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A trait to make Eloquent models translatable

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This package contains a trait to make Eloquent models translatable. Translations are stored as json. There is no extra table needed to hold them.

Once the trait is installed on the model you can do these things:

$newsItem = new NewsItem; // This is an Eloquent model
$newsItem
   ->setTranslation('name', 'en', 'Name in English')
   ->setTranslation('name', 'nl', 'Naam in het Nederlands')
   ->save();
   
$newsItem->name; // Returns 'Name in English' given that the current app locale is 'en'
$newsItem->getTranslation('name', 'nl'); // returns 'Naam in het Nederlands'

app()->setLocale('nl');

$newsItem->name; // Returns 'Naam in het Nederlands'

Installation

You can install the package via composer:

composer require spatie/laravel-translatable

Making a model translatable

The required steps to make a model translatable are:

  • First, you need to add the Spatie\Translatable\HasTranslations-trait.
  • Next, you should create a public property $translatable which holds an array with all the names of attributes you wish to make translatable.
  • Finally, you should make sure that all translatable attributes are set to the text-datatype in your database. If your database supports json-columns, use that.

Here's an example of a prepared model:

use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
use Spatie\Translatable\HasTranslations;

class NewsItem extends Model
{
    use HasTranslations;
    
    public $translatable = ['name'];
}

Available methods

Getting a translation

The easiest way to get a translation for the current locale is to just get the property for the translated attribute. For example (given that name is a translatable attribute):

$newsItem->name;

You can also use this method:

public function getTranslation(string $attributeName, string $locale) : string

This function has an alias named translate.

Getting all translations

You can get all translations by calling getTranslations() without an argument:

$newsItem->getTranslations();

Or you can use the accessor

$yourModel->translations

Setting a translation

The easiest way to set a translation for the current locale is to just set the property for a translatable attribute. For example (given that name is a translatable attribute):

$newsItem->name = 'New translation';

To set a translation for a specific locale you can use this method:

public function setTranslation(string $attributeName, string $locale, string $value)

To actually save the translation, don't forget to save your model.

$newsItem->setTranslation('name', 'en', 'Updated name in English');

$newsItem->save();

Validation

  • if you want to validate an attribute for uniqueness before saving/updating the db, you might want to have a look at laravel-unique-translation which is made specifically for laravel-translatable.

Forgetting a translation

You can forget a translation for a specific field:

public function forgetTranslation(string $attributeName, string $locale)

You can forget all translations for a specific locale:

public function forgetAllTranslations(string $locale)

Getting all translations in one go

public function getTranslations(string $attributeName): array

Setting translations in one go

public function setTranslations(string $attributeName, array $translations)

Here's an example:

$translations = [
   'en' => 'Name in English',
   'nl' => 'Naam in het Nederlands'
];

$newsItem->setTranslations('name', $translations);

Events

TranslationHasBeenSet

Right after calling setTranslation the Spatie\Translatable\Events\TranslationHasBeenSet-event will be fired.

It has these properties:

/** @var \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model */
public $model;

/** @var string  */
public $attributeName;

/** @var string  */
public $locale;

public $oldValue;
public $newValue;

Creating models

You can immediately set translations when creating a model. Here's an example:

NewsItem::create([
   'name' => [
      'en' => 'Name in English',
      'nl' => 'Naam in het Nederlands'
   ],
]);

Querying translatable attributes

If you're using MySQL 5.7 or above, it's recommended that you use the json data type for housing translations in the db. This will allow you to query these columns like this:

NewsItem::where('name->en', 'Name in English')->get();

Changelog

Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.

Upgrading

From v2 to v3

In most cases you can upgrade without making any changes to your codebase at all. v3 introduced a translations accessor on your models. If you already had one defined on your model, you'll need to rename it.

Testing

composer test

Contributing

Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.

Security

If you discover any security related issues, please email [email protected] instead of using the issue tracker.

Postcardware

You're free to use this package, but if it makes it to your production environment we highly appreciate you sending us a postcard from your hometown, mentioning which of our package(s) you are using.

Our address is: Spatie, Samberstraat 69D, 2060 Antwerp, Belgium.

We publish all received postcards on our company website.

Credits

We got the idea to store translations as json in a column from Mohamed Said. Parts of the readme of his multilingual package were used in this readme.

Support us

Spatie is a webdesign agency based in Antwerp, Belgium. You'll find an overview of all our open source projects on our website.

Does your business depend on our contributions? Reach out and support us on Patreon. All pledges will be dedicated to allocating workforce on maintenance and new awesome stuff.

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.

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