i18n-web is a simple tool helps in externalizing the strings in a JavaScript based Application such that, Internationalization(i18n) can be achieved easily. It has the additional capability of parameterizing the strings to get the dynamic content Internationalized.
MIT License
i18n-web
is a simple tool helps in externalizing the strings in a JavaScript based Application such that, Internationalization(i18n) can be achieved easily. It has the additional capability of parameterizing the strings to get the dynamic content Internationalized.
yarn add i18n-web
npm install i18n-web
String Externalization means, instead of writing the user(or customer) facing strings in source files(.html, .js, .java etc), we keep them in an external file like .properties, .json etc and load from there. This is to help Internationalization (i18n).
In Software, Internationalization (i18n) is the process to support various local languages like, English(en), Spanish(es), German(de) etc.
All the browsers come with the in-built support of languages which can be used to identify the local language to support for the application.
A Web Application may have the need of supporting multiple languages based on the targeted users. If the Application Strings are Externalized outside of the source files, it is easy and flexible to support i18n.
Lets consider, all the application strings are in a file called en.json
and this file can be loaded into the application to retrieve the strings when the app is running in English Language.
{
'username': 'User Name',
'password': 'Password',
'hasBlog': '{0} has a blog named, {1}. This is on {2}.'
}
Now there could be equivalent es.json
file which can be loaded into the application when browser supported language is Spanish instead of English.
{
'username': 'Nombre de usuario',
'password': 'Contraseña',
'hasBlog': '{0} tiene un blog llamado {1}. Esto está en {2}.'
}
The tool i18n-web
helps in externalizing the string and thus, internationalizing your web app with few quick and easy steps.
i18n
at the same level of node_modules
folder of your app.en.js
, es.js
, de.js
etc file to contain your application specific strings externalized. You must add all required language .js files that your app would support.Here is an example of the en.js and es.js file.
// en.js
const en = {
'username': 'User Name',
'password': 'Password',
'hasBlog': '{0} has a blog named, {1}. This is on {2}.'
}
export { en };
// es.js
const es = {
'username': 'Nombre de usuario',
'password': 'Contraseña',
'hasBlog': '{0} tiene un blog llamado {1}. Esto está en {2}.'
}
export { es };
index.js
where you can aggregate the all modules and export together like this:export { en } from './en.js';
export { es } from './es.js';
Example Directory Structure:
myapp
└── i18n
└── en.js
└── es.js
└── de.js
└── fr.js
└── index.js
└── node_modules
import i18n from 'i18n-web';
// When no parameters. Just Key is passed
console.log(i18n('usename'));
// Output:
// 'User Name' for English
// 'Nombre de usuario' for Spanish
// With parameters.
const params = ['Tapas', 'greenroos', 'JavaScript'];
let hasBlog = i18n('hasBlog', ...params);
console.log(hasBlog);
// Output:
// 'Tapas has a blog named, greenroots. This is on JavaScript.' for English and
// 'Tapas tiene un blog llamado greenroots. Esto está en JavaScript.' for Spanish