The i18n-helpers are now available as a stand-alone crate: https://crates.io/crates/mdbook-i18n-helpers. Because we cache the Rust binaries in our GitHub workflows, I bumped the cache prefix to ensure we use a clean cache. Otherwise, Cargo won’t install the new binaries in mdbook-i18n-helpers because it sees the old ones from this repository.
4.5 KiB
Translations of Comprehensive Rust 🦀
We would love to have your help with translating the course into other
languages! We use the Gettext system for translations. This means that you
don't modify the Markdown files directly: instead you modify .po
files in a
po/
directory. The .po
files are small text-based translation databases.
Tip: You should not edit the
.po
files by hand. Instead use a PO editor, such as Poedit. There are also several online editors available. This will ensure that the file is encoded correctly.
There is a .po
file for each language. They are named after the ISO 639
language codes: Danish would go into po/da.po
, Korean would go into
po/ko.po
, etc. The .po
files contain all the English text plus the
translations. They are initialized from a messages.pot
file (a PO template)
which contains only the English text.
We will show how to update and manipulate the .po
and .pot
files using the
GNU Gettext utilities below.
I18n Helpers
We use two helpers for the translations:
mdbook-xgettext
: This program extracts the English text. It is an mdbook renderer.mdbook-gettext
: This program translates the book into a target language. It is an mdbook preprocessor.
Install both helpers with:
$ cargo install mdbook-i18n-helpers
Creating and Updating Translations
First, you need to know how to update the .pot
and .po
files.
As a general rule, you should never touch the auto-generated po/messages.pot
file. You should also not edit the msgid
entries in a po/xx.po
file. If you
find mistakes, you need to update the original English text instead. The fixes
to the English text will flow into the .po
files the next time the translators
update them.
Generating the PO Template
To extract the original English text and generate a messages.pot
file, you run
mdbook
with a special renderer:
$ MDBOOK_OUTPUT='{"xgettext": {"pot-file": "messages.pot"}}' \
mdbook build -d po
You will find the generated POT file as po/messages.pot
.
Initialize a New Translation
To start a new translation, first generate the po/messages.pot
file. Then use
msginit
to create a xx.po
file for the fictional xx
language:
$ msginit -i po/messages.pot -l xx -o po/xx.po
You can also simply copy po/messages.pot
to po/xx.po
. Then update the file
header (the first entry with msgid ""
) to the correct language.
Tip: You can use the
cloud-translate
tool to quickly machine-translate a new translation. Install it withcargo install cloud-translate
Untranslated entries will be sent through GCP Cloud Translate. Some of the translations will be wrong after this, so you must inspect them by hand afterwards.
Updating an Existing Translation
As the English text changes, translations gradually become outdated. To update
the po/xx.po
file with new messages, first extract the English text into a
po/messages.pot
template file. Then run
$ msgmerge --update po/xx.po po/messages.pot
Unchanged messages will stay intact, deleted messages are marked as old, and updated messages are marked "fuzzy". A fuzzy entry will reuse the previous translation: you should then go over it and update it as necessary before you remove the fuzzy marker.
Using Translations
This will show you how to use the translations to generate localized HTML output.
Note:
mdbook
will use original untranslated entries for all entries marked as "fuzzy" (visible as "Needs work" in Poedit). This is especially important when usingcloud-translate
for initial translation as all entries will be marked as "fuzzy".
Building a Translation
To use the po/xx.po
file for your output, run the following command:
$ MDBOOK_BOOK__LANGUAGE=xx mdbook build -d book/xx
This will update the book's language to xx
, it will make the mdbook-gettext
preprocessor become active and tell it to use the po/xx.po
file, and finally
it will redirect the output to book/xx
.
Serving a Translation
Like normal, you can use mdbook serve
to view your translation as you work on
it. You use the same command as with mdbook build
above:
$ MDBOOK_BOOK__LANGUAGE=xx mdbook serve -d book/xx