gettext/languages

gettext languages with plural rules


Keywords
php, i18n, translations, language, l10n, localization, unicode, translate, internationalization, languages, plural, cldr, plurals, plural rules
License
MIT

Documentation

Tests

gettext language list automatically generated from CLDR data

Static usage

To use the languages data generated from this tool you can use the bin/export-plural-rules command.

Export command line options

export-plural-rules supports the following options:

  • --us-ascii If specified, the output will contain only US-ASCII characters. If not specified, the output charset is UTF-8.
  • --languages=<LanguageId>[,<LanguageId>,...]] --language=<LanguageId>[,<LanguageId>,...]] Export only the specified language codes. Separate languages with commas; you can also use this argument more than once; it's case insensitive and accepts both '_' and '-' as locale chunks separator (eg we accept it_IT as well as it-it). If this option is not specified, the result will contain all the available languages.
  • --reduce=yes|no If set to yes the output won't contain languages with the same base language and rules. For instance nl_BE (Flemish) will be omitted because it's the same as nl (Dutch). Defaults to no if --languages is specified, to yes otherwise.
  • --parenthesis=yes|no If set to no, extra parenthesis will be omitted in generated plural rules formulas. Those extra parenthesis are needed to create a PHP-compatible formula. Defaults to yes
  • --output=<file name> If specified, the output will be saved to <file name>. If not specified we'll output to standard output.

Export formats

export-plural-rules can generate data in the following formats:

  • json: compressed JSON data

    export-plural-rules json
  • prettyjson: uncompressed JSON data

    export-plural-rules prettyjson
  • html: html table (see the result)

    export-plural-rules html
  • php: build a php file that can be included

    export-plural-rules --output=yourfile.php php

    Then you can use that generated file in your php scripts:

    $languages = include 'yourfile.php';
  • ruby: build a ruby file that can be included

    export-plural-rules --parenthesis=no --output=yourfile.rb ruby

    Then you can use that generated file in your ruby scripts:

    require './yourfile.rb'
    PLURAL_RULES['en']
  • xml: generate an XML document (here you can find the xsd XML schema)

    export-plural-rules xml
  • po: generate the gettext .po headers for a single language

    export-plural-rules po --language=YourLanguageCode

Dynamic usage

With Composer

You can use Composer to include this tool in your project. Simply launch composer require gettext/languages or add "gettext/languages": "*" to the "require" section of your composer.json file.

Without Composer

If you don't use composer in your project, you can download this package in a directory of your project and include the autoloader file:

require_once 'path/to/src/autoloader.php';

Main methods

The most useful functions of this tools are the following

$allLanguages = Gettext\Languages\Language::getAll();
...
$oneLanguage = Gettext\Languages\Language::getById('en_US');
...

getAll returns a list of Gettext\Languages\Language instances, getById returns a single Gettext\Languages\Language instance (or null if the specified language identifier is not valid).

The main properties of the Gettext\Languages\Language instances are:

  • id: the normalized language ID (for instance en_US)
  • name: the language name (for instance American English for en_US)
  • supersededBy: the code of a language that supersedes this language code (for instance, jw is superseded by jv to represent the Javanese language)
  • script: the script name (for instance, for zh_Hans - Simplified Chinese - the script is Simplified Han)
  • territory: the name of the territory (for instance United States for en_US)
  • baseLanguage: the name of the base language (for instance English for en_US)
  • formula: the gettext formula to distinguish between different plural rules. For instance n != 1
  • categories: the plural cases applicable for this language. It's an array of Gettext\Languages\Category instances. Each instance has these properties:
    • id: can be (in this order) one of zero, one, two, few, many or other. The other case is always present.
    • examples: a representation of some values for which this plural case is valid (examples are simple numbers like 1 or complex ranges like 0, 2~16, 100, 1000, 10000, 100000, 1000000, …)

Is this data correct?

Yes - as far as you trust the Unicode CLDR project.

The conversion from CLDR to gettext includes also a lot of tests to check the results. And all passes 😉.

