I took an approach to this problem that allows others to contribute language translations for my application.
Pros:
- Uses "web-matured" libraries
- Crowd Sourced Translations
- No native hacking
- Uses templating
- Very easy to implement HTML/JS and easy to test
- Supports Language detection
- Supports Text Direction (BiDi)
- No Native dependencies at all so will work on Android/iOS/BB/WP yada yada..
- Testable in web browser
Cons:
- Your project needs to be open source and fulfill TranslateWiki's requirements
- Slightly tricky to implement the commit to Gerrit if you come from a branch/merge world.
I used handlebars for templating and the html10n library to provide translation logic, translated strings come from community contributed json files.
TranslateWiki provides the actual translations through the power of crowd-sourcing. Most of the heavy lifting on my implementation is done by TranslateWiki, a free and open source community service from the Wiki Media Foundation.
Handlebars and the html10n library are powerful, built for the web and widely used. They prove to be extremely useful libraries for this implementation.
No native code or plugins are required.
index.html
<head>
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/handlebars.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/html10n.js"></script>
<link rel="localizations" type="application/l10n+json" href="locales.json">
</head>
<body>
{{html10n "helloWorld"}}
</body>
locales.json
{
"fr":"locales/fr.json",
"en":"locales/en.json"
}
locales/en.json
{
"en":{
"helloWorld":"Hello Cruel World"
}
}
locales/fr.json
{
"fr":{
"helloWorld":"Hello Baguette World"
}
}
index.js
Handlebars.registerHelper('html10n', function(str,a){
return (html10n != undefined ? html10n.get(str) : str);
});
To switch between languages bring up your browser javascript console and type
html10n.localize("fr");
Some additional logic is needed to do browser language detection, I use Etherpad's implementation to accomplish this.
var language = document.cookie.match(/language=((\w{2,3})(-\w+)?)/);
if(language) language = language[1];
html10n.bind('indexed', function() {
html10n.localize([language, navigator.language, navigator.userLanguage, 'en'])
})
html10n.bind('localized', function() {
document.documentElement.lang = html10n.getLanguage()
document.documentElement.dir = html10n.getDirection()
// Then I display the index page using handlebars to render a template.
});
That's it, a hack free recipe for rolling out i18n in your Cordova Application.