Forked and updated from https://github.com/stevebauman/translation
Now the fastest automatic translator for laravel 5
For example:
Controller:
public function index()
{
return view('home.index');
}
View:
@extends('layout.default')
{{ ___trans('Welcome to our home page') }}
Seen:
Welcome to our home page
When you visit the page, you won't notice anything different, but if you take a look at your database, your default application locale has already been created, and the translation attached to that locale.
Now if we set locale to something different, such as French (fr), it'll automatically translate it for you.
Controller:
public function index()
{
App::setLocale('fr');
// Or Translation::setLocale( 'fr' );
return view('home.index');
}
View:
@extends('layout.default')
{{ __trans('Welcome to our home page') }}
Seen:
Bienvenue sur notre page d'accueil
We can even use placeholders for dynamic content:
View:
{{ __trans('Welcome :name, to our home page', ['name' => 'John']) }}
Seen:
Bienvenue John , à notre page d'accueil
Notice that we didn't actually change the text inside the view, which means everything stays completely readable in your locale to you (the developer!), which means no more managing tons of translation files and trying to decipher what text may be inside that dot-notated translation path:
Require the translation package
composer require josephnc/translation
Add the service provider to your config/app.php
config file
JosephNC\Translation\TranslationServiceProvider::class,
Add the facade to your aliases in your config/app.php
config file
'Translation' => JosephNC\Translation\Facades\Translation::class,
Publish the migrations
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="JosephNC\Translation\TranslationServiceProvider"
Run the migrations
php artisan migrate
Your good to go!
Anywhere in your application, either use the the shorthand function (can be disabled in config file)
__trans('Translate')
Or
Translation::translate('Translate')
This is typically most useful in blade views:
{{ __trans('Translate') }}
And you can even translate models easily by just plugging in your content:
{{ __trans($post->title) }}
Or use placeholders:
{{ __trans('Post :title', ['title' => $post->title]) }}
In your translations
database table you'll have something like this:
| id | text | data |
1 'Translate' {"en":"Translate","fr":"Traduire"}
To switch languages for the users session, all you need to call is:
App::setLocale('fr') // Setting to French locale
// Or use this, they both work
Translation::setLocale('fr') // Setting to French locale
Locales are automatically created when you call the Translation::setLocale($code)
method,
and when the translate function is called, it will automatically create a new translation record
for the new locale, with the default locale translation. The default locale is taken from the laravel app.php
config file.
You can now update the translation on the new record and it will be shown wherever it's called:
__trans('Translate me!')
Just pass in the locale into the third argument inside the translation functions show above like so:
View:
{{ __trans('Our website also supports russian!', [], 'ru') }}
{{ __trans('And french!', [], 'fr') }}
Seen:
Наш сайт также поддерживает России !
Et françaises !
This is great for showing users that your site supports different languages without changing the entire site language itself. You can also perform replacements like usual:
View:
{{ __trans('Hello :name, we also support french!', ['name' => 'John Doe'], 'fr') }}
Seen:
Bonjour John Doe , nous soutenons aussi le français !
Translating your site with a locale prefix couldn't be easier. First inside your app/Http/Kernel.php
file, insert
the locale middleware:
/**
* The application's route middleware.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $routeMiddleware = [
'auth' => \App\Http\Middleware\Authenticate::class,
'auth.basic' => \Illuminate\Auth\Middleware\AuthenticateWithBasicAuth::class,
'guest' => \App\Http\Middleware\RedirectIfAuthenticated::class,
// Insert Locale Middleware
'locale' => \JosephNC\Translation\Middleware\LocaleMiddleware::class
];
Now, in your app/Http/routes.php
file, insert the middleware and the following Translation method in the route
group prefix like so:
Route::group([
'prefix' => Translation::getRoutePrefix(),
'middleware' => ['locale'],
], function () {
Route::get('home', function () {
return view('home');
});
});
You should now be able to access routes such as:
http://localhost/home
http://localhost/en/home
http://localhost/fr/home
Automatic translation is enabled by default in the configuration file. It utilizes this fantastic packages
Stichoza Google Translate PHP.
Viniciusgava Google Translate PHP.
Using automatic translation will send the inserted text to google and save the returned text to the database. Once a translation is saved in the database, it is never sent back to google to get re-translated. This means that you don't have to worry about hitting a cap that google may impose. You effectively own that translation.
When you add placeholders to your translation, and add the data to replace it, for example:
__trans('Hi :name', ['name' => 'John'])
Translation parses each entry in the data array to see if the placeholder actually exists for the data inserted. For example, in the translation field in your database, here is what is saved:
__trans('Hi :name', ['name' => 'John']) // Hi __name__
__trans('Hi :name', ['test' => 'John']) // Hi :name
Since the placeholder data inserted doesn't match a placeholder inside the string, the text will be left as is. The
reason for the underscores is because google translate will try to translate text containing :name
, however providing
double underscores on both sides of the placeholder, prevents google from translating that specific word, allowing us to translate
everything else, but keep placeholders in tact. Translation then replaces the double underscore variant of the placeholder
(in this case __name__
) at runtime.
If you modify the text inside a translation function, it will create a new record and you will need to translate it again. This is intended because it could be a completely different translation after modification.
For example using:
{{ __trans('Welcome!') }}
And modifying it to:
{{ __trans('Welcome') }}
Would automatically generate a new translation record.
The package use the Viniciusgava's Google translate client then falls back to Stichoza's if any error occurred.
However, Stichoza's new 3.0 update allows you to translate up to 4200 words per request (tested, possibly more allowed).