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Localization
The snippets below show how to use localized strings in core Brackets code.
In JavaScript
var Strings = require("strings"); // load the Strings module
...
$("<span/>").text(Strings.CMD_ABOUT); // insert a localized string
In an HTML template
<!-- templateContent.html -->
<span>{{CMD_ABOUT}}</span>
/* JavaScript */
var Strings = require("strings"),
templateContent = require("text!templateContent.html"); // load text content of template file
var html = Mustache.render(templateContent, Strings); // use Mustache to insert translated strings
Because word order varies between languages, don't assume you can append separate strings together in a fixed order (e.g. using +
in JavaScript). Instead, make a single parameterized string:
- Let's say you need to make a message that looks like "Current position: item I out of N."
- Figure out which parts vary dynamically: "I" and "N" in this case.
- Add parameterized string in strings.js:
CURRENT_POSITION: "Current position: item {0} out of {1}",
- Dynamically substitute values in JavaScript:
StringUtils.format(Strings.CURRENT_POSITION, currentIndex, items.length)
TODO: explain how to do this in HTML/Mustache strings...
Brackets uses the i18n plugin for RequireJS to load translations. The locale is determined by brackets.app.language
(navigator.language
isn't used due to a CEF3 bug). Our main strings
module re-exports the root bundle (i.e. require("i18n!nls/strings.js")
). Client code should only use the main strings module (i.e. require("strings")
).
As of Sprint 13, brackets-shell hardcodes strings for both English and French, primarily for the limited set of native menus. Once native menus are implemented, there will be no translated strings in brackets-shell.
Creating new translations - README
How to Localize Your Extension - README (part of the sample localized extension included in the Brackets source)