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596 строки
22 KiB
ReStructuredText
596 строки
22 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. role:: js(code)
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:language: javascript
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=================
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Locale management
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=================
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A locale is a combination of language, region, script, and regional preferences the
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user wants to format their data into.
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There are multiple models of locale data structures in the industry that have varying degrees
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of compatibility between each other. Historically, each major platform has used their own,
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and many standard bodies provided conflicting proposals.
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Mozilla, alongside with most modern platforms, follows Unicode and W3C recommendation
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and conforms to a standard known as `BCP 47`_ which describes a low level textual
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representation of a locale known as `language tag`.
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A few examples of language tags: *en-US*, *de*, *ar*, *zh-Hans*, *es-CL*.
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Locales and Language Tags
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=========================
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Locale data structure consists of four primary fields.
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- Language (Example: English - *en*, French - *fr*, Serbian - *sr*)
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- Script (Example: Latin - *Latn*, Cyrylic - *Cyrl*)
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- Region (Example: United States - *US*, Canada - *CA*, Russia - *RU*)
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- Variants (Example: Mac OS - *macos*, Windows - *windows*, Linux - *linux*)
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`BCP 47`_ specifies the syntax for each of those fields (called subtags) when
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represented as a string. The syntax defines the allowed selection of characters,
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their capitalization, and the order in which the fields should be defined.
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Most of the base subtags are valid ISO codes, such as `ISO 639`_ for
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language subtag, or `ISO 3166-1`_ for region.
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The examples above present language tags with several fields omitted, which is allowed
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by the standard.
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On top of that, a locale may contain:
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- extensions and private fields
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These fields can be used to carry additional information about a locale.
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Mozilla currently has partial support for them in the JS implementation and plans to
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extend support to all APIs.
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- extkeys and grandfathered tags
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Mozilla does not support these yet.
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An example locale can be visualized as:
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.. code-block:: javascript
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{
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"language": "sr",
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"script": "Cyrl",
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"region": "RU",
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"variants": [],
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"extensions": {},
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"privateuse": [],
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}
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which can be then serialized into a string: **"sr-Cyrl-RU"**.
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.. important::
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Since locales are often stored and passed around the codebase as
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language tag strings, it is important to always use an appropriate
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API to parse, manipulate and serialize them.
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Avoid `Do-It-Yourself` solutions which leave your code fragile and may
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break on unexpected language tag structures.
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Locale Fallback Chains
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======================
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Locale sensitive operations are always considered "best-effort". That means that it
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cannot be assumed that a perfect match will exist between what the user requested and what
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the API can provide.
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As a result, the best practice is to *always* operate on locale fallback chains -
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ordered lists of locales according to the user preference.
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An example of a locale fallback chain may be: :js:`["es-CL", "es-ES", "es", "fr", "en"]`.
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The above means a request to format the data according to the Chilean Spanish if possible,
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fall back to Spanish Spanish, then any (generic) Spanish, French and eventually to
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English.
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.. important::
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It is *always* better to use a locale fallback chain over a single locale.
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In case there's only one locale available, a list with one element will work
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while allowing for future extensions without a costly refactor.
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Language Negotiation
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====================
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Due to the imperfections in data matching, all operations on locales should always
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use a language negotiation algorithm to resolve the best available set of locales,
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based on the list of all available locales and an ordered list of requested locales.
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Such algorithms may vary in sophistication and number of strategies. Mozilla's
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solution is based on modified logic from `RFC 5656`_.
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The three lists of locales used in negotiation:
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- **Available** - locales that are locally installed
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- **Requested** - locales that the user selected in decreasing order of preference
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- **Resolved** - result of the negotiation
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The result of a negotiation is an ordered list of locales that are available to
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the system, and the consumer is expected to attempt using the locales in the
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resolved order.
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Negotiation should be used in all scenarios like selecting language resources,
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calendar, number formatting, etc.
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Single Locale Matching
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----------------------
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Every negotiation strategy goes through a list of steps in an attempt to find the
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best possible match between locales.
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The exact algorithm is custom, and consists of a 6 level strategy:
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::
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1) Attempt to find an exact match for each requested locale in available
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locales.
