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Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

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Page 1: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Internationalization and the Java StackMatt Wheeler

Page 2: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Notes

• This is a training NOT a presentation• Please ask questions• Prerequisites

– Introduction to Java Stack– Introduction to Spring– Basic Java and XML skills– Installed LdsTech IDE (or other equivalent – good luck

there ;)

Page 3: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Overview

• Internationalization in general• Java Internationalization (ResourceBundle)• Spring Internationalization (MessageSource)• MessageSource vs. ResourceBundle• Spring Helpers

• JSP tags• Locale change interceptor• Locale resolver

Page 4: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Internationalization in General (I18n)

• "Internationalization, in relation to computer programming, is the process of designing and writing an application so that it can be used in a global or multinational context. An internationalized program is capable of supporting different languages, as well as date, time, currency, and other values, without software modification.“

Page 5: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Internationalization (continued)

• "Internationalization is the process of designing software so that it can be adapted (localized) to various languages and regions easily, cost-effectively, and in particular without engineering changes to the software. This generally involves isolating the parts of a program that are dependent on language and culture....“– http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/java/

tutorials/j-i18n/section2.html

Page 6: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Localization (L10n)

• "Localization is the process of adapting a program for use in a specific locale. A locale is a geographic or political region that shares the same language and customs. Localization includes the translation of text such as user interface labels, error messages, and online help. It also includes the culture-specific formatting of data items such as monetary values, times, dates, and numbers."• http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/java/tutorials/j-i18n/

section2.html

Page 7: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Internationalization vs. Localization

• Internationalization is developing the application so that it can handle multiple locales without code change

• Localization is the process of adding a new locale to an application– Includes translation of resources, …

Page 8: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

First Steps of Internationalization

• Extract translatable text from code• Load resources for a specific locale• Inject locale specific resources into the

application

Page 9: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Java Internationalization (ResourceBundle)

• ResourceBundle is the cornerstone of Java internationalization– Backed by different data stores

• Property files (PropertyResourceBundle)• Java source code (ListResourceBundle)

• Represents a collection of key/value pairs for a given locale

Page 10: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

For example

• Property file(s)

• Accessing the resourceResourceBundle.getBundle("bundle").getString("abc") //some string

ResourceBundle.getBundle("bundle", Locale.ITALIAN).getString("abc") //some Italian string

#bundle.properties

abc=some string

#bundle_it.properties

abc=some Italian string

Page 11: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

DEMO

Page 12: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Spring Internationalization (MessageSource)

• MessageSource is the cornerstone of Spring internationalization

• MessageSource interface– An abstraction to the actual text store of translated

resources• Data store can be properties files, database, MarkLogic, …• Implement the interface for the given resource store

– Many MessageSource implementations available out of the box including a basic resource bundle source

Page 13: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

MessageSource Example

• Place resource bundles in src/main/bundles• Configure the message source as follows:

<bean id="messageSource" class="org.springframework.context.support.ReloadableResourceBundleMessageSource"> <property name="basenames"> <list> <value>classpath:messages</value> <value>classpath:otherbundle</value> </list> </property></bean>

Page 14: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Inject MessageSource

• Utilize the MessageSource@Injectprivate MessageSource messageSource;

public void getAStringInCode(ModelMap model) { String message = messageSource.getMessage("abc", null, "Default text.", Locale.ENGLISH); //do something with the message return;}

Page 15: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

MessageSource vs. ResourceBundle

• MessageSource allows all resources to be conglomerated together

• MessageSource does parameter replacement automatically

• MessageSource allows for a default (in case message is not found)

• MessageSource can set default encoding#born={0} was born on {1}.

String pattern = ResourceBundle.getBundle("whatever", Locale.ENGLISH).getString("born");MessageFormat.format(pattern, "Billy", new Date())

messageSource.getMessage("born", new Object[] {"Billy“, new Date()}, "default", Locale.ENGLISH)

Page 16: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

DEMO

Page 17: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Spring MessageSource taglib

• http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.1.x/spring-framework-reference/html/spring.tld.html#spring.tld.message

<%@taglib uri="http://www.springframework.org/tags" prefix="spring"%>

<spring:message code="message.key"/><spring:message code="some.key" arguments="aaa, bbb"/>

Page 18: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

DEMO

Page 19: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Lab 1: Internationalize a page

https://tech.lds.org/wiki/Internationalization_and_the_Java_Stack

_-_Part_1#Lab_1_Internationalize_a_Page

Page 20: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Spring Internationalization Architecture

• LocaleResolver– Attempts to determine the current user’s locale– Provides a way to set / cache current user’s locale

• LocaleChangeInterceptor– Picks up locale changes (from request parameter by

default)– Sets locale on the resolver

Page 21: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Example Configuration

• Sample native Spring configuration:<mvc:interceptors> <bean ref="localeChangeInterceptor" /></mvc:interceptors>

<bean id="localeChangeInterceptor" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.LocaleChangeInterceptor"> <property name="paramName" value="siteLanguage"/> </bean>

<bean id="localeResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.CookieLocaleResolver"/>

Page 22: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

ChainedLocaleResolver

• Based on Spring LocaleResolver interface• Locale resolution on steroids• Sets up multiple locale resolvers from which to

determine the user’s locale

Page 23: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

ChainedLocaleResolver (configuration)• Basic configuration

• Or when using WAM

• code.lds.org/maven-sites/stack/module.html?module=web-spring/xsddoc/index.html

• code.lds.org/maven-sites/stack/module.html?module=web-spring/apidocs/org/lds/stack/web/spring/i18n/ChainedLocaleResolver.html

xmlns:stack-web="http://code.lds.org/schema/spring/web"

<stack-web:locale-resolver />

<stack-web:locale-resolver use-wam-locale= " true" />

Page 24: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Lab 2: Configure Locale Change and Resolution

https://tech.lds.org/wiki/Internationalization_and_the_Java_Stack_-

_Part_1#Lab_2_Configure_Locale_Change_and_Resolution

Page 25: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Spring MessageSource taglib

Page 26: Internationalization and the Java Stack Matt Wheeler

Credit where credit is due

• http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/java/tutorials/j-i18n/section2.html