react-native-localize

A toolbox for your React Native app localization.

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import reactNativeLocalize from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/react-native-localize';
</script>

README

🌍  react-native-localize

This library helped you? Consider sponsoring!

A toolbox for your React Native app localization.

npm version npm MIT
Platform - Android Platform - iOS Platform - macOS Platform - Windows Platform - Web

Support

package name version react-native version
react-native-localize 2.0.0+ 0.60.0+
react-native-localize 1.0.0+ 0.56.0+

Setup

$ npm install --save react-native-localize
# --- or ---
$ yarn add react-native-localize

Don't forget to run pod install after that !

🆘  Manual linking

Because this package targets React Native 0.60.0+, you will probably don't need to link it manually. Otherwise if it's not the case, follow this additional instructions:

👀 See manual linking instructions

iOS

Add this line to your ios/Podfile file, then run pod install.

target 'YourAwesomeProject' do
  # …
  pod 'RNLocalize', :path => '../node_modules/react-native-localize'
end

Android

  1. Add the following lines to android/settings.gradle:
include ':react-native-localize'
project(':react-native-localize').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-localize/android')
  1. Add the implementation line to the dependencies in android/app/build.gradle:
dependencies {
  // ...
  implementation project(':react-native-localize')
}
  1. Add the import and link the package in MainApplication.java:
import com.zoontek.rnlocalize.RNLocalizePackage; // <- add the RNLocalizePackage import

public class MainApplication extends Application implements ReactApplication {

  // …

  @Override
  protected List<ReactPackage> getPackages() {
    @SuppressWarnings("UnnecessaryLocalVariable")
    List<ReactPackage> packages = new PackageList(this).getPackages();
    // …
    packages.add(new RNLocalizePackage());
    return packages;
  }

  // …
}

macOS

Add this line to your macos/Podfile file, then run pod install.

target 'YourAwesomeProject' do
  # …
  pod 'RNLocalize', :path => '../node_modules/react-native-localize'
end

Windows Support

Because this RNW package targets React Native 0.63.0+, you probably won't need to link it manually. Otherwise if it's not the case, follow these additional instructions. You also need to manually link the module on Windows when using React Native Windows prior to 0.63:

For more information about autolinking and manual linking. Follow the official guide

Web support

This package supports react-native-web. Follow their official guide to configure webpack.

Basic usage example

import * as RNLocalize from "react-native-localize";

console.log(RNLocalize.getLocales());
console.log(RNLocalize.getCurrencies());

RNLocalize.addEventListener("change", () => {
  // do localization related stuff…
});

API

getLocales()

Returns the user preferred locales, in order.

Method type

type getLocales = () => Array<{
  languageCode: string;
  scriptCode?: string;
  countryCode: string;
  languageTag: string;
  isRTL: boolean;
}>;

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.getLocales());
/* -> [
  { countryCode: "GB", languageTag: "en-GB", languageCode: "en", isRTL: false },
  { countryCode: "US", languageTag: "en-US", languageCode: "en", isRTL: false },
  { countryCode: "FR", languageTag: "fr-FR", languageCode: "fr", isRTL: false },
] */

getNumberFormatSettings()

Returns number formatting settings.

Method type

type getNumberFormatSettings = () => {
  decimalSeparator: string;
  groupingSeparator: string;
};

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.getNumberFormatSettings());
/* -> {
  decimalSeparator: ".",
  groupingSeparator: ",",
} */

getCurrencies()

Returns the user preferred currency codes, in order.

Method type

type getCurrencies = () => Array<string>;

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.getCurrencies());
// -> ["EUR", "GBP", "USD"]

getCountry()

Returns the user current country code (based on its device locale, not on its position).

Method type

type getCountry = () => string;

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.getCountry());
// -> "FR"

Note

Devices using Latin American regional settings will return "UN" instead of "419", as the latter is not a standard country code.


getCalendar()

Returns the user preferred calendar format.

Method type

type getCalendar = () => "gregorian" | "japanese" | "buddhist";

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.getCalendar());
// -> "gregorian"

getTemperatureUnit()

Returns the user preferred temperature unit.

Method type

type getTemperatureUnit = () => "celsius" | "fahrenheit";

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.getTemperatureUnit());
// -> "celsius"

getTimeZone()

Returns the user preferred timezone (based on its device settings, not on its position).

Method type

type getTimeZone = () => string;

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.getTimeZone());
// -> "Europe/Paris"

uses24HourClock()

Returns true if the user prefers 24h clock format, false if he prefers 12h clock format.

Method type

type uses24HourClock = () => boolean;

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.uses24HourClock());
// -> true

usesMetricSystem()

Returns true if the user prefers metric measure system, false if he prefers imperial.

Method type

type usesMetricSystem = () => boolean;

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.usesMetricSystem());
// -> true

usesAutoDateAndTime()

Tells if the automatic date & time setting is enabled on the phone. Android only

Method type

type Option<T> = T | undefined;
type usesAutoDateAndTime = () => Option<boolean>;

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.usesAutoDateAndTime()); // true or false

usesAutoTimeZone()

Tells if the automatic time zone setting is enabled on the phone. Android only

Method type

type Option<T> = T | undefined;
type usesAutoTimeZone = () => Option<boolean>;

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.usesAutoTimeZone());

addEventListener() / removeEventListener()

Allows you to listen for any localization change.

Methods type

type addEventListener = (type: "change", handler: Function) => void;
type removeEventListener = (type: "change", handler: Function) => void;

Usage example

function handleLocalizationChange() {
  console.log(RNLocalize.getLocales());
}

RNLocalize.addEventListener("change", handleLocalizationChange);
// …later (ex: component unmount)
RNLocalize.removeEventListener("change", handleLocalizationChange);

findBestAvailableLanguage()

Returns the best language tag possible and its reading direction (⚠️ it respects the user preferred languages list order, see explanations). Useful to pick the best translation available.

Method type

type findBestAvailableLanguage = (
  languageTags: Array<string>,
) => { languageTag: string; isRTL: boolean } | void;

Usage example

console.log(RNLocalize.findBestAvailableLanguage(["en-US", "en", "fr"]));
// -> { languageTag: "en-US", isRTL: false }

Examples with i18n-js

Browse the files in the /example directory.

How to test your code

Because it's a native module, you need to mock this package.
The package provides a default mock you may use in your __mocks__/react-native-localize.js or jest.setup.js.

import RNLocalize from "react-native-localize/mock";

jest.mock("react-native-localize", () => RNLocalize);

Add project's supported localizations (iOS)