ashawareb / localizer

Localization gem

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Localizer

Welcome to your new gem! Localize will help you localizing your system to any language you want and create localization files in any format

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'localizer'

And then execute:

$ bundle install

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install localizer

Usage

You can get benefit of Localize features by following this guide:

  1. translate any text you want to any language
Localizer::TranslatePlusClient.translate(source_language, target_langue, text)

Example

Localizer::TranslatePlusClient.translate('en', 'fr', 'Good Morning!')
# [200, "Bonjour!"]
  1. get all the supported languages
Localizer::TranslatePlusClient.all_languages
# [200, {"Auto Detect"=>"auto", "Afrikaans"=>"af", "Albanian"=>"sq", "Amharic"=>"am", "Arabic"=>"ar", "Armenian"=>"hy", "Azerbaijani"=>"az", "Basque"=>"eu", "Belarusian"=>"be", "Bengali"=>"bn", "Bosnian"=>"bs", "Bulgarian"=>"bg", "Catalan"=>"ca", "Cebuano"=>"ceb", "Chinese (Simplified)"=>"zh-CN", "Chinese (Traditional)"=>"zh-TW", "Corsican"=>"co", "Croatian"=>"hr", "Czech"=>"cs", "Danish"=>"da", "Dutch"=>"nl", "English"=>"en", "Esperanto"=>"eo", "Estonian"=>"et", "Finnish"=>"fi", "French"=>"fr", "Frisian"=>"fy", "Galician"=>"gl", "Georgian"=>"ka", "German"=>"de", "Greek"=>"el", "Gujarati"=>"gu", "Haitian Creole"=>"ht", "Hausa"=>"ha", "Hawaiian"=>"haw", "Hebrew"=>"iw", "Hindi"=>"hi", "Hmong"=>"hmn", "Hungarian"=>"hu", "Icelandic"=>"is", "Igbo"=>"ig", "Indonesian"=>"id", "Irish"=>"ga", "Italian"=>"it", "Japanese"=>"ja", "Javanese"=>"jv", "Kannada"=>"kn", "Kazakh"=>"kk", "Khmer"=>"km", "Kinyarwanda"=>"rw", "Korean"=>"ko", "Kurdish (Kurmanji)"=>"ku", "Kurdish (Sorani)"=>"ckb", "Kyrgyz"=>"ky", "Lao"=>"lo", "Latin"=>"la", "Latvian"=>"lv", "Lithuanian"=>"lt", "Luxembourgish"=>"lb", "Macedonian"=>"mk", "Malagasy"=>"mg", "Malay"=>"ms", "Malayalam"=>"ml", "Maltese"=>"mt", "Maori"=>"mi", "Marathi"=>"mr", "Mongolian"=>"mn", "Myanmar (Burmese)"=>"my", "Nepali"=>"ne", "Norwegian"=>"no", "Nyanja (Chichewa)"=>"ny", "Odia (Oriya)"=>"or", "Pashto"=>"ps", "Persian"=>"fa", "Polish"=>"pl", "Portuguese (Portugal, Brazil)"=>"pt", "Punjabi"=>"pa", "Romanian"=>"ro", "Russian"=>"ru", "Samoan"=>"sm", "Scots Gaelic"=>"gd", "Serbian"=>"sr", "Sesotho"=>"st", "Shona"=>"sn", "Sindhi"=>"sd", "Sinhala (Sinhalese)"=>"si", "Slovak"=>"sk", "Slovenian"=>"sl", "Somali"=>"so", "Spanish"=>"es", "Sundanese"=>"su", "Swahili"=>"sw", "Swedish"=>"sv", "Tagalog (Filipino)"=>"tl", "Tajik"=>"tg", "Tamil"=>"ta", "Tatar"=>"tt", "Telugu"=>"te", "Thai"=>"th", "Turkish"=>"tr", "Turkmen"=>"tk", "Ukrainian"=>"uk", "Urdu"=>"ur", "Uyghur"=>"ug", "Uzbek"=>"uz", "Vietnamese"=>"vi", "Welsh"=>"cy", "Xhosa"=>"xh", "Yiddish"=>"yi", "Yoruba"=>"yo", "Zulu"=>"zu"}]

