Viewer: Internationalization
OHIF supports internationalization using i18next through the npm package @ohif/i18n, where is the main instance of i18n containing several languages and tools.
Our translation management is powered by Locize through their generous support of open source.
Installing
yarn add @ohif/i18n
# OR
npm install --save @ohif/i18n
How it works
After installing @ohif/i18n
npm package, the translation function
t can be used with or
without React.
A translation will occur every time a text match happens in a t function.
The t function is responsible for getting translations using all the power of i18next.
E.g.
Before:
<div>my translated text</div>
After:
<div>{t('my translated text')}</div>
If the translation.json file contains a key that matches the HTML content e.g.
my translated text
, it will be replaced automatically by the
t function.
With React
This section will introduce you to react-i18next basics and show how to implement the t function easily.
Using HOCs
In most cases we used
High Order Components to
share the t
function among OHIF's components.
E.g.
import React from 'react';
import { withTranslation } from '@ohif/i18n';
function MyComponent({ t, i18n }) {
return <p>{t('my translated text')}</p>;
}
export default withTranslation('MyNameSpace')(MyComponent);
Important: if you are using React outside the OHIF Viewer, check the I18nextProvider section,
withTranslation
HOC doesn't works without a I18nextProvider
Using Hooks
Also, it's possible to get the t
tool using
React Hooks, but it
requires at least React > 16.8 😉
Using outside of OHIF viewer
OHIF Viewer already sets a main
I18nextProvider connected to
the shared i18n instance from @ohif/i18n
, all extensions inside OHIF Viewer
will share this same provider at the end, you don't need to set new providers at
all.
But, if you need to use it completely outside of OHIF viewer, you can set the I18nextProvider this way:
import i18n from '@ohif/i18n';
import { I18nextProvider } from 'react-i18next';
import App from './App';
<I18nextProvider i18n={i18n}>
<App />
</I18nextProvider>;
After setting I18nextProvider
in your React App, all translations from
@ohif/i18n
should be available following the basic With React
usage.
Without React
When needed, you can also use available translations without React.
E.g.
import { T } from '@ohif/i18n';
console.log(T('my translated text'));
console.log(T('$t(Common:Play) my translated text'));
Main Concepts While Translating
Namespaces
Namespaces are being used to organize translations in smaller portions, combined
semantically or by use. Each .json
file inside @ohif/i18n
npm package
becomes a new namespace automatically.
- Buttons: All buttons translations
- CineDialog: Translations for the toll tips inside the Cine Player Dialog
- Common: all common jargons that can be reused like
t('$t(common:image)')
- Header: translations related to OHIF's Header Top Bar
- MeasurementTable - Translations for the
@ohif/ui
Measurement Table - UserPreferencesModal - Translations for the
@ohif/ui
Preferences Modal
How to use another NameSpace inside the current NameSpace?
i18next provides a parsing feature able to get translations strings from any
NameSpace, like this following example getting data from Common
NameSpace:
$t(Common:Reset)
Extending Languages in @ohif/i18n
Sometimes, even using the same language, some nouns or jargons can change according to the country, states or even from Hospital to Hospital.
In this cases, you don't need to set an entire language again, you can extend languages creating a new folder inside a pre existent language folder and @ohif/i18n will do the hard work.
This new folder must to be called with a double character name, like the UK
in
the following file tree:
|-- src
|-- locales
index.js
|-- en
|-- Buttons.json
index.js
| UK
|-- Buttons.js
index.js
| US
|-- Buttons.js
index.js
...
All properties inside a Namespace will be merged in the new sub language, e.g
en-US
and en-UK
will merge the props with en
, using i18next's fallback
languages tool.
You will need to export all Json files in your index.js
file, mounting an
object like this:
{
en: {
NameSpace: {
keyWord1: 'keyWord1Translation',
keyWord2: 'keyWord2Translation',
keyWord3: 'keyWord3Translation',
}
},
'en-UK': {
NameSpace: {
keyWord1: 'keyWord1DifferentTranslation',
}
}
}
Please check the index.js
files inside locales folder for an example of this
exporting structure.
Extending languages dynamically
You have access to the i18next instance, so you can use the addResourceBundle method to add and change language resources as needed.
E.g.
import { i18n } from '@ohif/i18n';
i18next.addResourceBundle('pt-BR', 'Buttons', {
Angle: 'Ângulo',
});
How to set a whole new language
To set a brand new language you can do it in two different ways:
Opening a pull request for
@ohif/i18n
and sharing the translation with the community. 😍 Please see Contributing section for further information.Setting it only in your project or extension:
You'll need a a final object like the following, what is setting French as
language, and send it to addLocales
method.
const newLanguage =
{
fr: {
Commons: {
"Reset": "Réinitialiser",
"Previous": "Précédent",
},
Buttons: {
"Rectangle": "Rectangle",
"Circle": "Cercle",
}
}
To make it easier to translate, you can copy the .json files in the /locales
folder and theirs index.js exporters, keeping same keys and NameSpaces.
Importing the main index.js file, will provide you an Object as expected by the
method addlocales
;
E.g. of addLocales
usage
import { addLocales } from '@ohif/i18n';
import locales from './locales/index.js';
addLocales(locales);
You can also set them manually, one by one, using this method.
Language Detections
@ohif/i18n uses i18next-browser-languageDetector to manage detections, also exports a method called initI18n that accepts a new detector config as parameter.
Changing the language
OHIF Viewer accepts a query param called lng
in the url to change the
language.
E.g.
https://docs.ohif.org/demo/?lng=es-MX
Language Persistence
The user's language preference is kept automatically by the detector and stored at a cookie called 'i18next', and in a localstorage key called 'i18nextLng'. These names can be changed with a new Detector Config.
Debugging translations
There is an environment variable responsible for debugging the translations,
called REACT_APP_I18N_DEBUG
.
Run the project as following to get full debug information:
REACT_APP_I18N_DEBUG=true yarn run dev
Contributing with new languages
Contributions of any kind are welcome! Please check the instructions.