Localization

Working With Locales

CodeIgniter provides several tools to help you localize your application for different languages. While full localization of an application is a complex subject, it’s simple to swap out strings in your application with different supported languages.

Language strings are stored in the app/Language directory, with a sub-directory for each supported language:

/app
    /Language
        /en
            App.php
        /fr
            App.php

Important

Locale detection only works for web-based requests that use the IncomingRequest class. Command-line requests will not have these features.

Configuring the Locale

Every site will have a default language/locale they operate in. This can be set in Config/App.php:

<?php

namespace Config;

use CodeIgniter\Config\BaseConfig;

class App extends BaseConfig
{
    public $defaultLocale = 'en';

    // ...
}

The value can be any string that your application uses to manage text strings and other formats. It is recommended that a BCP 47 language code is used. This results in language codes like en-US for American English, or fr-FR, for French/France. A more readable introduction to this can be found on the W3C’s site.

The system is smart enough to fall back to more generic language codes if an exact match cannot be found. If the locale code was set to en-US and we only have language files set up for en then those will be used since nothing exists for the more specific en-US. If, however, a language directory existed at app/Language/en-US then that would be used first.

Locale Detection

There are two methods supported to detect the correct locale during the request. The first is a “set and forget” method that will automatically perform content negotiation for you to determine the correct locale to use. The second method allows you to specify a segment in your routes that will be used to set the locale.

Should you ever need to set the locale directly you may use IncomingRequest::setLocale(string $locale).

Content Negotiation

You can set up content negotiation to happen automatically by setting two additional settings in Config/App. The first value tells the Request class that we do want to negotiate a locale, so simply set it to true:

<?php

namespace Config;

use CodeIgniter\Config\BaseConfig;

class App extends BaseConfig
{
    public $negotiateLocale = true;

    // ...
}

Once this is enabled, the system will automatically negotiate the correct language based upon an array of locales that you have defined in $supportLocales. If no match is found between the languages that you support, and the requested language, the first item in $supportedLocales will be used. In the following example, the en locale would be used if no match is found:

<?php

namespace Config;

use CodeIgniter\Config\BaseConfig;

class App extends BaseConfig
{
    public $supportedLocales = ['en', 'es', 'fr-FR'];

    // ...
}

In Routes

The second method uses a custom placeholder to detect the desired locale and set it on the Request. The placeholder {locale} can be placed as a segment in your route. If present, the contents of the matching segment will be your locale:

<?php

$routes->get('{locale}/books', 'App\Books::index');

In this example, if the user tried to visit http://example.com/fr/books, then the locale would be set to fr, assuming it was configured as a valid locale.

Note

If the value doesn’t match a valid locale as defined in the App configuration file, the default locale will be used in it’s place.

Retrieving the Current Locale

The current locale can always be retrieved from the IncomingRequest object, through the getLocale() method. If your controller is extending CodeIgniter\Controller, this will be available through $this->request:

<?php

namespace App\Controllers;

class UserController extends BaseController
{
    public function index()
    {
        $locale = $this->request->getLocale();
    }
}

Alternatively, you can use the Services class to retrieve the current request:

<?php

$locale = service('request')->getLocale();

Language Localization

Creating Language Files

Languages do not have any specific naming convention that are required. The file should be named logically to describe the type of content it holds. For example, let’s say you want to create a file containing error messages. You might name it simply: Errors.php.

Within the file, you would return an array, where each element in the array has a language key and can have string to return:

<?php

return [
    'languageKey' => 'The actual message to be shown.',
];

It also support nested definition:

<?php

return [
    'languageKey' => [
        'nested' => [
            'key' => 'The actual message to be shown.',
        ],
    ],
];
<?php

return [
    'errorEmailMissing'    => 'You must submit an email address',
    'errorURLMissing'      => 'You must submit a URL',
    'errorUsernameMissing' => 'You must submit a username',
    'nested'               => [
        'error' => [
            'message' => 'A specific error message',
        ],
    ],
];

Basic Usage

You can use the lang() helper function to retrieve text from any of the language files, by passing the filename and the language key as the first parameter, separated by a period (.). For example, to load the errorEmailMissing string from the Errors language file, you would do the following:

<?php

echo lang('Errors.errorEmailMissing');

For nested definition, you would do the following:

<?php

echo lang('Errors.nested.error.message');

If the requested language key doesn’t exist in the file for the current locale, the string will be passed back, unchanged. In this example, it would return ‘Errors.errorEmailMissing’ or ‘Errors.nested.error.message’ if it didn’t exist.

Replacing Parameters

Note

The following functions all require the intl extension to be loaded on your system in order to work. If the extension is not loaded, no replacement will be attempted. A great overview can be found over at Sitepoint.

