Dean Karn 478fb7294a rework example, code cleanup + update README | 8 years ago | |
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examples | 8 years ago | |
.gitignore | 8 years ago | |
LICENSE | 8 years ago | |
README.md | 8 years ago | |
benchmarks_test.go | 8 years ago | |
errors.go | 8 years ago | |
logo.png | 8 years ago | |
translator.go | 8 years ago | |
translator_test.go | 8 years ago | |
universal-translator.go | 8 years ago |
Universal Translator is an i18n Translator for Go/Golang using CLDR data + pluralization rules
Because none of the plural rules seem to be correct out there, including the previous implimentation of this package, so I took it upon myself to create locales for everyone to use; this package is a thin wrapper around locales in order to store and translate text for use in your applications.
Use go get
go get github.com/go-playground/universal-translator
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/go-playground/locales"
"github.com/go-playground/universal-translator"
)
// only one instance as translators within are shared + goroutine safe
var universalTraslator *ut.UniversalTranslator
func main() {
// NOTE: this example is omitting allot of error checking for brevity
universalTraslator, _ = ut.New("en", "en", "en_CA", "nl", "fr")
en := universalTraslator.GetTranslator("en")
// generally used after parsing an http 'Accept-Language' header
// and this will try to find a matching locale you support or
// fallback locale.
// en, _ := ut.FindTranslator([]string{"en", "en_CA", "nl"})
// this will help
fmt.Println("Cardinal Plural Rules:", en.PluralsCardinal())
fmt.Println("Ordinal Plural Rules:", en.PluralsOrdinal())
fmt.Println("Range Plural Rules:", en.PluralsRange())
// add basic language only translations
en.Add("welcome", "Welcome {0} to our test")
// add language translations dependant on cardinal plural rules
en.AddCardinal("days", "You have {0} day left to register", locales.PluralRuleOne)
en.AddCardinal("days", "You have {0} days left to register", locales.PluralRuleOther)
// add language translations dependant on ordinal plural rules
en.AddOrdinal("day-of-month", "{0}st", locales.PluralRuleOne)
en.AddOrdinal("day-of-month", "{0}nd", locales.PluralRuleTwo)
en.AddOrdinal("day-of-month", "{0}rd", locales.PluralRuleFew)
en.AddOrdinal("day-of-month", "{0}th", locales.PluralRuleOther)
// add language translations dependant on range plural rules
// NOTE: only one plural rule for range in 'en' locale
en.AddRange("between", "It's {0}-{1} days away", locales.PluralRuleOther)
// now lets use the translations we just added, in the same order we added them
fmt.Println(en.T("welcome", "Joeybloggs"))
fmt.Println(en.C("days", 1, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(1, 0)))) // you'd normally have variables defined for 1 and 0
fmt.Println(en.C("days", 2, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(2, 0))))
fmt.Println(en.C("days", 10456.25, 2, string(en.FmtNumber(10456.25, 2))))
fmt.Println(en.O("day-of-month", 1, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(1, 0))))
fmt.Println(en.O("day-of-month", 2, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(2, 0))))
fmt.Println(en.O("day-of-month", 3, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(3, 0))))
fmt.Println(en.O("day-of-month", 4, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(4, 0))))
fmt.Println(en.O("day-of-month", 10456.25, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(10456.25, 0))))
fmt.Println(en.R("between", 0, 0, 1, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(0, 0)), string(en.FmtNumber(1, 0))))
fmt.Println(en.R("between", 1, 0, 2, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(1, 0)), string(en.FmtNumber(2, 0))))
fmt.Println(en.R("between", 1, 0, 100, 0, string(en.FmtNumber(1, 0)), string(en.FmtNumber(100, 0))))
}
To anyone interesting in helping or contributing, I sure could use some help creating tests for each language. Please see issue here for details.