Localization

Before you read about the Localization Pipe and the Localization Service, you should know about localization keys.

The Localization key format consists of 2 sections which are Resource Name and Key. ResourceName::Key

If you do not specify the resource name, it will be defaultResourceName which is declared in environment.ts

const environment = {
  //...
  localization: {
    defaultResourceName: 'MyProjectName',
  },
};

So these two are the same:

<h1>{{ '::Key' | abpLocalization }}</h1>

<h1>{{ 'MyProjectName::Key' | abpLocalization }}</h1>

Using the Localization Pipe

You can use the abpLocalization pipe to get localized text as in this example:

<h1>{{ 'Resource::Key' | abpLocalization }}</h1>

The pipe will replace the key with the localized text.

You can also specify a default value as shown below:

<h1>
  {{ { key: 'Resource::Key', defaultValue: 'Default Value' } | abpLocalization }}
</h1>

To use interpolation, you must give the values for interpolation as pipe parameters, for example:

Localization data is stored in key-value pairs:

{
  //...
  AbpAccount: { // AbpAccount is the resource name
    Key: "Value",
    PagerInfo: "Showing {0} to {1} of {2} entries"
  }
}

So we can use this key like this:

<h1>{{ 'AbpAccount::PagerInfo' | abpLocalization:'20':'30':'50' }}</h1>

<!-- Output: Showing 20 to 30 of 50 entries -->

Using the Localization Service

First of all you should import the LocalizationService from @abp/ng.core

import { LocalizationService } from '@abp/ng.core';

class MyClass {
  constructor(private localizationService: LocalizationService) {}
}

After that, you are able to use localization service.

You can add interpolation parameters as arguments to instant() and get() methods.

this.localizationService.instant(
  'AbpIdentity::UserDeletionConfirmation',
  'John'
);

// with fallback value
this.localizationService.instant(
  {
    key: 'AbpIdentity::UserDeletionConfirmation',
    defaultValue: 'Default Value',
  },
  'John'
);

// Output
// User 'John' will be deleted. Do you confirm that?

To get a localized text as Observable use get method instead of instant:

this.localizationService.get('Resource::Key');

// with fallback value
this.localizationService.get({
  key: 'Resource::Key',
  defaultValue: 'Default Value',
});

UI Localizations

Localizations can be determined on backend side. Angular UI gets the localizations from the application-configuration API's response. You can also determine localizations on the UI side.

See an example:

// app.module.ts

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    //...other imports
    CoreModule.forRoot({
      localizations: [
        {
          culture: 'en',
          resources: [
            {
              resourceName: 'MyProjectName',
              texts: {
                Administration: 'Administration',
                HomePage: 'Home',
              },
            },
          ],
        },
        {
          culture: 'de-DE',
          resources: [
            {
              resourceName: 'MyProjectName',
              texts: {
                Administration: 'Verwaltung',
                HomePage: 'Startseite',
              },
            },
          ],
        },
      ],
    }),
  ]
})

...or, you can determine the localizations in a feature module:

// your feature module

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    //...other imports
    CoreModule.forChild({
      localizations: [
        {
          culture: 'en',
          resources: [
            {
              resourceName: 'MyProjectName',
              texts: {
                Administration: 'Administration',
                HomePage: 'Home',
              },
            },
          ],
        },
        {
          culture: 'de-DE',
          resources: [
            {
              resourceName: 'MyProjectName',
              texts: {
                Administration: 'Verwaltung',
                HomePage: 'Startseite',
              },
            },
          ],
        },
      ],
    }),
  ]
})

The localizations above can be used like this:

<div>{{ 'MyProjectName::Administration' | abpLocalization }}</div>

<div>{{ 'MyProjectName::HomePage' | abpLocalization }}</div>

Note: If you have specified the same localizations in the UI and backend, the backend localizations override the UI localizations.

RTL Support

As of v2.9 ABP has RTL support. If you are generating a new project with v2.9 and above, everything is set, you do not need to do any changes. If you are migrating your project from an earlier version, please follow the 2 steps below:

Step 1. Create Chunks for Bootstrap LTR and RTL

Find styles configuration in angular.json and make sure the chunks in your project has bootstrap-rtl.min and bootstrap-ltr.min as shown below.