You can pass an array of values to replace placeholders in the language string as the second parameter to the lang() function. This allows for very simple number translations and formatting:

<?php

// The language file, Tests.php:
return [
    'apples'      => 'I have {0, number} apples.',
    'men'         => 'The top {1, number} men out-performed the remaining {0, number}',
    'namedApples' => 'I have {number_apples, number, integer} apples.',
];

// Displays "I have 3 apples."
echo lang('Tests.apples', [3]);

The first item in the placeholder corresponds to the index of the item in the array, if it’s numerical:

<?php

// Displays "The top 23 men out-performed the remaining 20"
echo lang('Tests.men', [20, 23]);

You can also use named keys to make it easier to keep things straight, if you’d like:

<?php

// Displays "I have 3 apples."
echo lang('Tests.namedApples', ['number_apples' => 3]);

Obviously, you can do more than just number replacement. According to the official ICU docs for the underlying library, the following types of data can be replaced:

  • numbers - integer, currency, percent

  • dates - short, medium, long, full

  • time - short, medium, long, full

  • spellout - spells out numbers (i.e., 34 becomes thirty-four)

  • ordinal

  • duration

Here are a few examples:

<?php

// The language file, Tests.php
return [
    'shortTime'  => 'The time is now {0, time, short}.',
    'mediumTime' => 'The time is now {0, time, medium}.',
    'longTime'   => 'The time is now {0, time, long}.',
    'fullTime'   => 'The time is now {0, time, full}.',
    'shortDate'  => 'The date is now {0, date, short}.',
    'mediumDate' => 'The date is now {0, date, medium}.',
    'longDate'   => 'The date is now {0, date, long}.',
    'fullDate'   => 'The date is now {0, date, full}.',
    'spelledOut' => '34 is {0, spellout}',
    'ordinal'    => 'The ordinal is {0, ordinal}',
    'duration'   => 'It has been {0, duration}',
];

// Displays "The time is now 11:18 PM"
echo lang('Tests.shortTime', [time()]);
// Displays "The time is now 11:18:50 PM"
echo lang('Tests.mediumTime', [time()]);
// Displays "The time is now 11:19:09 PM CDT"
echo lang('Tests.longTime', [time()]);
// Displays "The time is now 11:19:26 PM Central Daylight Time"
echo lang('Tests.fullTime', [time()]);

// Displays "The date is now 8/14/16"
echo lang('Tests.shortDate', [time()]);
// Displays "The date is now Aug 14, 2016"
echo lang('Tests.mediumDate', [time()]);
// Displays "The date is now August 14, 2016"
echo lang('Tests.longDate', [time()]);
// Displays "The date is now Sunday, August 14, 2016"
echo lang('Tests.fullDate', [time()]);

// Displays "34 is thirty-four"
echo lang('Tests.spelledOut', [34]);

// Displays "It has been 408,676:24:35"
echo lang('Tests.ordinal', [time()]);

You should be sure to read up on the MessageFormatter class and the underlying ICU formatting to get a better idea on what capabilities it has, like performing the conditional replacement, pluralization, and more. Both of the links provided earlier will give you an excellent idea as to the options available.

Specifying Locale

To specify a different locale to be used when replacing parameters, you can pass the locale in as the third parameter to the lang() method.

<?php

// Displays "The time is now 23:21:28 GMT-5"
echo lang('Test.longTime', [time()], 'ru-RU');

// Displays "£7.41"
echo lang('{price, number, currency}', ['price' => 7.41], 'en-GB');
// Displays "$7.41"
echo lang('{price, number, currency}', ['price' => 7.41], 'en-US');

Nested Arrays

Language files also allow nested arrays to make working with lists, etc… easier.

<?php

// Language/en/Fruit.php

return [
    'list' => [
        'Apples',
        'Bananas',
        'Grapes',
        'Lemons',
        'Oranges',
        'Strawberries',
    ],
];

// Displays "Apples, Bananas, Grapes, Lemons, Oranges, Strawberries"
echo implode(', ', lang('Fruit.list'));

Language Fallback

If you have a set of messages for a given locale, for instance Language/en/app.php, you can add language variants for that locale, each in its own folder, for instance Language/en-US/app.php.

You only need to provide values for those messages that would be localized differently for that locale variant. Any missing message definitions will be automatically pulled from the main locale settings.

It gets better - the localization can fall all the way back to English, in case new messages are added to the framework and you haven’t had a chance to translate them yet for your locale.

So, if you are using the locale fr-CA, then a localized message will first be sought in Language/fr/CA, then in Language/fr, and finally in Language/en.

Message Translations

We have an “official” set of translations in their own repository.

You could download that repository, and copy its Language folder into your app. The incorporated translations will be automatically picked up because the App namespace is mapped to your app folder.

Alternately, a better practice would be to composer require codeigniter4/translations inside your project, and the translated messages will be automatically picked up because the translations folders get mapped appropriately.