The easiest way to translate your NextJs apps.
next-i18next
is a plugin for Next.js projects that allows you to get translations up and running quickly and easily, while fully supporting SSR, multiple namespaces with codesplitting, etc.
While next-i18next
uses i18next and react-i18next under the hood, users of next-i18next
simply need to include their translation content as JSON files and don't have to worry about much else.
yarn add next-i18next
By default, next-i18next
expects your translations to be organised as such:
.
├── static
├── en
| └── common.json
└── de
└── common.json
This structure can also be seen in the example directory.
If you want to structure your translations/namespaces in a custom way, you will need to pass modified localePath
and localeStructure
values into the initialisation config.
The default export of next-i18next
is a class constructor, into which you pass your config options. The resulting class has all the methods you will need to translate your app:
import NextI18Next from 'next-i18next'
const options = {}
export default new NextI18Next(options)
A full list of options can be seen here.
It's recommended to export this NextI18Next
instance from a single file in your project, where you can continually import it from to use the class methods as needed. You can see this approach in the example/i18n.js file.
After creating and exporting your NextI18Next
instance, you need to take the following steps to get things working:
- Create an
_app.js
file inside yourpages
directory, and wrap it with theNextI18Next.appWithTranslation
higher order component (HOC). You can see this approach in the example/pages/_app.js. - Create a
server.js
file inside your root directory, initialise an express server, and pass both the express server and NextJs app intoNextI18Next.nextI18NextMiddleware
. You can see this approach in the example/server.js
That's it! Your app is ready to go. You can now use the NextI18Next.withNamespaces
HOC to make your components or pages translatable, based on namespaces:
import React from 'react'
// This is our initialised `NextI18Next` instance
import { withNamespaces } from '../i18n'
class Footer extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<footer>{this.props.t('description')}</footer>
)
}
}
export default withNamespaces('footer')(Footer)
One of the main features of this package, besides translation itself, are locale subpaths. It's easiest to explain by example:
myapp.com ---> Homepage in default lang
myapp.com/de/ ---> Homepage in German
This functionality is not enabled by default, and must be passed as an option into the NextI18Next
constructor:
new NextI18Next({ localeSubpaths: true })
Now, all your page routes will be duplicated across all your non-default language subpaths. If our static/locales
folder included fr
, de
, and es
translation directories, we will automatically get:
myapp.com
myapp.com/fr/
myapp.com/de/
myapp.com/es/
The main "gotcha" with locale subpaths is routing. We want to be able to route to "naked" routes, and not have to worry about the locale subpath part of the route:
<Link href='/some-page'>
With this link, we would expect someone whose language is set to French to automatically be directed to /fr/some-page
.
To do that, we must import Link
from your NextI18Next
, not next/router:
import React from 'react'
// This is our initialised `NextI18Next` instance
import { Link } from '../i18n'
class SomeLink extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<Link href='/some-page'>
This will magically prepend locale subpaths
</Link>
)
}
}
Key | Default value |
---|---|
defaultLanguage |
"en" |
otherLanguages |
[] |
localePath |
'static/locales' |
localeStructure |
'{{lng}}/{{ns}}' |
localeSubpaths |
false |
defaultNS |
'common' |
Please do! All PRs and issues will be thoroughly reviewed.