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Localized
In @fluent/react
, localizable elements can be wrapped in the Localized
component.
The id
prop should be the unique identifier of the translation.
import { Localized } from '@fluent/react';
<Localized id="hello-world">
<p>Hello, world!</p>
</Localized>
Attributes defined in the translation will be applied to the wrapped element only if the attrs
prop is defined. attrs
should be an object with attribute names as keys and booleans as values. By default, if attrs
is not passed, no attributes will be set.
type-name =
.placeholder = Your name
<Localized id="type-name" attrs={{placeholder: true}}>
<input
type="text"
placeholder="Your name"
onChange={…}
value={…}
/>
</Localized>
You can also pass arguments to the translation in the vars
prop:
<Localized id="welcome" vars={{userName: name}}>
<p>{'Welcome, {$userName}'}</p>
</Localized>
It's recommended that the contents of the wrapped component be a string expression. The string will be used as the ultimate fallback if no translation is available. It also makes it easy to grep for strings in the source code. In the future, it may be used for automatic extraction of source copy.
Translations can include simple HTML markup. @fluent/react
will match them with elements passed to the elems
prop to <Localized>
. The contents of the passed elements will be replaced by the localizable content found in the markup the translation. This mechanism is called React Overlays.
<Localized
id="create-account"
elems={{
confirm: <button onClick={createAccount}></button>,
cancel: <Link to="/"></Link>
}}
>
<p>{'<confirm>Create account</confirm> or <cancel>go back</cancel>.'}</p>
</Localized>
Using <Localized>
makes your code more declarative. @fluent/react
will automatically respond to the browser's language changes and re-translate all <Localized>
elements. For cases when a one-off translation is sufficient (e.g. in a modal window or a push notification) you may want to use the withLocalization decorator or the useLocalization hook.
The declarative nature of <Localized>
synergizes well with other declarative components. For instance, it's easy to localize the document's title by combining react-document-title
and <Localized>
.
document =
.title = Welcome
<Localized id="document" attrs={{title: true}}>
<DocumentTitle>
…
</DocumentTitle>
</Localized>