yarn add -D @alienfast/i18next-loader
This webpack loader generates the resources
structure necessary for i18next. The structure is webpacked with the client bundle at build time, thus avoiding loading any language resources via extra HTTP requests.
- glob based file filtering
- one to many overrides supporting reuse cases (white labeling)
- yaml and json support
- locale chunking (help wanted - see #6)
Given a locales directory, by default, the loader will find and parse any json|yaml|yml
file and attribute the
contents to the containing lang folder e.g. en
. There is no need to add lang such as en
or de
inside your
json
or yaml
files.
See the test/data
directory for structure and example data.
└── app
└── src
│ └── app.js
└── locales
├── index.js
├── de
│ ├── foo.json
│ └── bar.yaml
└── en
├── foo.json
└── bar.yaml
module.exports = {
// ... snip
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /locales/,
loader: '@alienfast/i18next-loader',
// options here
//query: { overrides: [ '../node_modules/lib/locales' ] }
}
]
}
// ... snip
}
// File: app.js
import i18n from 'i18next'
import resources from '../locales' // typescript: import * as resources from '../locales'
i18n.init({
resources
});
// Use the resources as documented on i18next.com
i18n.t('key')
// File: app.js
import i18n from 'i18next'
import resources from '@alienfast/i18next-loader!../locales/index.js'
i18n.init({
resources
});
// Use the resources as documented on i18next.com
i18n.t('key')
And you're done! The index.js
can be empty, it's just needed to point the loader to the root directory of the locales.
Options are set via the loader query
. See webpack documentation for more details regarding how this mechanism works.
The following examples assume you understand these values are used as the query
value.
You can filter files in your file structure by specifying any glob supported by glob-all
.
By default, any json|yaml|yml
will be loaded.
{include: ['**/*.json']}
{include: ['**/*.json', '!**/excludeThis.json']}
Applications that reuse libraries e.g. white labeling, can utilize one to many sets of locale directories that the app will override.
{overrides: ['../node_modules/lib1/locales']}
This configures the loader to work on a file structure like the following:
└── app
├── src
│ └── app.js
├── locales
│ ├── index.js
│ └── en
│ ├── foo.json
│ └── bar.yaml
└── node_modules
└── lib1
└── locales
├── index.js
└── en
├── foo.json
└── bar.yaml
Everything from app/locales
will override anything specified in one to many libraries.
join | resolve | replace
join
by default
join
and replace
is path
methods with locales folder
{overridePathMethod: 'replace'}
{basenameAsNamespace: true}
The following file structure would result in resources loaded as below:
└── app
├── src
│ └── app.js
└── locales
├── index.js
└── en
├── foo.json
└── bar.yaml
foo.json
{
"header": {
"title": "TITLE"
}
}
bar.yaml
footer:
aboutUs: About us
Results in this object loaded:
"en": {
"foo": {
"header": {
"title":"TITLE"
}
},
"bar": {
"footer":{
"aboutUs":"About us"
}
}
}
This was forked from i18next-resource-store-loader because
we changed it in breaking ways that are incompatible.
Thanks to the original authors and contributors.