How to generate translation file (.po, .xliff, .yml,…) from a Symfony2/Silex project?

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野性不改
野性不改 2021-02-09 15:56

Im going to build a Silex/Symfony2 project and I have been looking around for a method to generate XLIFF/PO/YAML translation files based on texts-to-be-translated inside the pro

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  • 2021-02-09 16:16

    I see you've found a converter, but to answer your first question about generating your initial translation file -

    If you have Gettext installed on your system you could generate a PO file from your "texts-to-be-translated inside the project". The command line program xgettext will scan the source files looking for whatever function you're using.

    Example:
    To scan PHP files for instances of the trans method call as shown here you could use the following command -

    find . -name "*.php" | xargs xgettext --language=PHP --keyword=trans --output=messages.pot
    

    To your question about editors:
    You could use any PO editor, such as POEdit, to manage your translations, but as you say you eventually need to convert the PO file to either an XLIFF or YAML language pack for Symfony.

    I see you've already found a converter tool. You may also like to try the one I wrote for Loco. It supports PO to YAML, and PO to XLIFF

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  • 2021-02-09 16:38

    After a long time searching the internet, I found a good one:

    https://github.com/schmittjoh/JMSTranslationBundle

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  • 2021-02-09 16:39

    Workaround for busy people (UNIX)

    You can run the following command in the Terminal:

    $ grep -rEo --no-filename "'.+'\|\btrans\b" templates/ > output.txt
    

    This will output the list of messages to translate:

    'Please provide your email'|trans
    'Phone'|trans
    'Please provide your phone number'|trans
    ...
    

    I mean almost.. But you can usually do some work from here...

    Obviously you must tweak the command to your liking (transchoice, double-quotes instead of single...).

    Not ideal but can help!

    grep options

    • grep -R, -r, --recursive: Read all files under each directory, recursively this is equivalent to the -d recurse option.
    • grep -E, --extended-regexp: Interpret PATTERN as an extended regular expression.
    • grep -o, --only-matching: Show only the part of a matching line that matches PATTERN.
    • grep -h, --no-filename: Suppress the prefixing of filenames on output when multiple files are searched.

    (source)

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