This is a Scala 2.11, and 2.12 compiler plugin that acts like GNU xgettext
command to extract i18n strings in Scala source code files to Gettext
.po file, when you compile the Scala source code files.
More info on Scala compiler plugin: http://www.scala-lang.org/node/140
Presentation: I18nize Scala programs à la gettext
Discussion group: https://groups.google.com/group/scala-xgettext
For Play: https://github.com/georgeOsdDev/play-xgettext
This plugin can be used by frameworks like Xitrum to add i18n feature to them. For an example, see this SBT project.
In your Scala source code, you need to mark the strings you want to extract by using a trait or class that has these method signatures:
t(singular: String): String tn(singular: String, plural: String, n: Long): String tc(context: String, singular: String): String tcn(context: String, singular: String, plural: String, n: Long): String
The methods can also be:
t(singular: String, args: Any*): String tn(singular: String, plural: String, n: Long, args: Any*): String tc(context: String, singular: String, args: Any*): String tcn(context: String, singular: String, plural: String, n: Long, args: Any*): String
That is, only the first arguments (1 first argument for t
, 3 first arguments
for tn
etc.) are required, all the following arguments are ignored
(like params above).
You can use Scaposer to implement the methods above. See example.
Then in your Scala source code, use them like this:
t("Hello World") t("Hello %s").format("World") t("%,.3f").format(1234.5678) // => 1,234.568 t("%,.3f").formatLocal(java.util.Locale.FRANCE, 1234.5678) // => 1 234,568
If you have more than one placeholder:
// 1$ and 2$ are placeholders t("%1$s says hello to %2$s, then %2$s says hello back to %1$s").format("Bill", "Hillary") // {0} and {1} are placeholders java.text.MessageFormat.format(t("{0} says hello to {1}, then {1} says hello back to {0}"), "Bill", "Hillary")
Important: The arguments ``singular``, ``plural``, and ``context`` MUST be literal constant string, like in the above examples. Otherwise exception will be thrown during compilation. Alternatively, one can add the option ``ignoreNonLiteralStrings:true`` to ignore those cases instead of throwing an exception
To extract i18n strings like "Hello World" in the above snippet:
- Clean your Scala project to force the recompilation of all Scala source code files.
- Create an empty i18n.pot file in the current working directory. It will be filled with i18n string resources extracted from compiled Scala source code files.
- Compile your Scala project with
-P:xgettext:<i18n trait or class>
option. Example:-P:xgettext:xitrum.I18n
.
If you use SBT, build.sbt should look like this:
... autoCompilerPlugins := true addCompilerPlugin("tv.cntt" %% "xgettext" % "1.5.1") scalacOptions += "-P:xgettext:xitrum.I18n" ...
Copy or rename the .pot file to a .po file, and translate the strings in it to the language if want. "t" in ".pot" means "template".
You can use plain text editor to edit the .po file, or you can use Poedit. Poedit is very convenient, it can merge new .pot file to existing translated .po file.
Content of the .pot file is sorted by msgid, so that it's easier too see diffs between versions of the .pot/.po file.
t
, tn
, tc
, and tcn
above are the defaults.
If you want to use other names, you can change them to, for example,
tr
, trn
, trc
, and trcn
, by adding options to Scala compiler:
scalacOptions ++= Seq( "xitrum.I18n", "t:tr", "tn:trn", "tc:trc", "tcn:trcn" ).map("-P:xgettext:" + _)
If you skip an option, its default value will be used.
Multiple marker methods for t
can be configured like this:
scalacOptions ++= Seq( "xitrum.I18n", "t:tr", "t:notr" ).map("-P:xgettext:" + _)
Similar for tn
, tc
, and tcn
.
With this feature you can, for example, create an i18n library that can display both original strings and translated strings.
Some translation software require the plural forms formula used in the template to be explicitly stated.
scalacOptions ++= "-P:xgettext:sourceLang:en"
Or:
scalacOptions ++= "-P:xgettext:rawPluralForm:<nplurals=#; formula>"
Using one of these options will cause the template to have a Plural-Forms header.
Many languages are supported, but see src/main/scala/scala/PluralForms.scala
for all of the languages supported and examples of the common formulas.
Omitting this option will omit a Plural-Forms header from the template output.
Use Scaposer.