Idiom (idiom v0.6.8)

A new take on internationalisation in Elixir.

Basic usage

# Set the locale
Idiom.put_locale("en-US")

t("landing.welcome")

# With natural language key
t("Hello Idiom!")

# With interpolation
t("Good morning, {{name}}. We hope you are having a great day.", %{name: "Tim"})

# With plural and interpolation
# `count` is a magic option that automatically is available as binding.
t("You need to buy {{count}} carrots", count: 1)

# With namespace
t("Create your account", namespace: "signup")
Idiom.put_namespace("signup")
t("Create your account")

# With explicit locale
t("Create your account", to: "fr")

# With fallback key
t(["Create your account", "Register"])

# With fallback locale
t("Create your account", to: "fr", fallback: "en")

Installation

To start off, add idiom to the list of your dependencies:

def deps do
  {:idiom, "~> 0.1"},
end

Additionally, in order to be able refresh translations in the background, add Idiom's Supervisor to your application:

def start(_type, _args) do
  children = [
    Idiom,
  ]

  # ...
end

Configuration

There are a few things around Idiom that you can configure on an application level. The following fence shows all of Idiom's settings and their defaults.

config :idiom,
  default_locale: "en",
  default_fallback: "en",
  default_namespace: "default",
  data_dir: "priv/idiom",
  backend: nil

In order to configure your backend, please have a look at its module documentation.

Locales

When calling t/3, Idiom looks at the following settings to determine which locale to translate the key to, in order of priority:

  1. The explicit to option. When you call t("key", to: "fr"), Idiom will always use fr as a locale.
  2. The locale set in the current process. You can call Idiom.put_locale/1 to set it. Since this is just a wrapper around the process dictionary, it needs to be set for each process you are using Idiom in.
  3. The default_locale setting. See the Configuration section for more details on how to set it.

Resolution hierarchy

A note on examples

For ease of presentation, whenever an example in this module documentation includes a translation file for context, it will be merged from the multiple files that Idiom.Source.Local actually expects. Instead of giving you the contents of all en/default.json, en-US/default.json, en-GB/default.json and others, it will be represented here as one merged file, such as:

{ 
  "en": {"default": { [Contents of what would usually be `en/default.json` ] }},
  "en-US": {"default": { [Contents of what would usually be `en-US/default.json` ] }},
  ...
}

Locale codes can consist of multiple parts. Taking zh-Hant-HK as an example, we have the language (zh - Chinese), the script (Hant, Tradtional) and the region (HK - Hong Kong). For different regions, there might only be differences for some specific keys, whereas all other keys share a translation. In order to prevent needless repetition in your translation workflow, Idiom will always try to resolve translations in all of language, language and script, and language, script and region variants, in order of specifity.

Taking the following file as an example (see also File format):

{
  "en": {
    "default": {
      "Create your account": "Create your account"
    }
  },
  "en-US": {
    "default": {
      "Take the elevator": "Take the elevator"
    }
  },
  "en-GB": {
    "default": {
      "Take the elevator": "Take the lift"
    }
  }
}

The Create your account message is the same for both American and British English, whereas the key Take the elevator has different wording for each. With Idiom's resolution hierarchy, you can use both en-US and en-GB to refer to the Create your account key as well.

iex> t("Take the elevator", to: "en-US")
"Take the elevator"

iex> t("Take the elevator", to: "en-GB")
"Take the lift"

# Will first try to resolve the key in the `en-US` locale, then, since it does not exist, try `en`.
iex> t("Create your account", to: "en-US")
"Create your account"

iex> t("Create your account", to: "en-GB")
"Create your account"

Fallback keys

For scenarios where multiple keys might apply, t/3 allows specifying a list of keys as well.

t(["Create your account", "Register"], to: "en-US")

This snippet will first try to resolve the Create your account key, and fall back to resolving Register when it does not exist.

Fallback locales

For when a key might not be available in the set locale, you can set a fallback locale.
A fallback can be either a string or a list of strings. If you set the fallback as a list, Idiom will return the translation of the first locale for which the key is available.

When you don't explicitly set a fallback for t/3, Idiom will try the default_fallback (see Configuration). When a key is available in neither the target or any of the fallback language, the key will be returned as-is.

# will return the translation for `en`
t("Key that is only available in `en` and `fr`", to: "es", fallback: "en")
# will return the translation for `fr`
t("Key that is only available in `en` and `fr`", to: "es", fallback: ["fr", "en"])
# will return the translation for `en`, which is set as `default_fallback`
t("Key that is only available in `en` and `fr`", to: "es")
# will return "Key that is not available in any locale"
t("Key that is not available in any locale", to: "es")

Using fallback keys and locales together

When both fallback keys and locales are provided, Idiom will first try to resolve all keys in each locale before jumping to the next one.
For example, the resolution order for t(["Create your account", "Register"], to: "es", fallback: ["fr", "de"]) will be:

  1. Create your account in es
  2. Register in es
  3. Create your account in fr
  4. Register in fr
  5. Create your account in de
  6. Register in de

Namespaces

Idiom allows grouping your keys into namespaces.

