Transifex Native for Angular
Angular library for localizing Angular application using
Transifex Native.
Related packages:
Upgrade to v2
If you are upgrading from the 1.x.x
version, please read this migration guide, as there are breaking changes in place.
Table of Contents
Requirements
Angular 12 or 13 is required. If you are using Angular 11, please use the 1.x.x
version of
Transifex Native related packages. Other Angular versions are not officially supported at the moment.
Installation
Install the library and its dependencies using:
npm install @transifex/native @transifex/angular --save
Usage
Initialization
In order to use the TX Native object globally, it is necessary to initialize
the library in the angular application bootstrap, in two locations:
@NgModule({
declarations: [
AppComponent,
LoginComponent,
TermsComponent,
HomeComponent,
PrivacyComponent
],
imports: [
AppRoutingModule,
BrowserModule,
TxNativeModule.forRoot(),
],
providers: [,
],
bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import { TranslationService } from '@transifex/angular';
@Component({
selector: 'app-root',
templateUrl: './app.component.html',
styleUrls: ['./app.component.scss']
})
export class AppComponent {
constructor(private translationService: TranslationService) {
translationService.init({
token: '----- here your TX Native token ------',
});
}
async ngOnInit() {
await this.translationService.getLanguages();
await this.translationService.setCurrentLocale('el');
}
}
T
Component
<p>
<label>
<T str="Password" key="label.password"></T>
</label>
<input type="password" name="password" />
</p>
Available optional props:
context | String | String context, affects key generation |
key | String | Custom string key |
comment | String | Developer comment |
charlimit | Number | Character limit instruction for translators |
tags | String | Comma separated list of tags |
escapeVars | Boolean | If escaping should be applied to ICU variables |
sanitize | Boolean | Safe render of the HTML result after translation takes place |
vars | Object | ICU variables to render in the string |
The T component can sanitize the translated result if HTML is involved, using the parameter sanitize
, ie this would be possible:
<p>
<T
str="By proceeding you agree to the {terms_of_services} and {privacy_policy}."
key="text.agree_message"
[sanitize]=true
[vars]="{ terms_of_services: '<a href=\'terms\'>' + terms + '</a>',
privacy_policy: '<a href=\'privacy\'>' + privacy + '</a>'
}">
</T>
</p>
This will render like this in English:
<span>By proceeding you agree to the <a href="terms">terms of service</a> and <a href="privacy">privacy policy</a>.</span>
And like this in Greek:
<span>Συνεχίζοντας, αποδέχεστε τους <a href="terms">όροι χρήσης</a> και τους <a href="privacy">πολιτική απορρήτου</a>.</span>
The same block without the sanitize
option would be like this, for Greek:
Συνεχίζοντας, αποδέχεστε τους <a href='terms'>όροι χρήσης</a> και τους <a href='privacy'>πολιτική απορρήτου</a>.
The main thing to keep in mind is that the str
property to the T component
must always be a valid ICU message format template.
If it is nested into a tx-instance
tag, then the T component
will use the new instance to fetch the translation. Check the TX Instance Component section for more information about additional instances.
UT
Component
<p>
<UT
str="Copyright {year} by Transifex."
key="text.copyright"
[inline]=false
comment="This is the current year"
[vars]="{ year: '© 2020' }">
</UT>
</p>
UT
has the same behaviour as T
, but renders source string as HTML inside a
div
tag or a span
tag if inline
property is true. By default this property
is set to false
.
Available optional props:
inline | Boolean | If should wrap the translation with span (true) or with div (false) |
If it is nested into a tx-instance
tag, then the UT component
will use the new instance to fetch the translation. Check the TX Instance Component section for more information about additional instances.
TranslationService
service
This is the main service exposed from the SDK in order to intialize the TX Native object.
In your bootstrap entry point in the Angular application, you should initialize the SDK, like this:
import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import { TranslationService } from '@transifex/angular';
@Component({
selector: 'app-root',
templateUrl: './app.component.html',
styleUrls: ['./app.component.scss']
})
export class AppComponent {
title = 'TX Native Angular Demo';
constructor(private translationService: TranslationService) {
translationService.init({
token: '----- here your TX Native token ------',
});
}
async ngOnInit() {
await this.translationService.getLanguages();
await this.translationService.setCurrentLocale('el');
}
}
The translation service is a singleton
instance so the initialization will be shared across the whole application.
It keeps also a collection of additional TX Native instances which can be added to the default instance for specific purposes.
Each addional instance should have the following configuration:
ITXInstanceConfiguration {
token: string;
alias: string;
controlled: boolean;
}
See the section TX Instance Component for more details.
The additional instances can be added and retrieved using exposed methods addInstance
and getInstance
.
