Vite plugin to load i18n translation message files
In small applications, have single json file per language may be sufficient, but if your app grows, you should split it in multiple files per language, to improve your structure.
You may even want to move these files to different locations.
All translation files in the same folder - example
src
├── ...
├── locales
│ ├── about.en.json
│ ├── about.es.json
│ ├── about.fr.json
│ ├── home.en.json
│ ├── home.es.json
│ ├── home.fr.json
│ └── ...
└── ...
Translation Files split by scopes - example
src
├── ...
├── pages
│ ├── about
│ │ ├── ...
│ │ ├── locales
│ │ │ ├── about.en.json
│ │ │ ├── about.es.json
│ │ │ └── about.fr.json
│ │ └── ...
│ ├── home
│ │ ├── ...
│ │ ├── locales
│ │ │ ├── home.en.json
│ │ │ ├── home.es.json
│ │ │ └── home.fr.json
│ │ └── ...
│ └── ...
└── ...
This plugin finds all language files within a path and groups them by language so that you can set them on your vue-i18n instance.
yarn add --dev vite-plugin-i18n-resources
npm i -D vite-plugin-i18n-resources
1. Config plugin in vite.config.js
Import this plugin and set the path of translation files.
import i18nResources from "vite-plugin-i18n-resources";
import { resolve } from "path";
export default {
plugins: [
i18nResources({
path: resolve(__dirname, "src/locales"),
}),
],
};
2. Import translation message and set them to your vue-i18n instance
import { createI18n } from "vue-i18n";
import { messages } from "vite-i18n-resources";
const i18n = createI18n({
legacy: false,
locale: "en",
fallbackLocale: "en",
messages,
});
// Only if you want hot module replacement when translation message file change
if (import.meta.hot) {
import.meta.hot.on("locales-update", (data) => {
Object.keys(data).forEach((lang) => {
i18n.global.setLocaleMessage(lang, data[lang]);
});
});
}
To avoid namespace collisions when group all translations files by language, each file is stored within a section with its name:
home.en.json
{
"title": "Home Page"
}
about.en.json
{
"title": "About Page"
}
The plugin will generate the following object:
{
en: {
home: {
title: 'Home Page'
},
about: {
title: 'About Page'
}
},
...
}
Now, you can use a translation message by:
<template>
<h1>{{ $t("home.title") }}</h1>
...
</template>
The file names of the translation files should have always the same format:
{namespaces}.{locale}.json
home.en.json
about.en.json
cart.de.json
If you use i18n ALLY, you can configure it as follows:
"i18n-ally.localesPaths": [ "src/locales" ],
"i18n-ally.namespace": true,
"i18n-ally.pathMatcher": "{namespaces}.{locale}.json",
"i18n-ally.keystyle": "nested",
- Basic test coverage
I'm sorry for my wording, English is not my mother tongue.