rails i18n - translating text with links inside

Ruby on-RailsInternationalization

Ruby on-Rails Problem Overview


I'd like to i18n a text that looks like this:

> Already signed up? Log in!

Note that there is a link on the text. On this example it points to google - in reality it will point to my app's log_in_path.

I've found two ways of doing this, but none of them looks "right".

The first way I know involves having this my en.yml:

log_in_message: "Already signed up? <a href='{{url}}'>Log in!</a>"

And in my view:

<p> <%= t('log_in_message', :url => login_path) %> </p>

This works, but having the <a href=...</a> part on the en.yml doesn't look very clean to me.

The other option I know is using localized views - login.en.html.erb, and login.es.html.erb.

This also doesn't feel right since the only different line would be the aforementioned one; the rest of the view (~30 lines) would be repeated for all views. It would not be very DRY.

I guess I could use "localized partials" but that seems too cumberstone; I think I prefer the first option to having so many tiny view files.

So my question is: is there a "proper" way to implement this?

Ruby on-Rails Solutions


Solution 1 - Ruby on-Rails

en.yml

log_in_message_html: "This is a text, with a %{href} inside."
log_in_href: "link"

login.html.erb

<p> <%= t("log_in_message_html", href: link_to(t("log_in_href"), login_path)) %> </p>

Solution 2 - Ruby on-Rails

Separating text and link in locale.yml file works for a while but with longer text those are hard to translate and maintain as the link is in separate translation-item (as in Simones answer). If you start having many strings/translations with links you can dry it a bit more.

I made one helper in my application_helper.rb:

# Converts
# "string with __link__ in the middle." to
# "string with #{link_to('link', link_url, link_options)} in the middle."
def string_with_link(str, link_url, link_options = {})
  match = str.match(/__([^_]{2,30})__/)
  if !match.blank?
    raw($` + link_to($1, link_url, link_options) + $')
  else
    raise "string_with_link: No place for __link__ given in #{str}" if Rails.env.test?
    nil
  end
end

In my en.yml:

log_in_message: "Already signed up? __Log in!__"

And in my views:

<p><%= string_with_link(t('.log_in_message'), login_path) %></p>

This way it's easier to translate messages as also the link text is clearly defined in the locale.yml-files.

Solution 3 - Ruby on-Rails

I took hollis solution and made a gem called it out of it. Let's look at an example:

log_in_message: "Already signed up? %{login:Log in!}"

And then

<p><%=t_link "log_in_message", :login => login_path %></p>

For more details, see https://github.com/iGEL/it.

Solution 4 - Ruby on-Rails

In en.yml

registration:
    terms:
      text: "I do agree with the terms and conditions: %{gtc} / %{stc}"
      gtc: "GTC"
      stc: "STC"

In de.yml

registration:
    terms:
      text: "Ich stimme den Geschäfts- und Nutzungsbedingungen zu: %{gtc} / %{stc}"
      gtc: "AGB"
      stc: "ANB"

in new.html.erb [assumed]

<%= t(
   'registration.terms.text',
    gtc:  link_to(t('registration.terms.gtc'),  terms_and_conditions_home_index_url + "?tab=gtc"),
    stc: link_to(t('registration.terms.stc'), terms_and_conditions_home_index_url + "?tab=stc")
 ).html_safe %>

Solution 5 - Ruby on-Rails

Thank you very much, holli, for sharing this approach. It works like a charm for me. Would vote you up if I could, but this is my first post so I'm lacking the proper reputation ... As an additional piece to the puzzle: The problem I realized with your approach is that it still won't work from inside the controller. I did some research and combined your approach with the one from Glenn on rubypond.

Here is what I came up with:

View helper, e.g. application_helper.rb

  def render_flash_messages
    messages = flash.collect do |key, value|
      content_tag(:div, flash_message_with_link(key, value), :class => "flash #{key}") unless key.to_s =~ /_link$/i
    end
    messages.join.html_safe
  end
  
  def flash_message_with_link(key, value)
    link = flash["#{key}_link".to_sym]
    link.nil? ? value : string_with_link(value, link).html_safe
  end
  
  # Converts
  # "string with __link__ in the middle." to
  # "string with #{link_to('link', link_url, link_options)} in the middle."
  # --> see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2543936/rails-i18n-translating-text-with-links-inside (holli)
  def string_with_link(str, link_url, link_options = {})
    match = str.match(/__([^_]{2,30})__/)
    if !match.blank?
      $` + link_to($1, link_url, link_options) + $'
    else
      raise "string_with_link: No place for __link__ given in #{str}" if Rails.env.test?
      nil
    end
  end

In the controller:

flash.now[:alert] = t("path.to.translation")
flash.now[:alert_link] = here_comes_the_link_path # or _url

In the locale.yml:

path:
  to:
    translation: "string with __link__ in the middle"

In the view:

<%= render_flash_messages %>

Hope this post earns me the reputation to vote you up, holli :) Any feedback is welcome.