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Example: ['en-US'] * ['en-US'] = ['en-US']
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2) Attempt to match a requested locale to an available locale treated
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as a locale range.
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Example: ['en-US'] * ['en'] = ['en']
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^^
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|-- becomes 'en-*-*-*'
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3) Attempt to use the maximized version of the requested locale, to
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find the best match in available locales.
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Example: ['en'] * ['en-GB', 'en-US'] = ['en-US']
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^^
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|-- ICU likelySubtags expands it to 'en-Latn-US'
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4) Attempt to look for a different variant of the same locale.
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Example: ['ja-JP-win'] * ['ja-JP-mac'] = ['ja-JP-mac']
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^^^^^^^^^
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|----------- replace variant with range: 'ja-JP-*'
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5) Attempt to look for a maximized version of the requested locale,
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stripped of the region code.
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Example: ['en-CA'] * ['en-ZA', 'en-US'] = ['en-US', 'en-ZA']
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^^^^^
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|----------- look for likelySubtag of 'en': 'en-Latn-US'
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6) Attempt to look for a different region of the same locale.
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Example: ['en-GB'] * ['en-AU'] = ['en-AU']
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^^^^^
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|----- replace region with range: 'en-*'
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Filtering / Matching / Lookup
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-----------------------------
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When negotiating between lists of locales, Mozilla's :js:`LocaleService` API
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offers three language negotiation strategies:
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Filtering
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^^^^^^^^^
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This is the most common scenario, where there is an advantage in creating a
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maximal possible list of locales that the user may benefit from.
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An example of a scenario:
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.. code-block:: javascript
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let requested = ["fr-CA", "en-US"];
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let available = ["en-GB", "it", "en-ZA", "fr", "de-DE", "fr-CA", "fr-CH"];
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let result = Services.locale.negotiateLanguages(requested, available);
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result == ["fr-CA", "fr", "fr-CH", "en-GB", "en-ZA"];
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In the example above the algorithm was able to match *"fr-CA"* as a perfect match,
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but then was able to find other matches as well - a generic French is a very
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good match, and Swiss French is also very close to the top requested language.
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In case of the second of the requested locales, unfortunately American English
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is not available, but British English and South African English are.
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The algorithm is greedy and attempts to match as many locales
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as possible. This is usually what the developer wants.
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Matching
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^^^^^^^^
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In less common scenarios the code needs to match a single, best available locale for
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each of the requested locales.
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An example of this scenario:
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.. code-block:: javascript
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let requested = ["fr-CA", "en-US"];
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let available = ["en-GB", "it", "en-ZA", "fr", "de-DE", "fr-CA", "fr-ZH"];
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let result = Services.locale.negotiateLanguages(
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requested,
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available,
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undefined,
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Services.locale.langNegStrategyMatching);
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result == ["fr-CA", "en-GB"];
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The best available locales for *"fr-CA"* is a perfect match, and for *"en-US"*, the
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algorithm selected British English.
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Lookup
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^^^^^^
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The third strategy should be used in cases where no matter what, only one locale
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can be ever used. Some third-party APIs don't support fallback and it doesn't make
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sense to continue resolving after finding the first locale.
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It is still advised to continue using this API as a fallback chain list, just in
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this case with a single element.
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.. code-block:: javascript
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let requested = ["fr-CA", "en-US"];
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let available = ["en-GB", "it", "en-ZA", "fr", "de-DE", "fr-CA", "fr-ZH"];
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let result = Services.locale.negotiateLanguages(
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requested,
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available,
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Services.locale.defaultLocale,
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Services.locale.langNegStrategyLookup);
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result == ["fr-CA"];
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Default Locale
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--------------
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Besides *Available*, *Requested* and *Resolved* locale lists, there's also a concept
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of *DefaultLocale*, which is a single locale out of the list of available ones that
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should be used in case there is no match to be found between available and
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requested locales.
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Every Firefox is built with a single default locale - for example
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**Firefox zh-CN** has *DefaultLocale* set to *zh-CN* since this locale is guaranteed
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to be packaged in, have all the resources, and should be used if the negotiation fails
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to return any matches.