When calling t/3, Idiom looks at the following settings to determine which namespace to resolve the key in, in order of priority:

  1. The namespace option, like t("Create your account", namespace: "signup")
  2. The namespace set in the current process. You can call Idiom.put_namespace/1 to set it.
    Since this is just a wrapper around the process dictionary, it needs to be set for each process you are using Idiom in.
  3. The default_namespace setting. See the Configuration section for more details on how to set it.

Interpolation

Idiom supports interpolation in messages.
Interpolation can be added by adding an interpolation key to the message, enclosing it in {{}}. Then, you can bind the key to any string by passing it as key inside the second parameter of t/3.

Taking the following file as an example (see also File format):

{
  "en": {
    "default": {
      "Welcome, {{name}}": "Welcome, {{name}}",
      "It is currently {{temperature}} degrees in {{city}}": "It is currently {{temperature}} degrees in {{city}}"
    }
  }
}

These messages can then be interpolated as such:

iex> t("Welcome, {{name}}", %{name: "Tim"})
"Welcome, Tim"

iex> t("It is currently {{temperature}} degrees in {{city}}", %{temperature: "31", city: "Hong Kong"})
"It is currently 31 degrees in Hong Kong"

Pluralisation

Idiom supports the following key suffixes for pluralisation:

  • zero
  • one
  • two
  • few
  • many
  • other

Your keys, for English, might then look like this:

{
  "carrot_one": "{{count}} carrot"
  "carrot_other": "{{count}} carrots"
}

You can then pluralise your messages by passing count to t/3, such as:

iex> t("carrot", count: 1)
"1 carrot"

iex> t("carrot", count: 2)
"2 carrots"

{{count}} and pluralisation

As you can see in the above example, we are not passing an extra %{count: x} binding. This is because the count option acts as a magic binding that is automatically available for interpolation.

Backends

Idiom is backend-agnostic and allows configuring different providers which are grouped under Idiom.Backend.

Phrase

Phrase Strings is supported inside the Idiom.Backend.Phrase module.

Lokalise

Lokalise is supported inside the Idiom.Backend.Lokalise module.

Summary

Functions

Returns the locale that will be used by t/3.

Returns the namespace that will be used by t/3.

Sets the locale for the current process.

Sets the namespace for the current process.

Alias of t/3 for when you don't need any bindings.

Translates a key into a target language.

Types

Link to this type

translate_opts()

@type translate_opts() :: [
  namespace: String.t(),
  to: String.t(),
  fallback: String.t() | [String.t()],
  count: integer() | float() | Decimal.t() | String.t(),
  plural: :cardinal | :ordinal,
  cache_table_name: atom()
]

Functions

Link to this function

direction(locale)

See Idiom.Locales.direction/1.

@spec get_locale() :: String.t()

Returns the locale that will be used by t/3.

Examples

iex> Idiom.get_locale()
"en-US"
Link to this function

get_namespace()

@spec get_namespace() :: String.t()

Returns the namespace that will be used by t/3.

Examples

iex> Idiom.get_namespace()
"default"
Link to this function

put_locale(locale)

@spec put_locale(String.t()) :: String.t()

Sets the locale for the current process.

Examples

iex> Idiom.put_locale("fr-FR")
"fr-FR"
Link to this function

put_namespace(namespace)

@spec put_namespace(String.t()) :: String.t()

Sets the namespace for the current process.

Examples

iex> Idiom.put_namespace("signup")
"signup"
Link to this function

t(key_or_keys, opts)

@spec t(String.t() | [String.t()], translate_opts()) :: String.t()

Alias of t/3 for when you don't need any bindings.

Link to this function

t(key_or_keys, bindings \\ %{}, opts \\ [])

@spec t(String.t() | [String.t()], map(), translate_opts()) :: String.t()

Translates a key into a target language.

Examples

iex> Idiom.t("hello", to: "es")
"hola"

# With process-wide locale
iex> Idiom.put_locale("fr")
iex> Idiom.t("hello")
"bonjour"

# If neither `:to` option is provided nor `:lang` is set in the process, it will check the application configuration:
# Given `config :idiom, default_lang: "en"` is set in the `config.exs` file:
iex> Idiom.t("hello")
"hello"

# If a key does not exist in the target language, it will use the `:fallback` option:
iex> Idiom.t("hello", to: "de", fallback: "fr")
"bonjour"

# If a key does not exist in the target language or the first fallback language:
iex> Idiom.t("hello", to: "de", fallback: ["pl", "fr"])
"bonjour"