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Allows you to store text data in multiple languages with your ActiveRecord models. Similar to globalize, but with a few differences:
I18n.locale = :en
post = Post.create(title: 'hello')
post.title #=> hello
I18n.locale = :ru
post.update(title: 'привет')
post.title #=> привет
I18n.locale = :en
post.title #=> hello
It adds very thin abstraction layer on top of JSONB field. All data is stored in a simple JSON structure: { "locale_name": "data" }
. JSONB can be indexed (this is the main reason to use it instead of just JSON, available in earlier Postgres versions).
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'translateable'
And then execute:
$ bundle install
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install translateable
Include Translateable
into your model (or ApplicationRecord
if you are on Rails 5 and want to include it into all models).
Call translateable
macro with a list of attributes you want to be translateable:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
include Translateable
translateable :title
end
Now title
attribute is translateable:
I18n.locale = :en
post = Post.create(title: 'hello')
post.title #=> hello
I18n.locale = :ru
post.update(title: 'привет')
post.title #=> привет
I18n.locale = :en
post.title #=> hello
I18n.locale = :it # oops! no translation for 'it' locale, use translation for `I18n.default_locale`
post.title #=> hello
You can pass multiple attributes:
translateable :title, :body
If there is no translation for a selected locale, than I18n.default_locale
will be used. If there is no translation for I18n.default_locale
, than the first available one will be used. You can override this behavior with strict
option, in this case you'll get nil
if there is no translation for the selected locale:
I18n.locale = :en
post = Post.create(title: 'hello')
post.title #=> hello
I18n.locale = :ru
post.title #=> hello
post.title(strict: true) #=> nil
You can assign all locales data as a hash at once:
post = Post.create(title: { en: 'hello', ru: 'привет' })
I18n.with_locale(:en) do
post.title #=> 'hello'
end
I18n.with_locale(:ru) do
post.title #=> 'привет'
end
You can easily create translated data with form using nested attributes
For example, with simple_form and nested_form_fields:
= simple_form_for @post do |f|
= f.label(:title)
= f.nested_fields_for Translateable.translateable_attribute_by_name(:title), class_name: 'OpenStruct' do |ff|
= ff.input :data, label: false
= ff.input :locale, collection: I18n.available_locales, include_blank: false, label: false
= ff.remove_nested_fields_link 'Remove translation', role: 'button'
= f.add_nested_fields_link Translateable.translateable_attribute_by_name(:title), 'Add translation', role: 'button'
= f.button :submit
Or with built-in form_for
and nested_form_fields:
= form_for @post do |f|
= f.label :title
= f.nested_fields_for Translateable.translateable_attribute_by_name(:title), class_name: 'OpenStruct' do |ff|
= ff.text_field :data
= ff.select :locale, I18n.available_locales
= ff.remove_nested_fields_link 'Remove translation', role: 'button'
= f.add_nested_fields_link Translateable.translateable_attribute_by_name(:title), 'Add translation', role: 'button'
= f.submit
Don't forget about strong parameters in your controller:
def post_params
attrs = [:title] + Post.translateable_permitted_attributes
params.require(:post).permit(*attrs)
end
# `translateable_permitted_attributes` method provides strong_params for all translateable attributes
# for example with `title` attribute those will be: `title_translateable_attributes: [:locale, :data, :_destroy]`
Now you can add/delete/update title
attribute value in different languages via a single form.
Attributes must exist with JSONB
type in a database, so create a migration:
class AddTitleToPosts < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
add_column :posts, :title, :jsonb, null: false, default: {}
end
end
If you already have data and you want to migrate it to a new translateable structure, use a generator provided:
bin/rails generate translateable:migration posts title
This will create a reversible migration for data in title
field of the posts
table. By default, the existent data will be moved into I18n.default_locale
. If you want to use another locale, provide it as a third argument:
bin/rails generate translateable:migration posts title ru
Now all existent data will be transfered into new structure with 'ru' locale.
Example (using 'en' locale):
# before migration
SELECT id,title FROM posts;
id | title
----+-----------------
1 | "hello"
2 | "world"
# after migration
SELECT id,title FROM posts;
id | title
----+-----------------
1 | {"en": "hello"}
2 | {"en": "world"}
By default, generator will create a migration with 'gin' index on translateable field. If you you need to use custom path index you have to change it manually.
You'll probably want to create scopes for this kind of queries.
# get posts where `title` with `en` locale is 'hello'
Post.where("title->>'en' = ?", 'hello')
# get posts where `title` is 'hola' with any locale
Post.where("EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM jsonb_each_text(posts.title) j WHERE j.value = ?)", 'hola')
# get posts where `title` LIKE 'прив' with any locale ignoring case
where("EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM jsonb_each_text(posts.title) j WHERE lower(j.value) LIKE ?)", '%прив%')
I use this concern:
# app/models/concerns/jsonb_querable
module JsonbQuerable
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
included do
# http://stackoverflow.com/questions/36250331/query-postgres-jsonb-by-value-regardless-of-keys/36251296#36251296
scope :where_jsonb_value, -> (attribute, value) {
ta = sanitize("#{table_name}.#{attribute}")[1..-2]
where("EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM jsonb_each_text(#{ta}) j WHERE j.value = ?)", value)
}
scope :where_jsonb_value_like, -> (attribute, value, case_sens = false) {
ta = sanitize("#{table_name}.#{attribute}")[1..-2]
if case_sens
where("EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM jsonb_each_text(#{ta}) j WHERE j.value LIKE ?)", "%#{value}%")
else
where("EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM jsonb_each_text(#{ta}) j WHERE lower(j.value) LIKE lower(?))", "%#{value}%")
end
}
end
end
Refer to the Postgres documentation.
If you're having problems with translateable_sanity_check
you can disable those checks vie environment variable DISABLE_TRANSLATEABLE_SANITY_CHECK=true
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/olegantonyan/translateable. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
FAQs
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We found that translateable demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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