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namlook edited this page Aug 26, 2013 · 3 revisions

Internationalization and Localization

Sometime you might want to present your data in differents languages and have i18n fields. Mongokit provides helper to do it.

i18n with dot_notation

Let's create a simple i18n BlogPost:

>>> from mongokit import *
>>> class BlogPost(Document):
...     structure = {
...             'title':unicode,
...             'body':unicode,
...             'author':unicode,
...     }
...     i18n = ['title', 'body']
...     use_dot_notation = True

Declare your structure as usual and add an i18n descriptor. The i18n descriptor will tel Mongokit that the fields title and body will be in multiple langage.

Note of the use of use_dot_notation attribute. Using i18n with dot notation is more fun but a little slower (not critical thought). We will see later how to use i18n is a blasing fast way (but less fun).

Let's create a BlogPost object and fill some fields:

>>> con = Connection()
>>> con.register([BlogPost])
>>> blog_post = con.test.i18n.BlogPost()
>>> blog_post['_id'] = u'bp1'
>>> blog_post.title = u"Hello"
>>> blog_post.body = u"How are you ?"
>>> blog_post.author = u"me"

Now let's say we want to write your blog post in French. We select the language with the set_lang() method:

>>> blog_post.set_lang('fr')
>>> blog_post.title = u"Salut"
>>> blog_post.body = u"Comment allez-vous ?"

the author field is not i18n so we don't have to set it again.

Now let's play with our object :

>>> blog_post.title
u'Salut'
>>> blog_post.set_lang('en')
>>> blog_post.title
u'Hello'

Now, let's see how it work:

>>> blog_post
{'body': {'fr': u'Comment allez-vous ?', 'en': u'How are you ?'}, '_id': u'bp1', 'title': {'fr': u'Salut', 'en': u'Hello'}, 'author': u'me'}

The title field is actually a dictionnary which keys are the language and the values are the text. This is usefull if you don't want to use the dot notation. Let's save our object:

>>> blog_post.save()
>>> raw_blog_post = con.test.i18n.find_one({'_id':'bp1'})
>>> raw_blog_post
{u'body': [{u'lang': u'fr', u'value': u'Comment allez-vous ?'}, {u'lang': u'en', u'value': u'How are you ?'}], u'_id': u'bp1', u'author': u'me', u'title': [{u'lang': u'fr', u'value': u'Salut'}, {u'lang': u'en', u'value': u'Hello'}]}

Now, the title field looks little different. This is a list of dictionnary which have the following structure:

[{'lang': lang, 'value', text}, ...]

So, when an i18n object is save to the mongo database, it structure is changed. This is done to make indexation possible.

Note that you can still use this way, even if you enable dot notation.

Default language

By default, the default language is english ('en'). You can change it easily by passing arguments in object creation:

>>> blog_post = con.test.i18n.BlogPost()
>>> blog_post.get_lang() # english by default
'en'
>>> blog_post = con.test.i18n.BlogPost(lang='fr')
>>> blog_post.get_lang()
'fr'

you can also specify a fallblack language. This is useful if a field was translated yet:

>>> blog_post = con.test.i18n.BlogPost(lang='en', fallback_lang='en')
>>> blog_post.title = u"Hello"
>>> blog_post.set_lang('fr')
>>> blog_post.title # no title in french yet
u'Hello'
>>> blog_post.title = u'Salut'
>>> blog_post.title
u'Salut'

i18n without dot notation (the fast way)

If for you, speed is very very important, you might not want to use the dot notation (which brings some extra wrapping). While the API would be more fun, you can still use i18n. Let's take our BlogPost:

>>> from mongokit import *
>>> class BlogPost(Document):
...     structure = {
...             'title':unicode,
...             'body':unicode,
...             'author':unicode,
...     }
...     i18n = ['title', 'body']

>>> con = Connection()
>>> con.register([BlogPost])
>>> blog_post = con.test.i18n.BlogPost()
>>> blog_post['_id'] = u'bp1'
>>> blog_post['title']['en'] = u"Hello"
>>> blog_post['body']['en'] = u"How are you ?"
>>> blog_post['author'] = u"me"

As you can see, fields title and body are now dictionnary which take the language as key. The result is the same:

>>> blog_post
{'body': {'en': u'How are you ?'}, '_id': u'bp1', 'title': {'en': u'Hello'}, 'author': u'me'}

The good thing is you don't have to use set_lang() and get_lang() anymore, the bad thing is you get some ugly:

>>> blog_post['title']['fr'] = u'Salut'
>>> blog_post['title']
{'fr': u'Salut', 'en': u'Hello'}

>>> blog_post['body']['fr'] = u'Comment allez-vous ?'
>>> blog_post['body']
{'fr': u'Comment allez-vous ?', 'en': u'How are you ?'}

Note that you don't have to fear to miss a i18n field. Validation will take care of that:

>>> blog_post['body'] = u'Comment allez-vous ?'
>>> blog_post.save()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
SchemaTypeError: body must be an instance of i18n not unicode

i18n with different type

i18n in Mongokit was designed to handled any python types authorized in MongoKit. To illustrate, let's take a fake example : temperature.

>>> class Temperature(Document):
...     structure = {
...        "temperature":{
...           "degree": float
...        }
...     }
...     i18n = ['temperature.degree']
...     use_dot_notation = True

>>> con.register([Temperature])
>>> temp = con.test.i18n.Temperature()
>>> temp.set_lang('us')
>>> temp.temperature.degree = 75.2
>>> temp.set_lang('fr')
>>> temp.temperature.degree = 24.0
>>> temp.save()

This example describes that float can be translated too. Using i18n to handle temperature is a bad idea but you may find a useful usage of this feature.

Using i18n different type allow you to translate list:

>>> class Doc(Document):
...     structure = {
...        "tags":[unicode]
...     }
...     i18n = ['tags']
...     use_dot_notation = True

>>> con.register([Doc])
>>> doc = con.test.i18n.Doc()
>>> doc.set_lang('en')
>>> doc.tags = [u'apple', u'juice']
>>> doc.set_lang('fr')
>>> doc.tags = [u'pomme', u'jus']
>>> doc
{'tags': {'fr': [u'pomme', u'jus'], 'en': [u'apple', u'juice']}}
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