i18n-core
i18n-core is a no-fuzz Node.js implementation of i18n. It doesn't connect to express or any other fancy Node framework and is extensible where it needs to be and allows to reduce the complexity of other i18n implementations (thus the name).
It implements basic variable replacements in the mustache and sprintf manner.
Usage
To use i18n-core all you need to do is install it using npm
$ npm i i18n-core --save
To use i18n-core you need require it in your javascript file.
var i18n_core = require("i18n-core")
You can then initialize and use the library like this:
var i18n = i18n_core({a: "b"})
i18n.__("a")
To have different namespaces for different language you can get a prefixed subpart using .lang()
.
var en = i18n_core({en: {d: "e"}}).lang("en")
en.__("d")
Note: .lang(<lang>)
is the same thing as .sub(<lang> + ".")
The system is based on lookup
implementations that allow the system to use different sources to get its strings from. The examples before used an object and because of this the former example would be equal to:
var i18n = i18n_core(require("i18n-core/lookup/object")({a: "b"}));
If you were to pass in a string to i18n-core
instead like this:
var i18n = i18n_core("./");
Then it would be equal the primitive file-system lookup same like this:
var i18n = i18n_core(require("i18n-core/lookup/fs")("./"));
You can pass in your own strategy by given an object to the constructor that contains a "get"-method:
var i18n = i18n_core({
get: function (key) {
return null;
}
});
i18n-core does implement basic placeholder replacements like:
en.__("%s is cool", "he");
following the logic of sprintf.
It also offers mustache pattern replacement like this:
en.__("{{name}} are cool too", {name: "you"});
If you have any questions, please post them as issue, thanks!