Getting Started withDrupal Translations
By Steven Jacksonand Trent Wyman
Mediacurrent Consultants
Drupalcamp Atlanta 2010October 2, 2010
Overview
• This presentation will cover the basic steps for setting up a multi-lingual site in Drupal
• Discuss contrib modules needed• Cover basic configurations for content type
language support• Lessons learned from past projects
(Do’s & Don’ts)
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Introduction / BackgroundTrent Wyman
Occupation:
- Drupal Developer &Theming ConsultantDrupal Experience:
- Began experimenting with Drupal in version 4.7
- Employed as a full-time Drupal Developer & Theming Consultant since version 5
Company:
- Mediacurrent (www.mediacurrent.com)About Mediacurrent:
- Web development firm located in Alpharetta, GA
- Focused solely on Drupal Development, customization, & consultation
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Multi-Language Contrib Modules
Download the following contrib modules:• Internationalization Package (i18n)
- http://drupal.org/project/i18n• i18n Auto Translate
- http://drupal.org/project/i18n_auto• Language Switcher Dropdown (optional)
- http://drupal.org/project/lang_dropdown
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Enable Drupal Core Modules
Go to the modules list page in Drupal admin and enable the following modules under the “Core – optional” section:
1) Locale
2) Content Translations
www.yoursite.com/admin/build/modules
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www.yoursite.com/admin/build/modules
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Install Contrib Modules
Install the i18n, i18 Auto Translate, & Language Switcher Dropdown modules into your site’s modules folder.
www.yoursite.com\sites\all\modules\contrib\
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Get Your Language Template(s)
1) Choose & download the language(s) you want your site translated into. (http://drupal.org/project/Translations)
2) Unpack the .tar file(s) and install into the i18n/translations contrib module folder.
(sites\all\modules\contrib\i18n\translations)
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Enable Contrib Moduleswww.yoursite.com/admin/build/modules (“Multilanguage”)1) Auto draft translation
2) Block translation
3) CCK translation (if using custom CCK fields and fieldgroups)
4) Content type translation
5) Internationalization
6) Language switcher dropdown (if you prefer a dropdown selector v/s Locale’s text links)
7) Menu translation
8) Poll aggregate (if translating polls)
9) Profile translate (if translating user profiles)
10) String translation
11) Synchronize translations
12) Taxonomy translation
13) Views translation
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www.yoursite.com/admin/build/modules
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Configure Installed Language(s)
Go to the Languages Settings page in Drupal admin and select the “Configure” tab.
Then, under the “Language negotiation” subtab choose the “Path prefix only” option.
www.yoursite.com/admin/settings/language
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www.yoursite.com/admin/settings/language
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Enable Installed Language(s)
Now, select the “List” tab on the Languages Settings page and enable the languages you installed.
Here, you can also set your site’s default language (if other than English).
www.yoursite.com/admin/settings/language
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www.yoursite.com/admin/settings/language
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Enable Language SwitcherGo to the Blocks admin page and enable the language switcher under the “Disabled” section by assigning the block to your preferred Region.
Choose “Language switcher” if only using Locale (core).
Choose “Language switcher dropdown” if using the dropdown module (contrib).
www.yoursite.com/admin/build/block
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www.yoursite.com/admin/build/block
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Translating Your Site’s Content
Go to the “Content types” list page and select the content types that you want translated.
Click the “edit” link corresponding to the content type.
www.yoursite.com/admin/content/types
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www.yoursite.com/admin/content/types
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Translating Your Site’s Content
Next, on the content type’s “Edit” page refer to the “Workflow” section and choose “Enabled with translation”.
Then click the “Save” button at the bottom of the “Edit” page.
Example path:
www.yoursite.com/admin/content/node-type/blog
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www.yoursite.com/admin/content/node-type/blog
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Create New ContentNow you can create and translate new content for the content type you enabled for multi-language support.
Go to the “Create Content” page, select the content type and then choose “English” (or your default language) from the “Language” dropdown selector.
Example path:
www.yoursite.com/node/add/blog
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www.yoursite.com/node/add/blog
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Translate New ContentAfter choosing the desired language from the “Language” selector, save the node.
Once you have saved the node, click the “Translate” tab located below the content’s title.
If this is new content, translations will already be available.
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Example path:www.yoursite.com/node/767/translate
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Translate Pre-existing Content
Translations in Drupal are not retro-active.
For content that existed before you enabled translations you will need to manually translate those nodes.
Click the “Add translation” link next to the desired language. Manually insert your translations into the “Title”, “Body”, etc. fields and save the node.
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Example path:www.yoursite.com/node/56/translate
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Switching Between Translations
Once you have your content translated, your users will be able to toggle between the languages by selecting the language links available in your “Language Selector” block (displayed within the Region you assigned on the Blocks admin page).
Example of language selector in Header Region:
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Translating Menus & Menu Items
Due to limited time I will not go into menu translations for this presentation.
For info on how to translate menus and menu items you can refer to the following online tutorials:
http://drupal-translation.com/content/adding-menu
http://becircle.com/translating_menus_drupal_6
http://drupal.org/node/275705
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Introduction / Background
Steven JacksonOccupation:
- Drupal ConsultantDrupal Experience:
- Mainly backend module development
- Server deployment
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How to make it work, 1• Start with a plan
– Start with using i18n– Don’t do it as an afterthought– Know what languages you are using
• Try to keep as much in Drupal – hardcode as little as necessary
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How to make it work, 2• Put what you can in the node• Translate interface is good but may be
cumbersome to search– Might have duplicate or similar text but in different
locations
• If doing after the fact, make node_clone your friend
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How to make it work, 3
• If a social site, setup content_profile– Can then translate profile content in same
manner
• Coordinate with someone who knows the languages
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How to make it break• == !previousSlides
– Don’t plan ahead, buy lots of Tylenol
• Don’t wrap module text in t()• Write output in direct PHP instead of via Drupal
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What can go wrong• Server not rendering special characters• Pathauto, url_alias may create new path when
saving node after initial creation– Have to go into db and clear aliases and auto urls for
content
– Get a lot of some-path-name-0
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How fix what you break, 1• IF PHP
– You’ll want to parse the URL to get language or get $language->language
– if/switch language to output correct language text– Make friends with regex, might have to output some
special characters that some PHP functions aren’t generating (like date())
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How fix what you break, 2• IF PATHAUTO, URL_ALIAS
– Often ran into new url being generated when merely updating content
– Go into db, remove path_auto, url alias associations– Reassociate nodes via the translate tab
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Pros / Cons• Pros
– Well, you have a multilingual site– Only had to setup one code base
• Cons– If not planning ahead can be a headache– Might feel like you created multiple sites
despite auto generation
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Things to Remember• Setup translation auto-generation• If doing after the fact, setup translation
associations• Setup each view to be based on user’s current
language in filters
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Questions / Comments?
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