react-intl-modules-loader
is a webpack
loader which allows you to structure your
react-intl localisation files in a
modular fashion.
The idea is that you keep your intl messages as close as possible to the component that uses them, which allows you to move your code around. It also means that it's easier to track which messages are used by which parts of the code - if you remove a file that's being used, Webpack will give you an error.
Let's say you have an components/ActionButtons directory with this file inside:
// src/components/ActionButtons/intl.json
{
"en": {
"save": {
"default": "Save",
"busy": "Saving…",
"retry": "Retry"
},
"send": {
"default": "Send",
"busy": "Sending…",
"retry": "Retry"
}
}
}
When you require it via Webpack you will get a set of unique message IDs, something like:
{
"save": {
"default": "components/ActionButtons/intl.json:save.default",
"busy": "components/ActionButtons/intl.json:save.busy",
"retry": "components/ActionButtons/intl.json:save.retry"
},
"send": {
"default": "components/ActionButtons/intl.json:send.default",
"busy": "components/ActionButtons/intl.json:send.busy",
"retry": "components/ActionButtons/intl.json:send.retry"
}
}
Notice how the structure of the JSON is preserved.
You can shorten the module prefixes by setting shorten
to true in the loader
options, but this will make the loader non-deterministic because the shortened
prefixes will depend on the order in which the modules are loaded.
Here's a React component that uses this to create a set of localised action buttons.
// src/components/ActionButtons/index.js
import React from "react";
import {FormattedMessage} from "react-intl";
import * as messages from "./intl.json";
export class ActionButton extends React.Component {
static propTypes = {
onClick: React.PropTypes.func,
busy: React.PropTypes.bool,
error: React.PropTypes.string,
ids: React.PropTypes.object
};
getID() {
if (this.props.busy)
return this.props.ids.busy;
if (this.props.error)
return this.props.ids.retry;
return this.props.ids.default;
}
render() {
return (
<button onClick={this.props.onClick}
disabled={this.props.busy}
title={this.props.error}>
<FormattedMessage id={this.getID()}/>
</button>;
);
}
}
export const SaveButton = (props) =>
<ActionButton {...props} ids={messages.save}/>
export const SendButton = (props) =>
<ActionButton {...props} ids={messages.send}/>
Of course, this isn't useful to you unless you have a dictionary of messages to
pass to IntlProvider
. That's where require.context
comes in handy. At the
root of your project, you can use require.context
and the combine
helper to
combine all your intl modules into one:
// src/IntlProvider.js
import combine from "react-intl-modules-loader/combine";
import {IntlProvider} from "react-intl";
const locales = combine(
// Require all intl.json files in the project, take the messages from each,
// and combine them into a single dictionary of messages.
require.context(
"./",
true, // Recurse into subdirectories
/intl\.json$/)); // Or whatever you want to call your intl files.
};
export default (props) =>
<IntlProvider messages={locales[props.lang] || locales.en}>
{props.children}
</IntlProvider>;
To load JSON files, you could put this into your Webpack 2 module.rules
:
{
test: /^intl\.json$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: [
{
loader: "react-intl-modules-loader"
},
{
loader: "json-loader"
}
]
},
To load plain JavaScript i18n files, you could put this into your module.rules
:
{
test: /^intl\.js$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: [
{
loader: "react-intl-modules-loader"
}
]
},
In the spirit of Webpack, this loader does as little as possible.
Originally, it parsed the JSON file for you. Now, that is optional, and can
be done by chaining with json-loader
. This allows for more complex scenarios
such as sharing strings between components, and comments in your i18n files.
// src/components/intl.js (global/common i18n strings)
export const en = {
retry: "Retry"
};
// src/components/Widget/intl.js
import * as Global from "../intl.js";
export const en = {
save: {
default: "Save",
busy: "Saving…",
retry: Global.en.retry
},
send: {
default: "Send",
busy: "Sending…",
retry: Global.en.retry
}
};
// src/components/Widget/index.js
import {save, send} from "react-intl-modules-loader!./intl.js";
// ...
<ActionButton messages={send}/>
You don't have to define all of your different languages in the same file,
as long as one of those language files has all the necessary keys. The
combine
helper will merge all the files correctly.
react-intl-modules-loader
produces modules which have no imports and export
only immutable data, so it should be simple to hook it up to any hot module
replacement.
If you're using react-hot-loader
v3, you can re-require the context module,
re-run combine()
, and re-render the <AppContainer>
with the <IntlProvider>
inside, for example:
// src/messages.js
const combine = require("react-intl-modules-loader/combine");
export const locales = combine(require.context("./", true, /intl\.json$/));
// src/intl.js
export const en = {
title: "My first app"
};
// src/App.js
import React from "react";
import {title} from "./intl.js";
export const App = () => <h1><FormattedMessage id={title}/></h1>;
// src/index.js
import {AppContainer} from "react-hot-loader";
function render() {
const {locales} = require("./messages");
const {App} = require("./App");
ReactDOM.render(
<AppContainer>
<IntlProvider locale={navigator.language}
messages={locales[navigator.language] || locales.en}>
<App/>
</IntlProvider>
</AppContainer>,
document.getElementById("root")
)
}
render();
if (module.hot) {
module.hot.accept(render);
module.hot.accept("./messages", render);
module.hot.accept("./App", render);
}