{
  "projects": {
    "MyProjectName": {
      "architect": {
        "build": {
          "options": {
            "styles": [
              {
                "input": "node_modules/@fortawesome/fontawesome-free/css/all.min.css",
                "inject": true,
                "bundleName": "fontawesome-all.min"
              },
              {
                "input": "node_modules/@fortawesome/fontawesome-free/css/v4-shims.min.css",
                "inject": true,
                "bundleName": "fontawesome-v4-shims.min"
              },
              {
                "input": "node_modules/@abp/ng.theme.shared/styles/bootstrap-rtl.min.css",
                "inject": false,
                "bundleName": "bootstrap-rtl.min"
              },
              {
                "input": "node_modules/bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.min.css",
                "inject": true,
                "bundleName": "bootstrap-ltr.min"
              },
              "apps/dev-app/src/styles.scss"
            ]
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Step 2. Clear Lazy Loaded Fontawesome in AppComponent

If you have created and injected chunks for Fontawesome as seen above, you no longer need the lazy loading in the AppComponent which was implemented before v2.9. Simply remove them. The AppComponent in the template of the new version looks like this:

import { Component } from '@angular/core';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  template: `
    <abp-loader-bar></abp-loader-bar>
    <router-outlet></router-outlet>
  `,
})
export class AppComponent {}

Registering a New Locale

Since ABP has more than one language, Angular locale files loads lazily using Webpack's import function to avoid increasing the bundle size and register to Angular core using the registerLocaleData function. The chunks to be included in the bundle are specified by the Webpack's magic comments as hard-coded. Therefore a registerLocale function that returns Webpack import function must be passed to CoreModule.

registerLocaleFn

registerLocale function that exported from @abp/ng.core/locale package is a higher order function that accepts cultureNameLocaleFileMap object and errorHandlerFn function as params and returns Webpack import function. A registerLocale function must be passed to the forRoot of the CoreModule as shown below:

// app.module.ts

import { registerLocale } from '@abp/ng.core/locale';
// if you have commercial license and the language management module, add the below import
// import { registerLocale } from '@volo/abp.ng.language-management/locale';


@NgModule({
  imports: [
    // ...
    CoreModule.forRoot({
      // ...other options,
      registerLocaleFn: registerLocale(
        // you can pass the cultureNameLocaleFileMap and errorHandlerFn as optionally
        {
          cultureNameLocaleFileMap: { 'pt-BR': 'pt' },
          errorHandlerFn: ({ resolve, reject, locale, error }) => {
            // the error can be handled here
          },
        },
      )
    }),
    //...
  ]

Mapping of Culture Name to Angular Locale File Name

Some of the culture names defined in .NET do not match Angular locales. In such cases, the Angular app throws an error like below at runtime:

locale-error

If you see an error like this, you should pass the cultureNameLocaleFileMap property like below to the registerLocale function.

// app.module.ts

import { registerLocale } from '@abp/ng.core/locale';
// if you have commercial license and the language management module, add the below import
// import { registerLocale } from '@volo/abp.ng.language-management/locale';


@NgModule({
  imports: [
    // ...
    CoreModule.forRoot({
      // ...other options,
      registerLocaleFn: registerLocale(
        {
          cultureNameLocaleFileMap: {
            "DotnetCultureName": "AngularLocaleFileName",
            "pt-BR": "pt"  // example
          },
        },
      )
    }),
    //...

See all locale files in Angular.

Adding a New Culture

Add the below code to the app.module.ts by replacing your-locale placeholder with a correct locale name.

//app.module.ts

import { storeLocaleData } from '@abp/ng.core/locale';
import(
  /* webpackChunkName: "_locale-your-locale-js"*/
  /* webpackMode: "eager" */
  '@angular/common/locales/your-locale.js'
).then((m) => storeLocaleData(m.default, 'your-locale'));

...or a custom registerLocale function can be passed to the CoreModule:

// register-locale.ts

import { differentLocales } from '@abp/ng.core';
export function registerLocale(locale: string) {
  return import(
    /* webpackChunkName: "_locale-[request]"*/
    /* webpackInclude: /[/\\](/docs/6.0/UI/Angular/en%7Cfr).js/ */
    /* webpackExclude: /[/\\]global|extra/ */
    `@angular/common/locales/${differentLocales[locale] || locale}.js`
  )
}

// app.module.ts

import { registerLocale } from './register-locale';

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    // ...
    CoreModule.forRoot({
      // ...other options,
      registerLocaleFn: registerLocale
    }),
    //...
  ]

After this custom registerLocale function, since the en and fr added to the webpackInclude, only en and fr locale files will be created as chunks:

locale chunks

Which locale files you add to webpackInclude magic comment, they will be included in the bundle

See Also

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