auto-localize

["Machine-translates an application, by generating a config/locales/<target-language>.yml file from a config/locales/<source-language>.yml using Bing to translate strings from the source file automatically", "Machine-translates an application, by generating a config/locales/<target-language>.yml file from a config/locales/<source-language>.yml using Bing to translate strings from the source file automatically", "https://github.com/caiosba/auto_localize"]


License
MIT
Install
gem install auto-localize -v 0.1

Documentation

Auto Localize

Build Status Gem Version

Machine-translates an application, by generating a config/locales/<target-language>.yml file from a config/locales/<source-language>.yml using Bing to translate strings from the source file automatically. Existing translations are not overwritten by default.

Installation

Add the auto_localize gem to your Gemfile:

gem "auto_localize"

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install auto_localize

Usage

After the gem is installed, you'll have a new rake task available. You need to pass the following arguments as environment variables:

  • BING_ID: Bing id to be used (mandatory)
  • BING_SECRET: Bing secret to be used (mandatory)
  • TARGET_LANGUAGES: List of languages to which the source file should be translated, separated by commas (mandatory)
  • SOURCE_LANGUAGE: Which source language to be used - assumes that a file at config/locales/<source>.yml exists (defaults to "en")
  • FORCE: If true, existing translations are overwritten (defaults to FALSE)

Example:

BING_ID=yourbingid BING_SECRET=yourbingsecret SOURCE_LANGUAGE=en TARGET_LANGUAGES=pt,es FORCE=true rake auto_localize

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request