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chrome.i18n | API | Chrome for Developers

Description

Use the chrome.i18n infrastructure to implement internationalization across your whole app or extension.

Manifest

If an extension has a /_locales directory, the manifest must define "default_locale".

Concepts and usage

You need to put all of its user-visible strings into a file named messages.json. Each time you add a new locale, you add a messages file under a directory named /_locales/_localeCode_, where localeCode is a code such as en for English.

Here's the file hierarchy for an internationalized extension that supports English (en), Spanish (es), and Korean (ko):

Support multiple languages

Say you have an extension with the files shown in the following figure:

To internationalize this extension, you name each user-visible string and put it into a messages file. The extension's manifest, CSS files, and JavaScript code use each string's name to get its localized version.

Here's what the extension looks like when it's internationalized (note that it still has only English strings):

Some notes about internationalizing:

For more information, see Formats: Locale-Specific Messages.

Once an extension is internationalized, translating it is straightforward. You copy messages.json, translate it, and put the copy into a new directory under /_locales. For example, to support Spanish, just put a translated copy of messages.json under /_locales/es. The following figure shows the previous extension with a new Spanish translation.

Predefined messages

The internationalization system provides a few predefined messages to help you localize. These include @@ui_locale, so you can detect the current UI locale, and a few @@bidi_... messages that let you detect the text direction. The latter messages have similar names to constants in the gadgets BIDI (bi-directional) API.

The special message @@extension_id can be used in the CSS and JavaScript files, whether or not the extension or app is localized. This message doesn't work in manifest files.

The following table describes each predefined message.

Message name Description @@extension_id The extension or app ID; you might use this string to construct URLs for resources inside the extension. Even unlocalized extensions can use this message.
Note: You can't use this message in a manifest file. @@ui_locale The current locale; you might use this string to construct locale-specific URLs. @@bidi_dir The text direction for the current locale, either "ltr" for left-to-right languages such as English or "rtl" for right-to-left languages such as Arabic. @@bidi_reversed_dir If the @@bidi_dir is "ltr", then this is "rtl"; otherwise, it's "ltr". @@bidi_start_edge If the @@bidi_dir is "ltr", then this is "left"; otherwise, it's "right". @@bidi_end_edge If the @@bidi_dir is "ltr", then this is "right"; otherwise, it's "left".

Here's an example of using @@extension_id in a CSS file to construct a URL:

body {
  background-image:url('chrome-extension://__MSG_@@extension_id__/background.png');
}

If the extension ID is abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdef, then the bold line in the previous code snippet becomes:

  background-image:url('chrome-extension://abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdef/background.png');

Here's an example of using @@bidi_* messages in a CSS file:

body {
  direction: __MSG_@@bidi_dir__;
}

div#header {
  margin-bottom: 1.05em;
  overflow: hidden;
  padding-bottom: 1.5em;
  padding-__MSG_@@bidi_start_edge__: 0;
  padding-__MSG_@@bidi_end_edge__: 1.5em;
  position: relative;
}

For left-to-right languages such as English, the bold lines become:

  dir: ltr;
  padding-left: 0;
  padding-right: 1.5em;
Locales

You can choose from many locales, including some (such as en) that let a single translation support multiple variations of a language (such as en_GB and en_US).

You can localize your extension to any locale that is supported by the Chrome Web Store. If your locale is not listed here, choose the closest alternative. For example, if the default locale of your extension is "de_CH", choose "de" in the Chrome Web Store.

Locale code Language (region) ar Arabic am Amharic bg Bulgarian bn Bengali ca Catalan cs Czech da Danish de German el Greek en English en_AU English (Australia) en_GB English (Great Britain) en_US English (USA) es Spanish es_419 Spanish (Latin America and Caribbean) et Estonian fa Persian fi Finnish fil Filipino fr French gu Gujarati he Hebrew hi Hindi hr Croatian hu Hungarian id Indonesian it Italian ja Japanese kn Kannada ko Korean lt Lithuanian lv Latvian ml Malayalam mr Marathi ms Malay nl Dutch no Norwegian pl Polish pt_BR Portuguese (Brazil) pt_PT Portuguese (Portugal) ro Romanian ru Russian sk Slovak sl Slovenian sr Serbian sv Swedish sw Swahili ta Tamil te Telugu th Thai tr Turkish uk Ukrainian vi Vietnamese zh_CN Chinese (China) zh_TW Chinese (Taiwan) Search for messages

You don't have to define every string for every supported locale. As long as the default locale's messages.json file has a value for every string, your extension or app will run no matter how sparse a translation is. Here's how the extension system searches for a message:

  1. Search the messages file (if any) for the user's preferred locale. For example, when Google Chrome's locale is set to British English (en_GB), the system first looks for the message in /_locales/en_GB/messages.json. If that file exists and the message is there, the system looks no further.
  2. If the user's preferred locale has a region (that is, the locale has an underscore: _), search the locale without that region. For example, if the en_GB messages file doesn't exist or doesn't contain the message, the system looks in the en messages file. If that file exists and the message is there, the system looks no further.
  3. Search the messages file for the default locale. For example, if the extension's "default_locale" is set to "es", and neither /_locales/en_GB/messages.json nor /_locales/en/messages.json contains the message, the extension uses the message from /_locales/es/messages.json.

In the following figure, the message named "colores" is in all three locales that the extension supports, but "extName" is in only two of the locales. Wherever a user running Google Chrome in US English sees the label "Colors", a user of British English sees "Colours". Both US English and British English users see the extension name "Hello World". Because the default language is Spanish, users running Google Chrome in any non-English language see the label "Colores" and the extension name "Hola mundo".

Set your browser's locale

To test translations, you might want to set your browser's locale. This section tells you how to set the locale in Windows, Mac OS, Linux, and ChromeOS.