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.. code-block:: javascript
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let requested = ["fr-CA", "en-US"];
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let available = ["it", "de", "zh-CN", "pl", "sr-RU"];
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let defaultLocale = "zh-CN";
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let result = Services.locale.negotiateLanguages(requested, available, defaultLocale);
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result == ["zh-CN"];
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Chained Language Negotiation
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----------------------------
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In some cases the user may want to link a language selection to another component.
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For example, a Firefox extension may come with its own list of available locales, which
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may have locales that Firefox doesn't.
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In that case, negotiation between user requested locales and the add-on's list may result
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in a selection of locales superseding that of Firefox itself.
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.. code-block:: none
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Fx Available
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+-------------+
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| it, fr, ar |
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+-------------+ Fx Locales
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| +--------+
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+--------------> | fr, ar |
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| +--------+
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Requested |
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+----------------+
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| es, fr, pl, ar |
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+----------------+ Add-on Locales
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| +------------+
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+--------------> | es, fr, ar |
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Add-on Available | +------------+
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+-----------------+
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| de, es, fr, ar |
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+-----------------+
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In that case, an add-on may end up being displayed in Spanish, while Firefox UI will
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use French. In most cases this results in a bad UX.
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In order to avoid that, one can chain the add-on negotiation and take Firefox's resolved
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locales as a `requested`, and negotiate that against the add-ons' `available` list.
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.. code-block:: none
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Fx Available
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+-------------+
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| it, ar, fr |
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+-------------+ Fx Locales (as Add-on Requested)
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| +--------+
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+--------------> | fr, ar |
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| +--------+
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Requested | | Add-on Locales
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+----------------+ | +--------+
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| es, fr, pl, ar | +-------------> | fr, ar |
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+----------------+ | +--------+
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Add-on Available |
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+-----------------+
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| de, es, ar, fr |
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+-----------------+
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Available Locales
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=================
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In Gecko, available locales come from the `Packaged Locales` and the installed
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`language packs`. Language packs are a variant of web extensions providing just
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localized resources for one or more languages.
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The primary notion of which locales are available is based on which locales Gecko has
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UI localization resources for, and other datasets such as internationalization may
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carry different lists of available locales.
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Requested Locales
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=================
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The list of requested locales can be read and set using :js:`LocaleService::requestedLocales` API.
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Using the API will perform necessary sanity checks and canonicalize the values.
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After the sanitization, the value will be stored in a pref :js:`intl.locale.requested`.
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The pref usually will store a comma separated list of valid BCP47 locale
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codes, but it can also have two special meanings:
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- If the pref is not set at all, Gecko will use the default locale as the requested one.
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- If the pref is set to an empty string, Gecko will look into OS app locales as the requested.
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The former is the current default setting for Firefox Desktop, and the latter is the
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default setting for Firefox for Android.
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If the developer wants to programmatically request the app to follow OS locales,
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they can assign :js:`null` to :js:`requestedLocales`.
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Regional Preferences
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====================
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Every locale comes with a set of default preferences that are specific to a culture
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and region. This contains preferences such as calendar system, way to display
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time (24h vs 12h clock), which day the week starts on, which days constitute a weekend,
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what numbering system and date time formatting a given locale uses
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(for example "MM/DD" in en-US vs "DD/MM" in en-AU).
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For all such preferences Gecko has a list of default settings for every region,
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but there's also a degree of customization every user may want to make.
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All major operating systems have a Settings UI for selecting those preferences,
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and since Firefox does not provide its own, Gecko looks into the OS for them.
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A special API :js:`mozilla::intl::OSPreferences` handles communication with the
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host operating system, retrieving regional preferences and altering
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internationalization formatting with user preferences.
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One thing to notice is that the boundary between regional preferences and language
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selection is not strong. In many cases the internationalization formats
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will contain language specific terms and literals. For example a date formatting
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pattern into Japanese may look like this - *"2018年3月24日"*, or the date format
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may contains names of months or weekdays to be translated
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("April", "Tuesday" etc.).
