Getting Started
Cldr
is an Elixir library for the Unicode Consortium’s Common Locale Data Repository (CLDR). The intentions of CLDR, and this library, it to simplify the locale specific formatting of numbers, lists, currencies, calendars, units of measure and dates/times. As of March 2017 and Version 0.1.0, Cldr
is based upon CLDR version 31.0.0.
Installation
Add ex_cldr
as a dependency to your mix
project:
defp deps do
[
{:ex_cldr, "~> 0.1.0"}
]
end
then retrieve ex_cldr
from hex:
mix deps.get
mix deps.compile
Although Cldr
is purely a library application, it should be added to your application list so that it gets bundled correctly for release. This applies for Elixir versions up to 1.3.x; version 1.4 will automatically do this for you.
def application do
[applications: [:ex_cldr]]
end
Quick Configuration
Without any specific configuration Cldr will support the “en” locale only. To support additional locales update your config.exs
file (or the relevant environment version).
config :ex_cldr,
default_locale: "en",
locales: ["fr-*", "pt-BR", "en", "pl", "ru", "th", "he"],
gettext: MyApp.Gettext
Configures a default locale of “en” (which is itself the Cldr
default). Additional locales are configured with the :locales
key. In this example, all locales starting with “fr-“ will be configured along with Brazilian Portugues, English, Polish, Russian, Thai and Hebrew.
Recompiling after a configuration change
Note that Elixir can’t determine dependencies based upon configuration so when you make changes to your Cldr
configuration a forced recompilation is required in order for the changes to take affect. To recompile:
iex> mix deps.compile ex_cldr --force
Cldr
pre-computes a lot of the CLDR specification and compiles them into functions to provide better runtime performance. Needing to recompile the dependency after a configuration change comes as a result of that.
Downloading Configured Locales
Cldr
can be installed from either github
or from hex.
If installed from github then all 514 locales are installed when the repo is cloned into your application deps.
If installed from hex then only the locales “en” and “root” are installed. When you configure additional locales these will be downloaded during application compilation. Please note above the requirement for a force recompilation in this situation.
Localizing & Formatting Numbers
The Cldr.Number
module provides number formatting. The public API for number formatting is Cldr.Number.to_string/2
. Some examples:
iex> Cldr.Number.to_string 12345
"12,345"
iex> Cldr.Number.to_string 12345, locale: "fr"
"12 345"
iex> Cldr.Number.to_string 12345, locale: "fr", currency: "USD"
"12 345,00 $US"
iex(4)> Cldr.Number.to_string 12345, format: "#E0"
"1.2345E4"
iex(> Cldr.Number.to_string 1234, format: :roman
"MCCXXXIV"
iex> Cldr.Number.to_string 1234, format: :ordinal
"1,234th"
iex> Cldr.Number.to_string 1234, format: :spellout
"one thousand two hundred thirty-four"
See h Cldr.Number
and h Cldr.Number.to_string
in iex
for further information.
Localizing Lists
The Cldr.List
module provides list formatting. The public API for list formating is Cldr.List.to_string/2
. Some examples:
iex> Cldr.List.to_string(["a", "b", "c"], locale: "en")
"a, b, and c"
iex> Cldr.List.to_string(["a", "b", "c"], locale: "en", format: :unit_narrow)
"a b c"
iex> Cldr.List.to_string(["a", "b", "c"], locale: "fr")
"a, b et c"
Seer h Cldr.List
and h Cldr.List.to_string
in iex
for further information.
Localizing Units
The Cldr.Unit
module provides unit formatting. The public API for unit formating is Cldr.Unit.to_string/3
. Some examples:
iex> Cldr.Unit.to_string 123, :volume_gallon
"123 gallons"
iex> Cldr.Unit.to_string 1234, :volume_gallon, format: :long
"1 thousand gallons"
iex> Cldr.Unit.to_string 1234, :volume_gallon, format: :short
"1K gallons"
iex> Cldr.Unit.to_string 1234, :frequency_megahertz
"1,234 megahertz"
iex> Cldr.Unit.available_units
[:volume_gallon, :pressure_pound_per_square_inch, :digital_terabyte,
:digital_bit, :digital_gigabit, :digital_kilobit, :volume_pint,
:speed_kilometer_per_hour, :concentr_part_per_million, :energy_calorie,
:volume_milliliter, :length_fathom, :length_foot, :volume_cubic_yard,
:mass_microgram, :length_nautical_mile, :volume_deciliter,
:consumption_mile_per_gallon, :volume_bushel, :volume_cubic_centimeter,
:length_light_year, :volume_gallon_imperial, :speed_meter_per_second,
:power_kilowatt, :power_watt, :length_millimeter, :digital_gigabyte,
:duration_nanosecond, :length_centimeter, :volume_cup_metric,
:length_kilometer, :angle_degree, :acceleration_g_force, :electric_ampere,
:volume_quart, :duration_century, :angle_revolution, :volume_hectoliter,
:area_square_meter, :digital_megabyte, :light_lux, :duration_year,
:energy_kilocalorie, :frequency_megahertz, :power_horsepower,
:volume_cubic_meter, :area_hectare, :frequency_hertz, :length_furlong,
:length_astronomical_unit, ...]
See h Cldr.Unit
and h Cldr.Unit.to_string
in iex
for further information.
Localizing Dates, Times
Not currently supported, but they’re next on the development priority list.
- Dates/times on track to ship in March 2017 (delayed from an original January plan).
Gettext Integration
There is an experimental plurals module for Gettext called Cldr.Gettext.Plural
. Its not yet fully tested. It is configured in Gettext
by:
defmodule MyApp.Gettext do
use Gettext, plural_forms: Cldr.Gettext.Plural
end
Cldr.Gettext.Plural
will fall back to Gettext
pluralisation if the locale is not known to Cldr
. This module is only compiled if Gettext
is configured as a dependency in your project.
Phoenix Integration
There is an imcomplete (ie development not finished) implemenation of a Plug
intended to parse the HTTP accept-language
header into Cldr
compatible locale and number system. Since it’s not development complete it definitely won’t work yet. Comments and ideas (and pull requests) are, however, welcome.
About Locale strings
Note that Cldr
defines locale string according to the Unicode standard:
- Language codes are two lowercase letters (ie “en”, not “EN”)
- Potentially one or more modifiers separated by “-“ (dash), not a “_“. (underscore). If you configure a
Gettext
module thenCldr
will transliterateGettext
’s “_“ into “-“ for compatibility. - Typically the modifier is a territory code. This is commonly a two-letter uppercase combination. For example “pt-BR” is the locale referring to Brazilian Portugese.
- In
Cldr
a locale is always abinary
and never anatom
. Locale strings are often passed around in HTTP headers and converting to atoms creates an attack vector we can do without. - The locales known to
Cldr
can be retrieved byCldr.known_locales
to get the locales known to this configuration ofCldr
andCldr.all_locales
to get the locales available in the CLDR data repository.
Testing
Tests cover the full 514 locales defined in CLDR. Since Cldr
attempts to maximumize the work done at compile time in order to minimize runtime execution, the compilation phase for tests is several minutes.
Tests are run on Elixir 1.3.4 and 1.4.2.
Note that on 1.3 it is possible that ExUnit
will timeout loading the tests. There is a fixed limit of 60 seconds to load tests which, for 514 locales, may not be enough. This timeout is configurable on Elixir 1.4. You can configure it in config.exs
(or test.exs
) as follows:
config :ex_unit,
case_load_timeout: 120_000