JavaScript Gettext .mo
file parsing for Jed.
Gettext is an old translation standard with implementations in many languages. It's one that localisation-aware programmers and translators are likely to be familiar with.
Jed provides a very nice interface for translation using Gettext in Javascript.
Jed doesn't supply Gettext translation file parsers, so this library can act as the bridge between Gettext binary files and Jed.
Note: Jed Gettext Parser is made to work with Jed, but is a third-party library. Please direct any support queries to this repository's issue tracker, and the author.
Jed Gettext Parser can be loaded as a browser global, an AMD module, or in Node. It requires support for:
Node.js supports both since version 11.0.0.
<script src="jedGettextParser.js"></script>
<script>
// Use jedGettextParser
</script>
require(['jedGettextParser'], function(jedGettextParser) {
// Use jedGettextParser
});
npm install jed-gettext-parser
var jedGettextParser = require('jed-gettext-parser');
// Use jedGettextParser
Once you've loaded Jed and Jed Gettext Parser, they can can be used together:
var moBuffer = new ArrayBuffer();
// Fill the moBuffer with the contents of a .mo file in whatever way you like.
// locale_data is an object holding locale data as expected by Jed.
var locale_data = jedGettextParser.mo.parse(moBuffer);
// Now load using Jed.
var i18n = new Jed({
'locale_data': locale_data,
'domain': 'messages'
});
The library currently exposes only one function:
var data = jedGettextParser.mo.parse(buffer[, options]);
data
: an object that can be used as the value of Jed'slocale_data
initialisation option.buffer
: anArrayBuffer
object that holds the contents of the.mo
file to parse.options
: an object that can be optionally provided to specify some settings.
The options
object has the following structure (default values given):
var options = {
encoding: undefined,
domain: 'messages'
}
encoding
: The encoding to use when reading the.mo
file. If undefined, the encoding given in the.mo
file will be used. Otherwise, valid values are those given in the Encoding API specification.domain
: The domain under which the translation data should be stored.
If an issue is encountered during parsing, an Error
object describing the problem will be thrown.
There are two types of Gettext translation files: the .po
files contain human-readable text that can be easily edited by translators, and the .mo
files contain equivalent binary data. Some Gettext implementations use one, the other, or both.
While developing a Chromium Embedded Framework-based application (LOOT) which required localisation of strings in the C++ and the Javascript code, I decided that parsing the .mo
localisation files in each language separately was the neatest and simplest way of achieving this. The only Javascript .mo
file parser I could find was gettext-parser, and it's Node-only, so I wrote this little library.
I used gettext-parser to cross-check my understanding of the Gettext mo file spec, and as inspiration for this library's API, so thanks to Andris Reinman for writing it.