Security News
Cloudflare Adds Security.txt Setup Wizard
Cloudflare has launched a setup wizard allowing users to easily create and manage a security.txt file for vulnerability disclosure on their websites.
storybook-i18n
Advanced tools
A library for best-practice i18n addons in Storybook:
Requires storybook >=7.0.0
As an addon author, you can use this library by adding it as a dependency and adding the following to your src/manager.ts
and src/preview.ts
files:
src/manager.ts
export * from 'storybook-i18n/manager';
src/preview.ts
import type { Renderer, ProjectAnnotations } from '@storybook/types';
import i18n from 'storybook-i18n/preview';
import { withYourI18nDecorator } from './withYourDecorator';
// @ts-ignore
const i18nDecorators = i18n?.decorators || [];
const preview: ProjectAnnotations<Renderer> = {
...i18n,
decorators: [...i18nDecorators, withYourI18nDecorator],
}
export default preview;
Due to an issue with Storybook (pending resolution), you will need that @ts-ignore
above the decorators line.
The currently selected locale is available in the locale
global, so you can access it in a decorator using the following snippet:
import { MyProvider } from 'your-i18n-library';
import { useGlobals } from '@storybook/manager-api';
const myDecorator = (story, context) => {
const [{locale}] = useGlobals();
return <MyProvider locale={locale}>;
}
End users configure the locales
and locale
globals in .storybook/preview.ts
.
locales
is an object where the keys are the "ids" of the locale/language and the values are the plain text name of that locale you want to use. This is what will appear in the dropdown in the toolbar.
const preview: Preview = {
globals: {
locale: "en",
locales: {
en: "English",
fr: "Français",
ja: "日本語",
},
},
};
Users can also use full locale strings.
const preview: Preview = {
globals: {
locale: "en_US",
locales: {
en_US: "English (US)",
en_GB: "English (GB)",
fr_FR: "Français",
ja_JP: "日本語",
},
},
};
The locales
object can also have values as an object with keys of title
, icon
, and/or right
.
This is useful if you want to include an emoji flag or some other string to the left and/or right side.
For example:
const preview: Preview = {
globals: {
locale: 'en',
locales: {
en: {icon: '🇺🇸', title: 'English', right: 'US'},
fr: {icon: '🇫🇷', title: 'Français', right: 'FR'},
ja: {icon: '🇯🇵', title: '日本語', right: 'JP'},
},
},
};
Or something like this:
const preview: Preview = {
globals: {
locale: 'en_US',
locales: {
en_US: {title: 'English', right: 'US'},
en_GB: {title: 'English', right: 'GB'},
fr_FR: {title: 'Français', right: 'FR'},
ja_JP: {title: '日本語', right: 'JP'},
},
},
};
When the locale has been changed, an event is emitted on the addons-channel
.
You can subscribe to this event in your preview.ts
, to configure global environment settings yourself, related to your i18n-config.
The event is emitted with the selected locale as a parameter
.
Your implementation could look like this:
import { addons } from '@storybook/preview-api'
addons.getChannel().on('LOCALE_CHANGED', (newLocale) => {
changeMyI18nConfig(newLocale)
});
Addons should instruct them to use whichever format your i18n implementation expects.
FAQs
Tool to set the locale in Storybook for i18n
We found that storybook-i18n demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
Cloudflare has launched a setup wizard allowing users to easily create and manage a security.txt file for vulnerability disclosure on their websites.
Security News
The Socket Research team breaks down a malicious npm package targeting the legitimate DOMPurify library. It uses obfuscated code to hide that it is exfiltrating browser and crypto wallet data.
Security News
ENISA’s 2024 report highlights the EU’s top cybersecurity threats, including rising DDoS attacks, ransomware, supply chain vulnerabilities, and weaponized AI.