Nestjs localization provides a convenient way to retrieve strings in various languages, allowing you to easily support multiple languages within your application.
- Table of Contents
- Installation
- Getting Started
- Defining Translation Strings
- Retrieving Translation Strings
- Replacing Parameters In Translation Strings
- Pluralization
- Contributing
- About Us
- License
To install the package, run :
npm i @squareboat/nestjs-localization
Or if you are using yarn
yarn add @squareboat/nestjs-localization
Language strings may be stored in files within the a directory. Within this directory, the translation strings are to be defined in JSON files.When taking this approach, each language supported by your application would have a corresponding JSON file within this directory. This approach is recommended for application's that have a large number of translatable strings.
We would recommend you to store the files in resources/lang
directory. Also, it is recommended to name your language files using the language ISO-2 codes.You need to pass the absolute path to the directory you decide to store your files in, while registering the module.
Recommended directory structure :
/resources
/lang
en.json
es.json
/src
package.json
Once you have the @squareboat/nestjs-localization
package installed in your project. You'll need to import the module into your application. You can import the module statically or dynamically. You also need to specify a fallback language that the package will fall back to if no language is specified or the key for that language is not available.
To import the module statically, you can do
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { LocalizationModule } from '@squareboat/nestjs-localization/dist/src';
@Module({
imports: [
LocalizationModule.register({
path: 'absolute/path/to/your/resource/directory',
fallbackLang: 'en',
}),
],
})
export class AppModule {}
To import the module dynamically, create a configuration and load it into your Config Module
. Read about it here.
import { registerAs } from '@nestjs/config';
export default registerAs('localization', () => ({
path: 'absolute/path/to/your/resource/directory',
fallbackLang: 'en',
}));
Now that the configuration is loaded, you can import your module asynchronously.
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { LocalizationModule } from '@squareboat/nestjs-localization/dist/src'';
@Module({
imports: [
LocalizationModule.registerAsync({
imports: [ConfigModule],
useFactory: (config: ConfigService) => config.get('localization'),
inject: [ConfigService],
}),
],
})
export class AppModule {}
Typically, translation strings are stored in files within the resources/lang directory. Within this directory you'll have JSON files contianing the key value pairs for a particular language.
For example, if your application has a English translation, you should create a resources/lang/en.json
file:
// en.json
{
"welcome": "Welcome to this application",
"helloWorld": "Hello World"
}
For applications with a large number of translatable strings, defining every string with a "short key" can become confusing when referencing the keys in your views and it is cumbersome to continually invent keys for every translation string supported by your application.
For example, if your application has a German translation, you should create a resources/lang/de.json
file:
// de.json
{
"Have a good day": "Haben Sie einen guten Tag"
}
Also, you can nest your strings inside the json file. Example :
// en.json
{
"greetings": {
"morning": "Good Morning",
"evening": "Good Evening"
}
}
NOTE You should not create conflicting keys i.e 2 keys should not have the same name.
You may retrieve translation strings from your language files using the __
helper function. The __
function takes 2 required arguments, the key of the translation string you wish of retrive and the language code. You can use .
the dot notation to refer to nested strings.
__(key: string, language?: string, options?: Record<string, any>): string
Examples :
__('helloWorld', 'en'); // returns => Hello Worlds
__('Have a good day', 'de'); // returns => Haben Sie einen guten Tag
__('greetings.morning', 'en'); // returns => Good Morning
__('randomKey', 'en'); // returns => ERR::INVALID KEY ==> randomKey
You can also skip the language parameter if you wish to and the package will use the fallback language as the speified language. Examples :
__('helloWorld'); // returns => Hello World
__('greetings.morning'); // returns => Good Morning
__('randomKey'); // returns => ERR::INVALID KEY ==> randomKey
If you wish, you may define placeholders in your translation strings. All placeholders are prefixed with a :
. For example, you may define a personalized hello message with a placeholder name:
// en.json
{
"hello": "Hello, :name"
}
To replace the placeholders when retrieving a translation string, you may pass an array of replacements as the second argument to the __
function:
__('hello', 'en', { name: 'jeo' }); // returns => Hello, jeo
If your placeholder contains all capital letters, or only has its first letter capitalized, the translated value will be capitalized accordingly:
"hello": "Hello, :Name" // Hello, Jeo
// OR
"hello": "Hello, :NAME" // Hello, JEO
Pluralization is a complex problem, as different languages have a variety of complex rules for pluralization; however, @squareboat/nestjs-localization
can help you translate strings differently based on pluralization rules that you define. Using a |
character, you may distinguish singular and plural forms of a string:
"apples" : "There is one apples|There are many apples"
You may even create more complex pluralization rules which specify translation strings for multiple ranges of values:
"apples": "[0] There is no apple|[1,10] There are some apples|[11,*] There are many apples",
After defining a translation string that has pluralization options, you may use the transChoice
function to retrieve the line for a given "count".
transChoice(
key: string,
language?: string | number,
count?: number | Record<string, any>,
options?: Record<string, any>,
): string
In this example, since the count is greater than one, the plural form of the translation string is returned:
transChoice('apples', 'en', 10); // returns => There are some apples
If you want the string to use the fallback language you can omit the 2nd parameter as shown below :
transChoice('apples', 10); // returns => There are some apples
NOTE : The count agrument is required for tranChoice
You may also define placeholder attributes in pluralization strings. These placeholders may be replaced by passing an array as the third argument to the transChoice
function:
// en.json
{
"time": {
"minutes_ago": "[1] :value minute ago|[2,*] :value minutes ago"
}
}
transChoice('time.minutes_ago', 'en', 5, { value: 5 }); // returns => 5 minutes ago
If you would like to display the integer value that was passed to the transChoice
function, you may use the built-in :count
placeholder:
// en.json
{
"apples": "[0] There are none|[1] There is one|[2,*] There are :count apples"
}
transChoice('apples', 'en', 30); // returns => There are 30 apples
To know about contributing to this package, read the guidelines here
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