Reference

CLDR

The CLDR specifications define the following variables to be used in the CLDR plural formulas:

  • n: absolute value of the source number (integer and decimals) (eg: 9.870 => 9.87)
  • i: integer digits of n (eg: 9.870 => 9)
  • v: number of visible fraction digits in n, with trailing zeros (eg: 9.870 => 3)
  • w: number of visible fraction digits in n, without trailing zeros (eg: 9.870 => 2)
  • f: visible fractional digits in n, with trailing zeros (eg: 9.870 => 870)
  • t: visible fractional digits in n, without trailing zeros (eg: 9.870 => 87)
  • c: exponent of the power of 10 used in compact decimal formatting (eg: 98c7 => 7)
  • e: synonym for c

gettext

The gettext specifications define the following variables to be used in the gettext plural formulas:

  • n: unsigned long int

Conversion CLDR > gettext

CLDR variable gettext equivalent
n n
i n
v 0
w 0
f empty
t empty
c empty
e empty

Parenthesis in ternary operators

The generated gettext formulas contain some extra parenthesis, in order to avoid problems in some programming language. For instance, let's assume we have this formula: (0 == 0) ? 0 : (0 == 1) ? 1 : 2

So, in order to avoid problems, instead of a simple a ? 0 : b ? 1 : 2 the resulting formulas will be in this format: a ? 0 : (b ? 1 : 2)

Contributing

Generating the CLDR data

This repository uses the CLDR data, including American English (en_US) json files. In order to generate this data, you can use Docker. Start a new Docker container by running

docker run --rm -it -v path/to/src/cldr-data:/output alpine:3.13 sh

Then run the following script, setting the values of the variables accordingly to your needs:

# The value of the CLDR version (eg 39, 38.1, ...)
CLDR_VERSION=39
# Your GitHub username (required since CLDR 38) - see http://cldr.unicode.org/development/maven#TOC-Introduction
GITHUB_USERNAME=
# Your GitHub personal access token (required since CLDR 38) - see http://cldr.unicode.org/development/maven#TOC-Introduction
GITHUB_TOKEN=

if ! test -d /output; then
    echo 'Missing output directory' >&2
    return 1
fi
apk -U upgrade
apk add --no-cache git git-lfs openjdk8 apache-ant maven
CLDR_MAJORVERSION="$(printf '%s' "$CLDR_VERSION" | sed -E 's/^([0-9]+).*/\1/')"
SOURCE_DIR="$(mktemp -d)"
DESTINATION_DIR="$(mktemp -d)"
git clone --single-branch --depth=1 "--branch=release-$(printf '%s' "$CLDR_VERSION" | tr '.' '-')" https://github.com/unicode-org/cldr.git "$SOURCE_DIR"
if test $CLDR_MAJORVERSION -lt 38; then
    git -C "$SOURCE_DIR" lfs pull --include tools/java || true
    ant -f "$SOURCE_DIR/tools/java/build.xml" jar
    JARFILE="$SOURCE_DIR/tools/java/cldr.jar"
    DESTINATION_DIR_LOCALE="$DESTINATION_DIR/en_US"
    DESTINATION_FILE_PLURALS="$DESTINATION_DIR/supplemental/plurals.json"
else
    if test -z "${GITHUB_USERNAME:-}"; then
        echo 'GITHUB_USERNAME is missing' >&2
        return 1
    fi
    if test -z "${GITHUB_TOKEN:-}"; then
        echo 'GITHUB_TOKEN is missing' >&2
        return 1
    fi
    printf '<settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0"><servers><server><id>githubicu</id><username>%s</username><password>%s</password></server></servers></settings>' "$GITHUB_USERNAME" "$GITHUB_TOKEN" > "$SOURCE_DIR/mvn-settings.xml"
    mvn --settings "$SOURCE_DIR/mvn-settings.xml" package -DskipTests=true --file "$SOURCE_DIR/tools/cldr-code/pom.xml"
    JARFILE="$SOURCE_DIR//tools/cldr-code/target/cldr-code.jar"
    DESTINATION_DIR_LOCALE="$DESTINATION_DIR"
    DESTINATION_FILE_PLURALS="$DESTINATION_DIR/supplemental/plurals/plurals.json"
fi
java -Duser.language=en -Duser.country=US "-DCLDR_DIR=$SOURCE_DIR" "-DCLDR_GEN_DIR=$DESTINATION_DIR_LOCALE" -jar "$JARFILE" ldml2json -t main -r true -s contributed -m en_US
java -Duser.language=en -Duser.country=US "-DCLDR_DIR=$SOURCE_DIR" "-DCLDR_GEN_DIR=$DESTINATION_DIR/supplemental" -jar "$JARFILE" ldml2json -s contributed -o true -t supplemental
mkdir -p /output/main/en-US
cp $DESTINATION_DIR/en_US/languages.json /output/main/en-US/
cp $DESTINATION_DIR/en_US/scripts.json /output/main/en-US/
cp $DESTINATION_DIR/en_US/territories.json /output/main/en-US/
mkdir -p /output/supplemental
cp "$DESTINATION_FILE_PLURALS" /output/supplemental/

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