CLI usage

Also you can get benefits of these features in your terminal

  1. translate any text you want to any languag
$ bundle exec exe/localize translate --source="en" --target="fr" --text="Good Morning!"
# Bonjour!
  1. get all the supported languages
$ bundle exec exe/localize all_languages
# {"Auto Detect"=>"auto", "Afrikaans"=>"af", "Albanian"=>"sq", "Amharic"=>"am", "Arabic"=>"ar", "Armenian"=>"hy", "Azerbaijani"=>"az", "Basque"=>"eu", "Belarusian"=>"be", "Bengali"=>"bn", "Bosnian"=>"bs", "Bulgarian"=>"bg", "Catalan"=>"ca", "Cebuano"=>"ceb", "Chinese (Simplified)"=>"zh-CN", "Chinese (Traditional)"=>"zh-TW", "Corsican"=>"co", "Croatian"=>"hr", "Czech"=>"cs", "Danish"=>"da", "Dutch"=>"nl", "English"=>"en", "Esperanto"=>"eo", "Estonian"=>"et", "Finnish"=>"fi", "French"=>"fr", "Frisian"=>"fy", "Galician"=>"gl", "Georgian"=>"ka", "German"=>"de", "Greek"=>"el", "Gujarati"=>"gu", "Haitian Creole"=>"ht", "Hausa"=>"ha", "Hawaiian"=>"haw", "Hebrew"=>"iw", "Hindi"=>"hi", "Hmong"=>"hmn", "Hungarian"=>"hu", "Icelandic"=>"is", "Igbo"=>"ig", "Indonesian"=>"id", "Irish"=>"ga", "Italian"=>"it", "Japanese"=>"ja", "Javanese"=>"jv", "Kannada"=>"kn", "Kazakh"=>"kk", "Khmer"=>"km", "Kinyarwanda"=>"rw", "Korean"=>"ko", "Kurdish (Kurmanji)"=>"ku", "Kurdish (Sorani)"=>"ckb", "Kyrgyz"=>"ky", "Lao"=>"lo", "Latin"=>"la", "Latvian"=>"lv", "Lithuanian"=>"lt", "Luxembourgish"=>"lb", "Macedonian"=>"mk", "Malagasy"=>"mg", "Malay"=>"ms", "Malayalam"=>"ml", "Maltese"=>"mt", "Maori"=>"mi", "Marathi"=>"mr", "Mongolian"=>"mn", "Myanmar (Burmese)"=>"my", "Nepali"=>"ne", "Norwegian"=>"no", "Nyanja (Chichewa)"=>"ny", "Odia (Oriya)"=>"or", "Pashto"=>"ps", "Persian"=>"fa", "Polish"=>"pl", "Portuguese (Portugal, Brazil)"=>"pt", "Punjabi"=>"pa", "Romanian"=>"ro", "Russian"=>"ru", "Samoan"=>"sm", "Scots Gaelic"=>"gd", "Serbian"=>"sr", "Sesotho"=>"st", "Shona"=>"sn", "Sindhi"=>"sd", "Sinhala (Sinhalese)"=>"si", "Slovak"=>"sk", "Slovenian"=>"sl", "Somali"=>"so", "Spanish"=>"es", "Sundanese"=>"su", "Swahili"=>"sw", "Swedish"=>"sv", "Tagalog (Filipino)"=>"tl", "Tajik"=>"tg", "Tamil"=>"ta", "Tatar"=>"tt", "Telugu"=>"te", "Thai"=>"th", "Turkish"=>"tr", "Turkmen"=>"tk", "Ukrainian"=>"uk", "Urdu"=>"ur", "Uyghur"=>"ug", "Uzbek"=>"uz", "Vietnamese"=>"vi", "Welsh"=>"cy", "Xhosa"=>"xh", "Yiddish"=>"yi", "Yoruba"=>"yo", "Zulu"=>"zu"}
  1. get the langugae code for any language
$ bundle exec exe/localize language_code --language="French"
# fr
  1. check if language is supported or not
$ bundle exec exe/localize supported --code="fr"
# true
  1. generate localization files (in progress)
  • supported formats: yml
$ bundle exec exe/localize generate_locale language_code source_file_path format destination_path

Example If we want to create a localization file for our keys file, we need to do the following:

$ bundle exec exe/localize generate_locale "fr" "config/locales/en.yml" "yml" "config/locales"
# create  config/locales/fr.yml

if the source file does not exist, we will create localization files same as our provided templates

$ bundle exec exe/localize generate_locale "fr" "config/locales/en.yml" "yml" "config/locales"
# create  config/locales/fr.yml
# en.yml
---
en:
  email_texts:
    common:
      good_morning: Good Morning!

# fr.yml
---
fr:
  email_texts:
    common:
      good_morning: Bonjour!

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake test to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and the created tag, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/ashawareb/localizer.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

About

Localization gem

License:MIT License


Languages

Language:Ruby 92.1%Language:Gherkin 6.6%Language:Shell 1.3%