Migration guide from 2.x to 3.x¶
Important
Check out the @lingui/codemods package for semi-automatic migration of your codebase.
Backward incompatible changes¶
Minimal required versions are:
Node.js: 10.x
React: 16.8
Babel: 7
@lingui/react¶
<I18n>
render-prop component was removed in favor ofuseLingui()
hook.In <I18nProvider>,
defaultRender
prop was renamed todefaultComponent
, and now only accepts Custom ComponentsIn <Trans>,
defaults
prop was renamed tomessage
anddescription
tocomment
.In <Trans>,
render
prop only accepts render-prop function which is used to render translation.In <Trans>, new prop
component
accepts React component which is used to render translation.In <Trans>,
components
is now an object, not an array. When using the low level API, it allows to name the component placeholders:<Trans id="Read <a>the docs</a>!" components={{a: <a href="/docs" />}} />
NumberFormat
andDateFormat
components were removed. Importi18n
from@lingui/core
package and use i18n.date()
and ì18n.number()
instead.
Removed <I18nProvider> declarative API¶
LinguiJS started as a React library. After @lingui/core
package was introduced,
there were two ways how to switch active locales and manage catalogs in React: either
using <I18nProvider> declarative API or using setupI18n
imperative API.
In the same spirit as @apollo/react
and react-redux
, the <I18nProvider>
is simplified and accepts i18n
manager, which must be created manually:
import { I18nProvider } from '@lingui/react'
import { i18n } from "@lingui/core"
+ import { en } from 'make-plural/plurals'
import { messages } from './locale/en/messages.js'
+ i18n.loadLocaleData('en', { plurals: en })
+ i18n.load('en', messages)
+ i18n.activate('en')
function App() {
return (
- <I18nProvider language="en" catalogs={{ en: catalogEn }}>
+ <I18nProvider i18n={i18n}>
<App />
</I18nProvider>
)
}
@lingui/core¶
Package now exports default
i18n
instance. It’s recommended to use it unless you need customized instance.+ import { i18n } from "@lingui/core" - import { setupI18n } from "@lingui/core" - const i18n = setupI18n() i18n.activate('en')
Note
If you decide to use custom
i18n
instance, you also need to setruntimeConfigModule
. Macros automatically importi18n
instance and must be aware of correct import path.i18n.t
,i18n.plural
,i18n.select
andi18n.selectOrdinal
methods were removed in favor of macros.i18n.use
was removed. Using two locales at the same time isn’t common usecase and can be solved in user land by having two instances of i18n object.Signature of
i18n._
method has changed. The third parameter now accepts default message inmessage
prop, instead ofdefaults
:- i18n._('Welcome / Greetings', { name: 'Joe' }, { defaults: "Hello {name}" }) + i18n._('Welcome / Greetings', { name: 'Joe' }, { message: "Hello {name}" })
i18n._
also accepts a message descriptor as a first parameter:i18n._({ id: string, message?: string, comment?: string })
i18n.load loads a catalog for a single locale¶
i18n
manager is the single source of truth and there’s no need to keep all catalogs
loaded outside this object. To make loading easier, i18n.load now accepts catalog
for a single locale or multiple catalogs at once.
import { i18n } from "@lingui/core"
import catalogEn from './locale/en/messages.js'
- i18n.load({ en: catalogEn })
+ i18n.load('en', catalogEn.messages)
Note
You can still use i18n.load to load all catalogs at once:
// i18n.js
import { i18n } from "@lingui/core"
import catalogEn from './locale/en/messages.js'
import catalogFr from './locale/fr/messages.js'
i18n.load({
en: catalogEn.messages,
fr: catalogFr.messages
})
@lingui/macro¶
plural, select and selectOrdinal accepts value as a first parameter:
- plural({ value, one: "# book", other: "# books" }) + plural(value, { one: "# book", other: "# books" })
@lingui/cli¶
command
lingui init
was removedcommand
lingui add-locale
was removed
Whitespace¶
Whitespace handling in plugins had few bugs. By fixing them, there might be few
backward incompatible changes. It’s advised to run extract
and inspect
changes in catalogs (if any).
Spaces before
{variables}
in JSX aren’t preserved. This is how React handles whitespaces in JSX. Leading whitespace is always removed:<Trans> " {variable} " </Trans> // Becomes: "{variable}"
Forced newlines are preserved. Sometimes it’s useful to keep newlines in JSX. If that’s your case, you need to force it in the same was as spaces are forced before variables or elements:
<Trans> 1. Item{"\n"} 2. Item </Trans> // Becomes: 1. Item\n2. Item
Plugins/Presets¶
Plugins are replaced with macros. Presets are removed completely because they aren’t needed anymore.
Uninstall plugins/presets, remove them from Babel config and replace them with
macros
:npm uninstall @lingui/babel-preset-react npm install --dev @lingui/macro babel-plugin-macros
{ "presets": [ - "@lingui/babel-preset-react" ], "plugins": [ + "macros", ] }
Import <Trans>, <Plural>, <Select> and <SelectOrdinal> from
@lingui/macro
:- import { Trans } from "@lingui/react" + import { Trans } from "@lingui/macro"
Note
If you used <Trans> component without children, then keep the import from
@lingui/react
:import { Trans } from "@lingui/react" const CustomID = () => <Trans id="msg.id" /> const DynamicID = () => <Trans id={msgId} />
i18n.t()
,i18n.plural()
,i18n.select()
andi18n.selectOrdinal()
methods are removed and replaced with macros.These macros automatically binds message to default
i18n
object:import { i18n } from "@lingui/core" + import { t } from "@lingui/macro" - i18n.t`Hello World` + t`Hello World`
New features¶
i18n.load¶
i18n.load can now accept one catalog for specific locale. Useful for incremental loading of catalogs.
import { i18n } from "@lingui/core"
// Lingui v2 and v3
i18n.load({
en: require("./locale/en/messages"),
cs: require("./locale/cs/messages")
})
// Lingui v3 only
i18n.load('en', require("./locale/en/messages"))
i18n.load('cs', require("./locale/cs/messages"))
i18n.on(‘change’, callback)¶
Event change
is fired anytime new catalogs are loaded or when locale
is activated.
Native TypeScript support¶
Lingui now supports TypeScript out of the box, don’t forget to remove the @types/lingui packages from your project.