问题
I have the following problem with a small iOS 7 project on which I'm testing the localisation capabilities.
- I have a default project, with one VC, in which I have one button in the middle of the scene
- in my VC I have an IBOutlet to my button called myButton
- in the viewDidLoad method of the VC I am setting the buttons's title:
NSString *title = NSLocalizedString(@"MY_BUTTON", @"My comment for my button");
[self.myButton setTitle:title forState:UIControlStateNormal];
- I generated the Localizable.strings file end enabled it for localization for the following languages: Base, Dutch
- the contents of each file are as follows:
/* My comment for my button */ "MY_BUTTON" = "My [VALUE] Button"; where VALUE = Base, Dutch; so the labels should be My Base Button & My Dutch Button
Problem: If I launch my app using the simulator's language as Dutch, the label is (as expected) "My Dutch Button". If I launch it in English, the label is "My Base Button" (kind of ok…)
However, if I launch it with the phone's language set to French, and I previously had it set to Dutch, the label of the button does not default to Base, and instead displays again "My Dutch Button"
Any thoughts on this?
Thanks
回答1:
the order of default languages is a user setting on OSX and not editable (AFAIK) on iOS
BUT still adhered to!
the app is passed the array AppleLanguages (or so..) that specifies the languages to try. The NSLocalizedString macro will try load each language in the array in the order they appear UNTIL it finds a working one and then it uses that
compare: How to force NSLocalizedString to use a specific language
回答2:
I have created the following class, which supports a fallback to a customizable language. In my case I use Base.lproj as file for my default language contents.
StringUtilities.h
@interface StringUtils : NSObject
#define GetLocalizedString(key) [StringUtils getLocalizedString:key comment:nil]
//#define GetLocalizedString(key,comment) [StringUtils getLocalizedString:key comment:comment]
+ (NSString*) getLocalizedString:(NSString*)key comment:(NSString*)comment;
@end
StringUtilities.m
#import "StringUtilities.h"
@implementation StringUtils
//Returns a localized string, with fallback to version of Base
+ (NSString*) getLocalizedString:(NSString*)key comment:(NSString*)comment {
NSString* localizedString = NSLocalizedString(key, nil);
//use base language if current language setting on device does not find a proper value
if([localizedString isEqualToString:key]) {
NSString * path = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"Base" ofType:@"lproj"];
NSBundle * bundle = nil;
if(path == nil){
bundle = [NSBundle mainBundle];
}else{
bundle = [NSBundle bundleWithPath:path];
}
localizedString = [bundle localizedStringForKey:key value:comment table:nil];
}
return localizedString;
}
@end
How to use
Import the header file and use the GetLocalizedString
macro instead of NSLocalizedString
macro.
#import "StringUtilities.h"
NSString* str = GetLocalizedString(@"your.text.key");
回答3:
I have an equivalent in Swift:
public func LS(_ key: String) -> String {
let value = NSLocalizedString(key, comment: "")
if value != key || NSLocale.preferredLanguages.first == "en" {
return value
}
// Fall back to en
guard
let path = Bundle.main.path(forResource: "en", ofType: "lproj"),
let bundle = Bundle(path: path)
else { return value }
return NSLocalizedString(key, bundle: bundle, comment: "")
}
回答4:
Using Dirk's answer here is the Swift equivalent implemented as a computed property in a String extension:
extension String {
var localized: String {
var localizedString = NSLocalizedString(self, comment: "")
// If a localized string was found then return it.
// This check is based on the fact that if no localized string
// exists then NSLocalized() returns the key itself.
if self != localizedString {
return localizedString
}
// No localized string exists. Retrieve the display string
// from the base strings file.
var bundleForString: Bundle
if let path = Bundle.main.path(forResource: "Base", ofType: "lproj"),
let bundle = Bundle(path: path) {
bundleForString = bundle
} else {
bundleForString = Bundle.main
}
localizedString = bundleForString.localizedString(forKey: self, value: self, table: nil)
return localizedString
}
}
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/21754890/nslocalizedstring-not-defaulting-to-base-language