locale is a node.js module for negotiating HTTP locales for incoming browser requests. It can be used as a standalone module for HTTP or as Express/Connect middleware, or as the server component for an in-browser gettext implementation like JED.
It works like this: you (optionally) tell it the languages you support, and it figures out the best one to use for each incoming request from a browser. So if you support en
, en_US
, ja
, kr
, and zh_TW
, and a request comes in that accepts en_UK
or en
, locale will figure out that en
is the best language to use.
Credits to jed who passed the ownership of the package.
var http = require("http")
, locale = require("locale")
, supported = new locale.Locales(["en", "en_US", "ja"])
http.createServer(function(req, res) {
var locales = new locale.Locales(req.headers["accept-language"])
res.writeHeader(200, {"Content-Type": "text/plain"})
res.end(
"You asked for: " + req.headers["accept-language"] + "\n" +
"We support: " + supported + "\n" +
"Our default is: " + locale.Locale["default"] + "\n" +
"The best match is: " + locales.best(supported) + "\n"
)
}).listen(8000)
var http = require("http")
, express = require("express")
, locale = require("locale")
, supported = ["en", "en_US", "ja"]
, default = "en",
, app = express()
app.use(locale(supported, default))
app.get("/", function(req, res) {
res.header("Content-Type", "text/plain")
res.send(
"You asked for: " + req.headers["accept-language"] + "\n" +
"We support: " + supported + "\n" +
"Our default is: " + locale.Locale["default"] + "\n" +
"The best match is: " + req.locale + "\n"
)
})
app.listen(8000)
$ npm install locale
(Note that although this repo is CoffeeScript, the actual npm library is pre-compiled to pure JavaScript and has no run-time dependencies.)
This module exports a function that can be used as Express/Connect middleware. It takes one argument, a list of supported locales, and adds a locale
property to incoming HTTP requests, reflecting the most appropriate locale determined using the best
method described below.
The Locale constructor takes a language tag string consisting of an ISO-639 language abbreviation and optional two-letter ISO-3166 country code, and returns an object with a language
property containing the former and a country
property containing the latter.
The default locale for the environment, as parsed from process.env.LANG
. This is used as the fallback when the best language is calculated from the intersection of requested and supported locales and supported languages has not default.
The Locales constructor takes a string compliant with the Accept-Language
HTTP header, and returns a list of acceptible locales, optionally sorted in descending order by quality score. Second argument is optional default value used as the fallback when the best language is calculated. Otherwise locale.Locale["default"] is used as fallback.
This method takes the target locale and compares it against the optionally provided list of supported locales, and returns the most appropriate locale based on the quality scores of the target locale. If no exact match exists (i.e. language+country) then it will fallback to language
if supported, or if the language isn't supported it will return the default locale.
supported = new locale.Locales(['en', 'en_US'], 'en');
(new locale.Locales('en')).best(supported).toString(); // 'en'
(new locale.Locales('en_GB')).best(supported).toString(); // 'en'
(new locale.Locales('en_US')).best(supported).toString(); // 'en_US'
(new locale.Locales('jp')).best(supported); // supported.default || locale.Locale["default"]
The actual return value of calling locales.best([supportedLocales])
or new locale.Locale(languageTag)
is a Locale object. This Locale object has its own interface with the following properties and methods:
Locale object
{
/* properties */
code: string // returns user-generated input used to construct the Locale. Eg, `en-US`
langauge: string // returns the first 2 letters of the code, lowercased
country: string // returns the second 2 letters of the code if present, uppercased. Returns `undefined` otherwise
normalized: string // returns the language, followed by a `_` and the country, if the country is present
/* methods */
toString(): string // returns the code
toJSON(): string // returns the code
}
For example:
var locale = new locale.Locale('pt-BR');
console.log(locale);
// {
// code: 'pt-BR',
// language: 'pt',
// country: 'BR',
// normalized: 'pt_BR',
// }
Copyright (c) 2012 Jed Schmidt. See LICENSE.txt for details.
Send any questions or comments here.