Solution 6 - Ruby on-Rails

We had the following:

module I18nHelpers
  def translate key, options={}, &block
    s = super key, options  # Default translation
    if block_given?
      String.new(ERB::Util.html_escape(s)).gsub(/%\|([^\|]*)\|/){
        capture($1, &block)  # Pass in what's between the markers
      }.html_safe
    else
      s
    end
  end
  alias :t :translate
end

or more explicitly:

module I18nHelpers

  # Allows an I18n to include the special %|something| marker.
  # "something" will then be passed in to the given block, which
  # can generate whatever HTML is needed.
  #
  # Normal and _html keys are supported.
  #
  # Multiples are ok
  #
  #     mykey:  "Click %|here| and %|there|"
  #
  # Nesting should work too.
  #
  def translate key, options={}, &block

    s = super key, options  # Default translation

    if block_given?

      # Escape if not already raw HTML (html_escape won't escape if already html_safe)
      s = ERB::Util.html_escape(s)

      # ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer#gsub broken, so convert to String.
      # See https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/1555
      s = String.new(s)

      # Find the %|| pattern to substitute, then replace it with the block capture
      s = s.gsub /%\|([^\|]*)\|/ do
        capture($1, &block)  # Pass in what's between the markers
      end

      # Mark as html_safe going out
      s = s.html_safe
    end

    s
  end
  alias :t :translate


end

then in ApplicationController.rb just

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  helper I18nHelpers

Given a key in the en.yml file like

mykey: "Click %|here|!"

can be used in ERB as

<%= t '.mykey' do |text| %>
  <%= link_to text, 'http://foo.com' %>
<% end %>

should generate

Click <a href="http://foo.com">here</a>!

Solution 7 - Ruby on-Rails

I wanted a bit more flexibility than just adding links to flash messages from YAML files (for example the logged in username etc.) so instead I wanted to use ERB notation in the string.

As I am using bootstrap_flash so I modified the helper code as follows to decode the ERB strings before displaying:

require 'erb'

module BootstrapFlashHelper
  ALERT_TYPES = [:error, :info, :success, :warning] unless const_defined?(:ALERT_TYPES)

  def bootstrap_flash
    flash_messages = []
    flash.each do |type, message|
      # Skip empty messages, e.g. for devise messages set to nothing in a locale file.
      next if message.blank?

      type = type.to_sym
      type = :success if type == :notice
      type = :error   if type == :alert
      next unless ALERT_TYPES.include?(type)

      Array(message).each do |msg|
        begin
          msg = ERB.new(msg).result(binding) if msg
        rescue Exception=>e
          puts e.message
          puts e.backtrace
        end
        text = content_tag(:div,
                           content_tag(:button, raw("&times;"), :class => "close", "data-dismiss" => "alert") +
                           msg.html_safe, :class => "alert fade in alert-#{type}")
        flash_messages << text if msg
      end
    end
    flash_messages.join("\n").html_safe
  end
end

It is then possible to use strings like the following (using devise):

signed_in: "Welcome back <%= current_user.first_name %>! <%= link_to \"Click here\", account_path %> for your account."

This may not work for all situations and there may be an argument that code and string definitions should not be mixed (especially from a DRY perspective), but this seems to work well for me. The code should be adaptable for many other situations, the important bits being the following:

require 'erb'

....

        begin
          msg = ERB.new(msg).result(binding) if msg
        rescue Exception=>e
          puts e.message
          puts e.backtrace
        end

Solution 8 - Ruby on-Rails

I think a simple way to do this is by simply doing :

<%= link_to some_path do %>
<%= t '.some_locale_key' %>
<% end %>

Solution 9 - Ruby on-Rails

Why not use the first way, but splitting it up like

log_in_message: Already signed up?
log_in_link_text: Log in!

And then

<p> <%= t('log_in_message') %> <%= link_to t('log_in_link_text'), login_path %> </p>

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionkikitoView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - Ruby on-RailsSimone CarlettiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - Ruby on-RailsholliView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - Ruby on-RailsiGELView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - Ruby on-RailsEmuView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - Ruby on-RailsemrassView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - Ruby on-RailsJaime ChamView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - Ruby on-RailszelanixView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - Ruby on-RailsSankalp SinghaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - Ruby on-Railsalex.zherdevView Answer on Stackoverflow