gettext v0.17.1 Gettext.Plural behaviour View Source
Behaviour and default implementation for finding plural forms in given locales.
This module both defines the Gettext.Plural
behaviour and provides a default
implementation for it.
Plural forms
For a given language, there is a grammatical rule on how to change words depending on the number qualifying the word. Different languages can have different rules. [source]
Such grammatical rules define a number of plural forms. For example, English has two plural forms: one for when there is just one element (the singular) and another one for when there are zero or more than one elements (the plural). There are languages which only have one plural form and there are languages which have more than two.
In GNU Gettext (and in Gettext for Elixir), plural forms are represented by
increasing 0-indexed integers. For example, in English 0
means singular and
1
means plural.
The goal of this module is to determine, given a locale:
- how many plural forms exist in that locale (
nplurals/1
); - to what plural form a given number of elements belongs to in that locale
(
plural/2
).
Default implementation
Gettext.Plural
provides a default implementation of a plural module. Most
languages used on Earth should be covered by this default implementation. If
custom pluralization rules are needed (for example, to add additional
languages) a different plural module can be specified when creating a Gettext
backend. For example, pluralization rules for the Elvish language could be
added as follows:
defmodule MyApp.Plural do
@behaviour Gettext.Plural
def nplurals("elv"), do: 3
def plural("elv", 0), do: 0
def plural("elv", 1), do: 1
def plural("elv", _), do: 2
# Fallback to Gettext.Plural
def nplurals(locale), do: Gettext.Plural.nplurals(locale)
def plural(locale, n), do: Gettext.Plural.plural(locale, n)
end
defmodule MyApp.Gettext do
use Gettext, otp_app: :my_app, plural_forms: MyApp.Plural
end
The mathematical expressions used in this module to determine the plural form of a given number of elements are taken from this page as well as from Mozilla's guide on "Localization and plurals".
Unknown locales
Trying to call Gettext.Plural
functions with unknown locales will result in
a Gettext.Plural.UnknownLocaleError
exception.
Language and country
Often, a locale is composed as a language and country couple, such as
en_US
. The default implementation for Gettext.Plural
handles xx_YY
by
forwarding it to xx
(except for just Brazilian Portuguese, pt_BR
, which
is not forwarded to pt
as pluralization rules slightly differ). We treat the
underscore as a separator according to ISO 15897. Sometimes, a dash -
is
used as a separator (for example, en-US
): this is not forwarded to en
in the
default Gettext.Plural
(and it will raise an Gettext.Plural.UnknownLocaleError
exception).
Examples
An example of the plural form of a given number of elements in the Polish language:
iex> Plural.plural("pl", 1)
0
iex> Plural.plural("pl", 2)
1
iex> Plural.plural("pl", 5)
2
iex> Plural.plural("pl", 112)
2
As expected, nplurals/1
returns the possible number of plural forms:
iex> Plural.nplurals("pl")
3
Link to this section Summary
Callbacks
Returns the number of possible plural forms in the given locale
.
Returns the plural form in the given locale
for the given count
of
elements.
Link to this section Functions
nplurals(locale) View Source
plural(locale, count) View Source
Link to this section Callbacks
nplurals(locale)
View Source
nplurals(locale :: String.t()) :: pos_integer()
nplurals(locale :: String.t()) :: pos_integer()
Returns the number of possible plural forms in the given locale
.
plural(locale, count)
View Source
plural(locale :: String.t(), count :: integer()) ::
plural_form :: non_neg_integer()
plural(locale :: String.t(), count :: integer()) :: plural_form :: non_neg_integer()
Returns the plural form in the given locale
for the given count
of
elements.