easygettext
![codecov.io](https://codecov.io/github/Polyconseil/easygettext/coverage.svg?branch=master)
Simple gettext tokens extraction tools for HTML and Pug files. Also converts from PO to JSON.
Motivation
angular-gettext is a very neat tool, that comes with Grunt tooling
to extract translation tokens from your Pug/Jade/HTML templates and JavaScript code.
Unfortunately, this has two drawbacks:
- It isn't a simple command-line interface, and forces the usage of Grunt;
- It is angular-specific.
This library comes up with two simple CLI tools to extract and compile your HTML tokens.
Why This Library?
Our frontend toolchain, systematic doesn't rely on Grunt/Gulp/Broccoli/...
and uses a combination of simple Makefiles and CLI tools to do the job.
The toolchain being framework-agnostic, we don't want to depend on Angular to extract our HTML translation tokens.
On another note, we use the standard xgettext
tool to extract our JavaScript translation tokens.
Nevertheless, the way angular-gettext does it (with tokens, directly in HTML) is elegant, is used by many other
libraries and will also be the way to do it in Angular2.
Also, by utilizing acorn, this tool will parse and compile typical JavaScript expressions used in translate-filter expressions. For example, exposed to a (AngularJS-based) fragment like
<span ng-bind="isNight ? 'Moon' + 'shine' : 'Day' + 'light' |translate"></span>
<span ng-bind="isC ? 'C' + (isD ? 'D' : 'd') : 'c' + (isE ? 'E' : 'e') |i18n "></span>
will produce the following strings
Moonshine
Daylight
CD
Cd
cE
ce
Which will be correctly looked up and translated during runtime, at least by angular-gettext.
Installation
You can install the easygettext package by running
npm install --dev easygettext
or
yarn add --save-dev easygettext
Usage & Examples
Simply invoke the tool on the templates you want to extract a POT dictionary template from.
The optional '--ouput' argument enables you to directly output to a file.
gettext-extract --output dictionary.pot foo.html bar.pug hello.vue
It recognizes the following token flavours (currently; feel free to extend it!)
<div translate>Hello World</div>
<div translate translate-context="According to...">Hello World</div>
<div translate translate-comment="My comment...">Hello World</div>
<div translate translate-plural="Hello worlds">Hello World</div>
<div placeholder="{{ 'Hello World' | translate }}"></div>
<div placeholder="{{ scopeVariable || ('Hello World' | translate) }}"></div>
<get-text>Hello World</get-text>
<i18n>Hello World</i18n>
<translate>Hello World</translate>
<span ng-bind="{{ 'Broken '
+ 'strings ' +
'are ' +
'joined' |translate}}"></span>
<span ng-bind="'Bed n\'' + ' breakfast' |translate"></span>
<span ng-bind="true ? 'Always' : 'Never' |i18n "></span>
<span>{{:: 'Something …' |translate}}</span>
<span ng-bind=":: 'Something …' |translate"></span>
<div placeholder="'Hello World' | translate"></div>
Also, it's able to parse Jade/Pug and Vue component files, even if those themselves contain Jade or Pug
templates.
You can combine any context, comment and plural together. Also, you can use 'i18n' instead
of 'translate' as master token.
You can also provide your own master tokens:
gettext-extract --attribute v-translate --output dictionary.pot foo.html bar.jade
gettext-extract --attribute v-translate --attribute v-i18n --output dictionary.pot foo.html bar.jade
gettext-extract --startDelimiter '[#' --endDelimiter '#]' --output dictionary.pot foo.html bar.jade
Extract from
You can also extract the strings marked as translatable inside the <script> section of Vue.js components:
<template>
<h1>{{ greeting_message }}</h1>
<p>{{ number_of_people_here }}</p>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "greetings",
computed: {
greeting_message() {
return this.$gettext("Hello there!")
},
number_of_people_here(nb_folks) {
return this.$ngettext("There is ${ n } person here.", "There are ${ n } persons here.", nb_folks)
}
}
}
</script>
For the moment, only the the extraction of strings localized using the $gettext, $ngettext and $pgettext functions of vue-gettext is supported.
gettext-compile
Outputs or writes to an output file, the sanitized JSON version of a PO file.
gettext-compile --output translations.json fr.po en.po de.po
AngularJS
If you use easygettext
to extract files from an AngularJS code base, you might find the following tips helpful.
To cover the cases (1)
<input placeholder="{{:: 'Insert name …' |translate }}">
<input placeholder="{{ 'Insert name …' |translate }}">
and (2)
<a href="#" ng-bind=":: 'Link text' |translate"></a>
<a href="#" ng-bind="'Link text' |translate"></a>
<a href="#">{{::'Link text' |translate}}</a>
<a href="#">{{'Link text' |translate}}</a>
you should run the extraction tool twice. Once with the command-line arguments
--startDelimiter '{{' --endDelimiter '}}' --filterPrefix '::'
and once with the command-line arguments
--output ${html_b} --startDelimiter '' --endDelimiter '' --filterPrefix '::'
The following Bash script shows how msgcat
might help
#!/usr/bin/env bash
input_files="$(find ./src/ -iname \*\.html)"
workdir=$(mktemp -d "${TMPDIR:-/tmp/}$(basename $0).XXXXXXXXXXXX") || exit 1
html_a=${workdir}/messages-html-interpolate.pot
html_b=${workdir}/messages-html.pot
./dist/extract-cli.js --output ${html_a} --startDelimiter '{{' --endDelimiter '}}' --filterPrefix '::' ${input_files}
./dist/extract-cli.js --output ${html_b} --startDelimiter '' --endDelimiter '' --filterPrefix '::' ${input_files}
es_a=${workdir}/ecmascript.pot
merged_pot=${workdir}/merged.pot
msgcat ${html_a} ${html_b} ${es_a} > ${merged_pot}
header=${workdir}/header.pot
sed -e '/^$/q' < ${html_a} > ${header}
body=${workdir}/body.pot
sed '1,/^$/d' < ${merged_pot} > ${body}
cat ${header} ${body} > ${output_file}
rm -r ${workdir}
Please note that the script needs to be modified to match your needs and environment.
Testing
Run the tests using mocha:
npm test
We also have extensive coverage:
npm run cover
Testing the CLI
Run:
npm run prepublish
Then run extract-cli.js
:
./dist/extract-cli.js --attribute v-translate --attribute v-i18n ~/output.html
Credits
Thanks a million to @rubenv for the initial ideas and
implementations in angular-gettext-tools, which inspired me a lot.
Thanks to ES6 and Babel for being awesome.
Licensing
MIT