Windows

You can change the locale using either a locale-specific shortcut or the Google Chrome UI. The shortcut approach is quicker, once you've set it up, and it lets you use several languages at once.

Use a locale-specific shortcut

To create and use a shortcut that launches Google Chrome with a particular locale:

  1. Make a copy of the Google Chrome shortcut that's already on your desktop.
  2. Rename the new shortcut to match the new locale.
  3. Change the shortcut's properties so that the Target field specifies the --lang and --user-data-dir flags. The target should look something like this:

    path_to_chrome.exe --lang=locale --user-data-dir=c:\locale_profile_dir
    
  4. Launch Google Chrome by double-clicking the shortcut.

For example, to create a shortcut that launches Google Chrome in Spanish (es), you might create a shortcut named chrome-es that has the following target:

path_to_chrome.exe --lang=es --user-data-dir=c:\chrome-profile-es

You can create as many shortcuts as you like, making it straightforward to test in multiple languages. For example:

path_to_chrome.exe --lang=en --user-data-dir=c:\chrome-profile-en
path_to_chrome.exe --lang=en_GB --user-data-dir=c:\chrome-profile-en_GB
path_to_chrome.exe --lang=ko --user-data-dir=c:\chrome-profile-ko
Note: Specifying --user-data-dir is optional but handy. Having one data directory per locale lets you run the browser in several languages at the same time. A disadvantage is that because the locales' data isn't shared, you have to install your extension multiple times—once per locale, which can be challenging when you don't speak the language. For more information, see Creating and Using Profiles. Use the UI

Here's how to change the locale using the UI on Google Chrome for Windows:

  1. App icon > Options
  2. Choose the Under the Hood tab
  3. Scroll to Web Content
  4. Click Change font and language settings
  5. Choose the Languages tab
  6. Use the drop down to set the Google Chrome language
  7. Restart Chrome
Mac OS

To change the locale on Mac, you use the system preferences.

  1. From the Apple menu, choose System Preferences
  2. Under the Personal section, choose International
  3. Choose your language and location
  4. Restart Chrome
Linux

To change the locale on Linux, first quit Google Chrome. Then, all in one line, set the LANGUAGE environment variable and launch Google Chrome. For example:

LANGUAGE=es ./chrome
ChromeOS

To change the locale on ChromeOS:

  1. From the system tray, choose Settings.
  2. Under the Languages and input section, choose the Language drop-down.
  3. If your language is not listed, click Add languages and add it.
  4. Once added, click the 3-dot More actions menu item next to your language and choose Display ChromeOS in this language.
  5. Click the Restart button that appears next to the set language to restart ChromeOS.
Examples

You can find examples of internationalization in the examples/api/i18n directory. For a complete example, see examples/extensions/news. For other examples and for help in viewing the source code, see Samples.

getMessage()

The following code gets a localized message from the browser and displays it as a string. It replaces two placeholders within the message with the strings "string1" and "string2".

function getMessage() {
  var message = chrome.i18n.getMessage("click_here", ["string1", "string2"]);
  document.getElementById("languageSpan").innerHTML = message;
}

Here's how you'd supply and use a single string:

  // In JavaScript code
  status.innerText = chrome.i18n.getMessage("error", errorDetails);
"error": {
  "message": "Error: $details$",
  "description": "Generic error template. Expects error parameter to be passed in.",
  "placeholders": {
    "details": {
      "content": "$1",
      "example": "Failed to fetch RSS feed."
    }
  }
}

For more information about placeholders, see the Locale-Specific Messages page. For details on calling getMessage(), see the API reference.

getAcceptLanguages()

The following code gets accept-languages from the browser and displays them as a string by separating each accept-language with ','.

function getAcceptLanguages() {
  chrome.i18n.getAcceptLanguages(function(languageList) {
    var languages = languageList.join(",");
    document.getElementById("languageSpan").innerHTML = languages;
  })
}

For details on calling getAcceptLanguages(), see the API reference.

detectLanguage()

The following code detects up to 3 languages from the given string and displays the result as strings separated by new lines.

function detectLanguage(inputText) {
  chrome.i18n.detectLanguage(inputText, function(result) {
    var outputLang = "Detected Language: ";
    var outputPercent = "Language Percentage: ";
    for(i = 0; i < result.languages.length; i++) {
      outputLang += result.languages[i].language + " ";
      outputPercent +=result.languages[i].percentage + " ";
    }
    document.getElementById("languageSpan").innerHTML = outputLang + "\n" + outputPercent + "\nReliable: " + result.isReliable;
  });
}

For more details on calling detectLanguage(inputText), see the API reference.

Types

LanguageCode

An ISO language code such as en or fr. For a complete list of languages supported by this method, see kLanguageInfoTable. For an unknown language, und will be returned, which means that [percentage] of the text is unknown to CLD

Methods

detectLanguage()

chrome.i18n.detectLanguage(
  text: string,
)
: Promise<object>

Detects the language of the provided text using CLD.

Parameters

getAcceptLanguages()

chrome.i18n.getAcceptLanguages(): Promise<LanguageCode[]>

Gets the accept-languages of the browser. This is different from the locale used by the browser; to get the locale, use i18n.getUILanguage.

getMessage()

chrome.i18n.getMessage(
  messageName: string,
  substitutions?: any,
  options?: object,
)
: string

Gets the localized string for the specified message. If the message is missing, this method returns an empty string (''). If the format of the getMessage() call is wrong — for example, messageName is not a string or the substitutions array has more than 9 elements — this method returns undefined.

Parameters Returns

getUILanguage()

chrome.i18n.getUILanguage(): string

Gets the browser UI language of the browser. This is different from i18n.getAcceptLanguages which returns the preferred user languages.

Returns

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