73

I'm working with Symfony 2 on a site which having 2 languages, and I want to change patterns of my routes depending on user locale language !

Example:

user_login_en:
    pattern:  /en/user/login.html
    defaults: { _controller: SfErrorsAppBundle:User:login, _locale: en }

user_login_fr:
    pattern:  /fr/utilisateur/connexion.html
    defaults: { _controller: SfErrorsAppBundle:User:login, _locale: fr}

Inside a template, this is not difficult, i just have to pass the $this->get('session')->getLocale() from the controller to the template...

To work, I have to call my routes:

$router->generate('user_login_'.$locale, array());

But inside my layouts, I have of course a menu, and sidebars, which have links... So I want to get the locale variable to use it ! So my question is simple: how to get this variable inside a "layout" template ? Otherwise, have you got any idea to change the pattern depending on the language ?

The reasons are that I want beautiful routes for all users, whether they're english or french... And also for a SEO reason !

4 Answers 4

184

---UPDATED FROM THE COMMENTS---

As Symfony 2.1, you must use

{{ app.request.locale }}

or

{{ app.request.getLocale() }}

which returns app.request.locale if available and app.request.defaultLocale if app.request.locale is not set.

6
  • 101
    As Symfony 2.1, you must use app.request.locale instead.
    – Damien
    Jul 18, 2012 at 8:29
  • @Damien and in a php template?
    – DomingoSL
    Jul 15, 2013 at 9:27
  • 1
    @DomingoSL $view['request']->getLocale()
    – iizno
    Mar 7, 2014 at 21:45
  • 5
    Also in twig i would prefer {{ app.request.getLocale() }} since it returns app.request.locale if available and app.request.defaultLocale if app.request.locale is not set.
    – Anticom
    Oct 22, 2014 at 12:59
  • 4
    Actually, these two options both do the same thing. In Twig, the dot syntax can be used to access getter methods if there's no public property with the name provided (as here - the locale property on requests is protected). For the exact rules of how the dot operator works in Twig, see the "Implementation" section under twig.sensiolabs.org/doc/templates.html#variables
    – Sam
    Sep 9, 2015 at 11:18
106

As Symfony 2.1 stores the "locale" in the Request instead of the session you have to use this:

{{ app.request.getLocale() }}

instead of app.session.locale

3
  • 11
    this one should be accepted, as the other one is outdated and therefore misleading
    – Gigala
    Apr 19, 2013 at 9:38
  • 1
    I guess I had the same experience as those people, who just lost 5 minutes with the first accepted answer, @Sybio please change accepted answer Jan 7, 2014 at 23:08
  • Maybe should have made the effort to update the accepted answer with this ;-)
    – Potherca
    Oct 23, 2014 at 8:41
5

Also, you might want to simplify your routing (one single rule):

user_login:
    pattern:  /{_locale}/user/login.html
    defaults: { _controller: SfErrorsAppBundle:User:login }

If you want to allow only some languages you can add a requirement:

user_login:
    pattern:  /{_locale}/user/login.html
    defaults: { _controller: SfErrorsAppBundle:User:login }
    requirements:
       _locale: fr|en
1
2

In my opinion, this is the most easy and maintenable way to autodetect the locale without worrying for Symfony version:

{% if not app.session.locale is null %} {# Prior to Symfony 2.1 you must get from session, it will be null if upper #}
    Locale: {{ app.session.locale }}
{% else %} {# With Symfony 2.1 or upper you only can get the locale from request #}
    Locale: {{ app.request.locale }}
{% endif %}

Also, if you prefer it you can use a object like notation in Twig template engine:

{% if not app.getSession().getLocale() is null %} {# Prior to Symfony 2.1 you must get from session, it will be null if upper #}
    Locale: {{ app.getSession().getLocale() }}
{% else %} {# With Symfony 2.1 or upper you only can get the locale from request #}
    Locale: {{ app.getRequest().getLocale() }}
{% endif %}

See Symfony 2.1.0 release notes for more info

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