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For that reason it is tricky to follow regional preferences in a scenario where Operating
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System locale selection does not match the Firefox UI locales.
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Such behavior might lead to a UI case like "Today is 24 października" in an English Firefox
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with Polish date formats.
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For that reason, by default, Gecko will *only* look into OS Preferences if the *language*
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portion of the locale of the OS and Firefox match.
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That means that if Windows is in "**en**-AU" and Firefox is in "**en**-US" Gecko will look
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into Windows Regional Preferences, but if Windows is in "**de**-CH" and Firefox
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is in "**fr**-FR" it won't.
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In order to force Gecko to look into OS preferences irrelevant of the language match,
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set the flag :js:`intl.regional_prefs.use_os_locales` to :js:`true`.
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UI Direction
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------------
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Since the UI direction is so tightly coupled with the locale selection, the
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main method of testing the directionality of the Gecko app lives in LocaleService.
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:js:`LocaleService::IsAppLocaleRTL` returns a boolean indicating if the current
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direction of the app UI is right-to-left.
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Default and Last Fallback Locales
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=================================
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Every Gecko application is built with a single locale as the default one. Such locale
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is guaranteed to have all linguistic resources available, should be used
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as the default locale in case language negotiation cannot find any match, and also
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as the last locale to look for in a fallback chain.
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If all else fails, Gecko also support a notion of last fallback locale, which is
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currently hardcoded to *"en-US"*, and is the very final locale to try in case
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nothing else (including the default locale) works.
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Notice that Unicode and ICU use *"en-GB"* in that role because more English speaking
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people around the World recognize British regional preferences than American (metric vs.
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imperial, Fahrenheit vs Celsius etc.).
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Mozilla may switch to *"en-GB"* in the future.
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Packaged Locales
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================
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When the Gecko application is being packaged it bundles a selection of locale resources
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to be available within it. At the moment, for example, most Firefox for Android
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builds come with almost 100 locales packaged into it, while Desktop Firefox comes
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with usually just one packaged locale.
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There is currently work being done on enabling more flexibility in how
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the locales are packaged to allow for bundling applications with different
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sets of locales in different areas - dictionaries, hyphenations, product language resources,
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installer language resources, etc.
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Web Exposed Locales
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====================
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For anti-tracking or some other reasons, we tend to expose spoofed locale to web content instead
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of default locales. This can be done by setting the pref :js:`intl.locale.privacy.web_exposed`.
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The pref is a comma separated list of locale, and empty string implies default locales.
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The pref has no function while :js:`privacy.spoof_english` is set to 2, where *"en-US"* will always
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be returned.
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Multi-Process
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=============
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Locale management can operate in a client/server model. This allows a Gecko process
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to manage locales (server mode) or just receive the locale selection from a parent
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process (client mode).
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The client mode is currently used by all child processes of Desktop Firefox, and
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may be used by, for example, GeckoView to follow locale selection from a parent
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process.
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To check the mode the process is operating in, the :js:`LocaleService::IsServer` method is available.
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Mozilla Exceptions
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==================
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There's currently only a single exception of the BCP47 used, and that's
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a legacy "ja-JP-mac" locale. The "mac" is a variant and BCP47 requires all variants
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to be 5-8 character long.
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Gecko supports the limitation by accepting the 3-letter variants in our APIs and also
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provides a special :js:`appLocalesAsLangTags` method which returns this locale in that form.
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(:js:`appLocalesAsBCP47` will canonicalize it and turn into `"ja-JP-macos"`).
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Usage of language negotiation etc. shouldn't rely on this behavior.
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Events
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======
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:js:`LocaleService` emits two events: :js:`intl:app-locales-changed` and
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:js:`intl:requested-locales-changed` which all code can listen to.
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Those events may be broadcasted in response to new language packs being installed, or
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uninstalled, or user selection of languages changing.
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In most cases, the code should observe the :js:`intl:app-locales-changed`
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and react to only that event since this is the one indicating a change
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in the currently used language settings that the components should follow.
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Testing
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=======
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Many components may have logic encoded to react to changes in requested, available
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or resolved locales.
