getlang
go-i18n
getlang | go-i18n | |
---|---|---|
- | 9 | |
165 | 2,783 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 7.0 | |
over 3 years ago | about 1 month ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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getlang
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Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
go-i18n
- Internationalization best practices for front-end developers
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an easy way to generate translations for your Go app
Thanks for sharing, from a quick read this looks easier to maintain than nicksnyder/go-i18n.
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How to build a go library that supports i18n and make these translations available to client apps (CLI ONLY)
I am using Nick Snyder's go-i18n for translations. I am also building a go library intented to be imported by either by other libraries or cli executables. All of the documentation I have seen about supporting i18n assume this is being used in an app, but don't cover the scenario where this is being implemented in a library.
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How to generate translations for multiple packages inside same module
On a different note you may consider exploring nicksnyder/go-i18n as well, it simplifies things a bit.
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Implementing i18n in go libraries designed to be consumed by go cli's
I am trying to get to grips with i18n in Go but finding that most articles on the subject are either inadequate or geared towards web applications. This query is specifically for cli applications and libraries. The kind of articles I've looked at so for are i18n managing translations and internationalization i18n go. I have also investigated using Nick Snyder's go-i18n, but the more I learn, the more I'm coming to the conclusion that it's not necessary for my needs.
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go-i18n VS spreak - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 16 May 2022
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Golang and Locale
What you are looking for is I18N like https://github.com/nicksnyder/go-i18n
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How to localize Go app with go-i18n and Localazy
This article will show you how to prepare your Go project for localization using a very popular go-i18n package.
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🈂️ An easy way to translate your Golang application
I've looked at many packages for this operation (including the one built into the Go core), but nicksnyder/go-i18n was the only one I enjoyed working with in my projects. We will create our demo application using this particular package.
What are some alternatives?
textcat - A Go package for n-gram based text categorization, with support for utf-8 and raw text
icu - Cgo binding for icu4c library
snowball - Cgo binding for Snowball C library
prose - :book: A Golang library for text processing, including tokenization, part-of-speech tagging, and named-entity extraction.
go-tinydate - A tiny date object in Go. Tinydate uses only 4 bytes of memory
universal-translator - :speech_balloon: i18n Translator for Go/Golang using CLDR data + pluralization rules
kagome - Self-contained Japanese Morphological Analyzer written in pure Go
go-nlp
segment - A Go library for performing Unicode Text Segmentation as described in Unicode Standard Annex #29
sentences - A multilingual command line sentence tokenizer in Golang
whatlanggo - Natural language detection library for Go
locales - :earth_americas: a set of locales generated from the CLDR Project which can be used independently or within an i18n package; these were built for use with, but not exclusive to https://github.com/go-playground/universal-translator