lingui/core
Overview¶
@lingui/core
package exports the global instance of i18n
object. Simply import
it and use it:
import { i18n } from "@lingui/core"
// import plural rules for all locales
import { en, cs } from "make-plural/plurals"
i18n.loadLocaleData("en", { plurals: en })
i18n.loadLocaleData("cs", { plurals: cs })
/**
* Load messages for requested locale and activate it.
* This function isn't part of the LinguiJS library because there are
* many ways how to load messages — from REST API, from file, from cache, etc.
*/
async function activate(locale: string) {
const { messages } = await import(`${locale}/messages.js`)
i18n.load(locale, messages)
i18n.activate(locale)
}
activate("cs")
// returns the Czech translation of "Hello World"
const translation = i18n._("Hello World")
If you don’t want to use the global i18n
instance and you want to setup your own,
you can use setupI18n()
method. You also need to set runtimeConfigModule
for macros to work correctly:
// If you import `i18n` object from custom module like this:
import { i18n } from "./custom-i18n-config"
// ... then add following line to your Lingui configuration:
// "runtimeConfigModule": ["./custom-i18n-config", "i18n"]
Reference¶
-
class
I18n
()¶ -
I18n.
load
(catalogs: Catalogs)¶
-
I18n.
load
(locale: string, catalog: Catalog)¶ Load catalog for given locale or load multiple catalogs at once.
import { i18n } from "@lingui/core" const messages = { "Hello": "Hello", "Good bye": "Good bye", // Just an example how catalog looks internally. // Formatting of string messages works in development only. // See note below. "My name is {name}": "My name is {name}" } const messagesCs = { "Hello": "Ahoj", "Good bye": "Nashledanou", "My name is {name}": "Jmenuji se {name}" } i18n.load({ en: messagesEn, cs: messagesCs }) // This is the same as loading message catalogs separately per language: // i18n.load('en', messagesEn) // i18n.load('cs', messagesCs)
Important
Don’t write catalogs manually
Code above contains an example of message catalogs. In real applications, messages are loaded from external message catalogs generated by
compile
command.Formatting of messages as strings (e.g:
"My name is {name}"
) works in development only, when messages are parsed on the fly. In production, however, messages must be compiled usingcompile
command.The same example would in real application look like this:
import { i18n } from "@lingui/core" // File generated by `lingui compile` import { messages: messagesEn } from "./locale/en/messages.js" i18n.load('en', messagesEn)
-
I18n.
activate
(locale[, locales])¶ Activate a locale and locales.
_()
from now on will return messages in given locale.import { i18n } from "@lingui/core" i18n.activate("en") i18n._("Hello") // Return "Hello" in English i18n.activate("cs") i18n._("Hello") // Return "Hello" in Czech
-
I18n.
_
(messageId[, values[, options]])¶ The core method for translating and formatting messages.
messageId
is a unique message ID which identifies message in catalog.values
is an object of variables used in translated message.options.defaults
is the default translation (optional). This is mostly used when application doesn’t use message IDs in natural language (e.g.:msg.id
orComponent.title
).import { i18n } from "@lingui/core" // Simple message i18n._("Hello") // Message with variables i18n._("My name is {name}", { name: "Tom" }) // Message with custom messageId i18n._("msg.id", { name: "Tom" }, { defaults: "My name is {name}" })
-
-
setupI18n
([options])¶ - Returns
instance of I18n
Initialize and return a new I18n instance. Usually you want to call it just once and then use returned
i18n
object across whole codebase.Important
You don’t need to setup i18n instance
In most cases you can use the global
i18n
object exported from@lingui/core
directly.However, if you do need to setup your own
i18n
instance, remember to also setruntimeConfigModule
work macros to work properly:// If you import `i18n` object from custom module like this: import { i18n } from "./custom-i18n-config" // ... then add following line to your Lingui configuration: // "runtimeConfigModule": ["./custom-i18n-config", "i18n"]
import { setupI18n } from "@lingui/core" const i18n = setupI18n()
The factory function accepts one optional parameter,
options
:-
options.
locale
¶ Initial active locale.
import { setupI18n } from "@lingui/core" const i18n = setupI18n({ locale: "en" }) // This is a shortcut for: // const i18n = setupI18n() // i18n.activate("en")
-
options.
locales
¶ List of alternative locales (BCP 47 langauge tags) which are used for number and date formatting (some countries use more than one number/date format). If not set, active locale is used instead.
import { setupI18n } from "@lingui/core" const i18n = setupI18n({ locale: "ar", locales: ["en-UK", "ar-AS"] }) // This is a shortcut for: // const i18n = setupI18n() // i18n.activate("en", ["en-UK", "ar-AS"])
-
options.
messages
¶ Initial
Messages
.import { setupI18n } from "@lingui/core" const messages: { en: require("./locale/en/messages").messages, // your path to compiled messages here cs: require("./locale/cs/messages").messages // your path to compiled messages here } const i18n = setupI18n({ messages }) // This is a shortcut for: // const i18n = setupI18n() // i18n.load(messages)
-
options.
missing
¶ Custom message to be returned when translation is missing. This is useful for debugging:
import { setupI18n } from "@lingui/core" const i18n = setupI18n({ missing: "🚨" }) i18n._('missing translation') === "🚨"
This might be also a function which is called with active language and message ID:
import { setupI18n } from "@lingui/core" function missing(language, id) { alert(`Translation in ${language} for ${id} is missing!`) return id } const i18n = setupI18n({ missing }) i18n._('missing translation') // raises alert
-
Catalogs
¶ Type of
catalogs
parameters inI18n.load()
method:type Catalogs = {[locale: string]: Catalog} // Example: const catalogs: Catalogs = { en: { messages: { "Hello": "Hello", "Good bye": "Good bye" } }, cs: { messages: { "Hello": "Ahoj", "Good bye": "Nashledanou" } } }
-
Catalog
¶ Message catalog contains messages and language data (plurals). This object is usually generated in CLI:
type Catalog = { languageData: { plurals: Function }, messages: Messages }