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In order to test the component's behavior, it is important to replicate
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the environment in which such change may happen.
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Since in most cases it is advised for a component to tie its
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language negotiation to the main application (see `Chained Language Negotiation`),
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it is not enough to add a new locale to trigger the language change.
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First, it is necessary to add a new locale to the available ones, then change
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the requested, and only that will result in a new negotiation and language
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change happening.
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There are two primary ways to add a locale to available ones.
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Testing Localization
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--------------------
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If the goal is to test that the correct localization ends up in the correct place,
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the developer needs to register a new :js:`FileSource` in :js:`L10nRegistry` and
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provide a mock cached data to be returned by the API.
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It may look like this:
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.. code-block:: javascript
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let fs = new FileSource(["ko-KR", "ar"], "resource://mock-addon/localization/{locale}");
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fs.cache = {
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"resource://mock-addon/localization/ko-KR/test.ftl": "key = Value in Korean",
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"resource://mock-addon/localization/ar/test.ftl": "key = Value in Arabic"
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
L10nRegistry.registerSource(fs);
|
|
|
|
let availableLocales = Services.locale.availableLocales;
|
|
|
|
assert(availableLocales.includes("ko-KR"));
|
|
assert(availableLocales.includes("ar"));
|
|
|
|
Services.locale.requestedLocales = ["ko-KR"];
|
|
|
|
let appLocales = Services.locale.appLocalesAsBCP47;
|
|
assert(appLocales[0], "ko-KR");
|
|
|
|
From here, a resource :js:`test.ftl` can be added to a `Localization` and for ID :js:`key`
|
|
the correct value from the mocked cache will be returned.
|
|
|
|
Testing Locale Switching
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
The second method is much more limited, as it only mocks the locale availability,
|
|
but it is also simpler:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: javascript
|
|
|
|
Services.locale.availableLocales = ["ko-KR", "ar"];
|
|
Services.locale.requestedLocales = ["ko-KR"];
|
|
|
|
let appLocales = Services.locale.appLocalesAsBCP47;
|
|
assert(appLocales[0], "ko-KR");
|
|
|
|
In the future, Mozilla plans to add a third way for add-ons (`bug 1440969`_)
|
|
to allow for either manual or automated testing purposes disconnecting its locales
|
|
from the main application ones.
|
|
|
|
Testing the outcome
|
|
-------------------
|
|
|
|
Except of testing for reaction to locale changes, it is advised to avoid writing
|
|
tests that expect a certain locale to be selected, or certain internationalization
|
|
or localization data to be used.
|
|
|
|
Doing so locks down the test infrastructure to be only usable when launched in
|
|
a single locale environment and requires those tests to be updated whenever the underlying
|
|
data changes.
|
|
|
|
In the case of testing locale selection it is best to use a fake locale like :js:`x-test`, that
|
|
will not be present at the beginning of the test.
|
|
|
|
In the case of testing for internationalization data it is best to use :js:`resolvedOptions()`,
|
|
to verify the right data is being used, rather than comparing the output string.
|
|
|
|
In the case of localization, it is best to test against the correct :js:`data-l10n-id`
|
|
being set or, in edge cases, verify that a given variable is present in the string using
|
|
:js:`String.prototype.includes`.
|
|
|
|
Deep Dive
|
|
=========
|
|
|
|
Below is a list of articles with additional
|
|
details on selected subjects:
|
|
|
|
.. toctree::
|
|
:maxdepth: 1
|
|
|
|
locale_env
|
|
locale_startup
|
|
|
|
Feedback
|
|
========
|
|
|
|
In case of questions, please consult Intl module peers.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _RFC 5656: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5656
|
|
.. _BCP 47: https://tools.ietf.org/html/bcp47#section-2.1
|
|
.. _ISO 639: http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/php/code_list.php
|
|
.. _ISO 3166-1: https://www.iso.org/iso-3166-country-codes.html
|
|
.. _Intl.Locale: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1433303
|
|
.. _fluent-locale: https://docs.rs/fluent-locale/
|
|
.. _bug 1440969: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1440969
|