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@transifex/react

Transifex Native for React

  • 2.0.0-rc2
  • Source
  • npm
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Transifex Native for React

React component for localizing React 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.

Install

Install the library and its dependencies using:

npm install @transifex/native @transifex/react --save

Usage

T Component

import React from 'react';

import { T } from '@transifex/react';

function Example() {
  return (
    <div>
      <T _str="Hello world" />
      <T _str="Hello {username}" username={user} />
    </div>
  );
}

Available optional props:

PropTypeDescription
_contextStringString context, affects key generation
_keyStringCustom string key
_commentStringDeveloper comment
_charlimitNumberCharacter limit instruction for translators
_tagsStringComma separated list of tags

The T-component can accept React elements as properties and they will be rendered properly, ie this would be possible:

<T
  _str="A {button} and a {bold} walk into a bar"
  button={<button><T _str="button" /></button>}
  bold={<b><T _str="bold" /></b>} />

This will render like this in English:

A <button>button</button> and a <b>bold</b> walk into a bar

And like this in Greek:

Ένα <button>κουμπί</button> και ένα <b>βαρύ</b> μπαίνουν σε ένα μπαρ

Assuming the translations look like this:

sourcetranslation
A {button} and a {bold} walk into a barΈνα {button} και ένα {bold} μπαίνουν σε ένα μπαρ
buttonκουμπί
boldβαρύ

The main thing to keep in mind is that the _str property to the T-component must always be a valid ICU messageformat template.

UT Component

import React from 'react';

import { UT } from '@transifex/react';

function Example () {
  return (
    <div>
      <UT _str="Hello <b>{username}</b>" username={user} />
      <p>
        <UT _str="Hello <b>{username}</b>" _inline username={user} />
      </p>
    </div>
  )
}

UT has the same behaviour as T, but renders source string as HTML inside a div tag.

Available optional props: All the options of T plus:

PropTypeDescription
_inlineBooleanWrap translation in span

Note: If you supply React elements as properties to the UT component, it will misbehave by rendering [object Object]. Only use React elements as properties with the T component.

useT hook

Makes the current component re-render when a language change is detected and returns a t-function you can use to translate strings programmatically.

You will most likely prefer to use the T or UT components over this, unless for some reason you want to have the translation output in a variable for manipulation.

import React from 'react';

import { useT } from '@transifex/react';

function Capitalized() {
  const t = useT();
  const message = t('Hello world');
  return <span>{message.toUpperCase()}</span>;
}

useLanguages hook

Returns a state variable that will eventually hold the supported languages of the application. Makes an asynchronous call to the CDS.

import React from 'react';
import { useLanguages } from '@transifex/react';

function LanguageList () {
  const languages = useLanguages();
  return (
    <ul>
      {languages.map(({ code, name }) => (
        <li key={code}>
          <strong>{code}</strong>: {name}
        </li>
      ))}
    </ul>
  );
}

useLocale hook

Returns a state variable with the currently selected locale.

import React from 'react';
import { useLocale } from '@transifex/react';

function DisplayLocale () {
  const locale = useLocale();
  return (
    <p>Currently selected locale is {locale}</p>
  );
}

LanguagePicker component

Renders a <select> tag that displays supported languages and switches the application's selected language on change. Uses useLanguages and useLocale internally.

import React from 'react';
import { T, LanguagePicker } from '@transifex/react';

function App () {
  return (
    <div>
      <T _str="This is a translatable message" />
      <LanguagePicker />
    </div>
  );
}

Accepts properties:

  • className: The CSS class that will be applied to the <select> tag

If you want something different than a <select>, it should be easy to write your own language picker using useLanguages:

import React from 'react';
import { tx } from '@transifex/native';
import { useLanguages, useLocale } from '@transifex/react';

function MyLanguagePicker () {
  const languages = useLanguages();
  const locale = useLocale();

  return (
    <>
      {languages.map(({ code, name }) => (
        <button key={code} onClick={() => tx.setCurrentLocale(code)}>
          {name} {locale === code ? '(selected)' : ''}
        </button>
      ))}
    </>
  );
}

License

Licensed under Apache License 2.0, see LICENSE file.

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Package last updated on 24 Nov 2021

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