Exposes the following methods and properties:
init | config 1 | Initializes the TX Native object |
setCurrentLocale | locale | Set the current locale in the TX Native object |
getCurrentLocale | none | Returns the current locale of the TX Native object |
getLanguages | none | Returns an array of available languages |
translate | translate params 2 | Returns the translation for a string with given translation params |
localeChanged | none | Returns an observable for monitoring the locale changed event |
addInstance | ITXInstanceConfiguration | Returns true if the new TX Native instance was added succesfully and false otherwise |
getInstance | string | Returns the TX Native instance with the given alias. If the operation is not possible the default one is returned as fallback. |
| | |
(1) Initialization config
export interface ITranslationServiceConfig {
token: string;
cdsHost?: string;
filterTags?: string;
cache?: () => void;
missingPolicy?: IPolicy;
errorPolicy?: IPolicy;
stringRenderer?: IStringRenderer;
}
cache
, missingPolicy
, errorPolicy
and stringRenderer
are set by default by
@transifex/native
package but you can provide if you wish custom functions
of your own, or use another policy provided by the @transifex/native
package.
Please check the documentation related to this on@transifex/native
package here.
(2) Translation params
str: string
params: Record<string, unknown>
The params should follow the interface:
export interface ITranslateParams {
_context?: string;
_comment?: string;
_charlimit?: number;
_tags?: string;
_key?: string;
_escapeVars?: boolean;
_inline?: boolean;
sanitize?: boolean;
}
@T
Decorator
This is a decorator for using inside classes and components in order to have
properties with the translation and used them in code and templates.
An example of use is the following:
import { Component, OnInit } from '@angular/core';
import { Router } from '@angular/router';
import { T, TranslationService } from '@transifex/angular';
@Component({
selector: 'app-login',
templateUrl: './login.component.html',
styleUrls: ['./login.component.scss']
})
export class LoginComponent implements OnInit {
@T('Monday', { _key: 'text.monday' })
weekday: string;
@T('terms of service', { _key: 'text.terms_of_service' })
terms: string;
@T('privacy policy', { _key: 'text.privacy_policy' })
privacy: string;
constructor(
private translationService: TranslationService,
private router: Router) {}
login() {
this.router.navigateByUrl('home');
}
}
and the use of the properties in the template:
<p>
<T
str="By proceeding you agree to the {terms_of_services} and {privacy_policy}."
key="text.agree_message"
[sanitize]=true
[vars]="{ terms_of_services: '<a href=\'#/terms\'>' + terms + '</a>',
privacy_policy: '<a href=\'#/privacy\'>' + privacy + '</a>'
}"
></T>
</p>
An instance configuration can be passed to the decorator in order to use an alternative instance instead of the main TX Native one.
See TX Instance Component for more information.
Example of alternative instance:
const INSTANCE_CONFIG = {
token: 'XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX',
alias: 'mycmppage',
controlled: true,
};
@Component({
selector: 'my-component',
templateUrl: './my.component.html',
styleUrls: ['./my.component.scss']
})
export class MyComponent implements OnInit {
@T('My string', { _key: 'text.my_string' }, INSTANCE_CONFIG)
myString: string;
translate
Pipe
You have available a translate
pipe for inline strings translations, the only limitation that it has is that
you cannot translate strings with embedded HTML.
These examples will work:
{{ 'Copyright {year} by Transifex' | translate:{ _key: 'text.copyright' } }}
<p [matTooltip]="'A paragraph' | translate">A paragraph</p>
this example will not work, as it has HTML embedded:
{{ 'A string with <b>HTML embedded</b>' | translate }}
If it is nested into a tx-instance
tag, then the pipe will use the new instance to fetch the translation. Check the TX Instance Component section for more information about additional instances.
Language Picker Component
Renders a <select>
tag that displays supported languages and switches the
application's selected language on change.
Uses Translation Service
internally.
The html selector is tx-language-picker
.
This is an example of use for the language picker component:
<tx-language-picker
className="placeBottomLeft"
(localeChanged)="onLocaleChanged($event)"></tx-language-picker>
and the event for locale changed inside the component could be:
import { Component, OnInit } from '@angular/core';
import { Router } from '@angular/router';
import { T, TranslationService } from '@transifex/angular';
@Component({
selector: 'app-login',
templateUrl: './login.component.html',
styleUrls: ['./login.component.scss']
})
export class LoginComponent implements OnInit {
onLocaleChanged(event) {
}
}
Accepts properties:
className
: The CSS class that will be applied to the <select>
tag
Returns:
localeChanged
: event for handling the change of locale
You always can implement a language picker of your choice, injecting
the TranslationService
and using the different methods provided,
such as getLanguages
.
TX Instance Component
Creates a new TX Native instance with the given configuration and adds it to the TX Native main instance. All the nested components will use the new instance in order to fetch the translations. This apply to components:
Uses Translation Service
internally to add the instance.
The html selector is tx-instance
.
This is an example of use for the instance component:
this.instanceConfig = {
token: 'XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX',
alias: 'homepage',
controlled: true,
};
<tx-instance
[token]="instanceConfig?.token"
[alias]="instanceConfig?.alias"
[controlled]="instanceConfig?.controlled"
(instanceReady)="onInstanceReady($event)"
>
<T str="My brand new string"></T>
</tx-instance>
Accepts properties:
-
token
: The token for the new instance.
-
alias
: A string indetifier of the instance, should be unique. If the identifier already exists, the existing instance with the given alias is used, and no new instance is created.
-
controlled
: If the new instance is controlled (locale) by the main TX Native instance.
Returns:
instanceReady
: event for handling the readiness of the new instance.
Exposes:
instanceIsReady
: observable for listening the readiness of the new instance.
License
Licensed under Apache License 2.0, see LICENSE file.