Although Django Django does not yet support Python 3, it eventually will, so I want to keep my code the more "future-proof" possible.
Since Python 2.7 the string interpolation operator (%
) is being deprecated. And I realized that every string that needs to be translated is using the %
interpolation syntax. And in the Django docs there is no mention of the new str.format
method (the "new" official way of string formatting)...
Maybe there is a limitation of the gettext
library, but I don't think so, since the string appears identical in the .PO files.
The question is if I can use the new string format
method for translation.
The old way:
class Post(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=50)
date = models.DateField()
# ...
def __unicode__(self):
return _('%(title)s (%(date)s)') % {
'title': self.title,
'date': self.date,
}
The "new" way:
class Post(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=50)
date = models.DateField()
# ...
def __unicode__(self):
return _('{title} ({date})').format(
title=self.title,
date=self.date,
)
Also, ugettext_lazy
does not really return strings, but Promises
, objects that are evaluated only when needed.