hugo/docs/content/en/content-management/multilingual.md
2023-07-29 11:17:28 +02:00

21 KiB

title linkTitle description categories keywords menu toc weight aliases
Multilingual mode Multilingual Hugo supports the creation of websites with multiple languages side by side.
content management
multilingual
i18n
internationalization
docs
parent weight
content-management 230
true 230
/content/multilingual/
/tutorials/create-a-multilingual-site/

You should define the available languages in a languages section in your site configuration.

Also See Hugo Multilingual Part 1: Content translation.

Configure languages

This is an example of a site configuration for a multilingual project. Any key not defined in a languages object will fall back to the global value in the root of your site configuration.

{{< code-toggle file="hugo" >}} defaultContentLanguage = 'de' defaultContentLanguageInSubdir = true

[languages.de] contentDir = 'content/de' disabled = false languageCode = 'de-DE' languageDirection = 'ltr' languageName = 'Deutsch' title = 'Projekt Dokumentation' weight = 1

[languages.de.params] subtitle = 'Referenz, Tutorials und Erklärungen'

[languages.en] contentDir = 'content/en' disabled = false languageCode = 'en-US' languageDirection = 'ltr' languageName = 'English' title = 'Project Documentation' weight = 2

[languages.en.params] subtitle = 'Reference, Tutorials, and Explanations' {{< /code-toggle >}}

defaultContentLanguage
(string) The project's default language tag as defined by RFC 5646. Must be lower case, and must match one of the defined language keys. Default is en. Examples:
  • en
  • en-gb
  • pt-br
defaultContentLanguageInSubdir
(bool) If true, Hugo renders the default language site in a subdirectory matching the defaultContentLanguage. Default is false.
contentDir
(string) The content directory for this language. Omit if translating by file name.
disabled
(bool) If true, Hugo will not render content for this language. Default is false.
languageCode
(string) The language tag as defined by RFC 5646. This value may include upper and lower case characters, hyphens or underscores, and does not affect localization or URLs. Hugo uses this value to populate the language element in the built-in RSS template, and the lang attribute of the html element in the built-in alias template. Examples:
  • en
  • en-GB
  • pt-BR
languageDirection
(string) The language direction, either left-to-right (ltr) or right-to-left (rtl). Use this value in your templates with the global dir HTML attribute.
languageName
(string) The language name, typically used when rendering a language switcher.
title
(string) The language title. When set, this overrides the site title for this language.
weight
(int) The language weight. When set to a non-zero value, this is the primary sort criteria for this language.

Changes in Hugo 0.112.0

{{< new-in "0.112.0" >}}

In Hugo v0.112.0 we consolidated all configuration options, and improved how the languages and their parameters are merged with the main configuration. But while testing this on Hugo sites out there, we received some error reports and reverted some of the changes in favor of deprecation warnings:

  1. site.Language.Params is deprecated. Use site.Params directly.
  2. Adding custom parameters to the top level language configuration is deprecated, add all of these below [params], see color in the example below.
title = "My blog"
languageCode = "en-us"

[languages]
[languages.sv]
title = "Min blogg"
languageCode = "sv"
[languages.en.params]
color = "blue"

In the example above, all settings except color below params map to predefined configuration options in Hugo for the site and its language, and should be accessed via the documented accessors:

{{ site.Title }}
{{ site.LanguageCode }}
{{ site.Params.color }}

Disable a language

To disable a language within a languages object in your site configuration:

{{< code-toggle file="hugo" copy=false >}} [languages.es] disabled = true {{< /code-toggle >}}

To disable one or more languages in the root of your site configuration:

{{< code-toggle file="hugo" copy=false >}} disableLanguages = ["es", "fr"] {{< /code-toggle >}}

To disable one or more languages using an environment variable:

HUGO_DISABLELANGUAGES="es fr" hugo

Note that you cannot disable the default content language.

Configure multilingual multihost

From Hugo 0.31 we support multiple languages in a multihost configuration. See this issue for details.

This means that you can now configure a baseURL per language:

{{% note %}} If a baseURL is set on the language level, then all languages must have one and they must all be different. {{% /note %}}

Example:

{{< code-toggle file="hugo" >}} [languages] [languages.fr] baseURL = "https://example.fr" languageName = "Français" weight = 1 title = "En Français"

[languages.en] baseURL = "https://example.com" languageName = "English" weight = 2 title = "In English" {{</ code-toggle >}}

With the above, the two sites will be generated into public with their own root:

public
├── en
└── fr

All URLs (i.e .Permalink etc.) will be generated from that root. So the English home page above will have its .Permalink set to https://example.com/.

When you run hugo server we will start multiple HTTP servers. You will typically see something like this in the console:

Web Server is available at 127.0.0.1:1313 (bind address 127.0.0.1)
Web Server is available at 127.0.0.1:1314 (bind address 127.0.0.1)
Press Ctrl+C to stop

Live reload and --navigateToChanged between the servers work as expected.

Translate your content

There are two ways to manage your content translations. Both ensure each page is assigned a language and is linked to its counterpart translations.

Translation by file name

Considering the following example:

  1. /content/about.en.md
  2. /content/about.fr.md

The first file is assigned the English language and is linked to the second. The second file is assigned the French language and is linked to the first.

Their language is assigned according to the language code added as a suffix to the file name.

By having the same path and base file name, the content pieces are linked together as translated pages.

{{% note %}} If a file has no language code, it will be assigned the default language. {{% /note %}}

Translation by content directory

This system uses different content directories for each of the languages. Each language's content directory is set using the contentDir parameter.

{{< code-toggle file="hugo" >}} languages: en: weight: 10 languageName: "English" contentDir: "content/english" fr: weight: 20 languageName: "Français" contentDir: "content/french" {{< /code-toggle >}}

The value of contentDir can be any valid path -- even absolute path references. The only restriction is that the content directories cannot overlap.

Considering the following example in conjunction with the configuration above:

  1. /content/english/about.md
  2. /content/french/about.md

The first file is assigned the English language and is linked to the second. The second file is assigned the French language and is linked to the first.

Their language is assigned according to the content directory they are placed in.

By having the same path and basename (relative to their language content directory), the content pieces are linked together as translated pages.

Bypassing default linking

Any pages sharing the same translationKey set in front matter will be linked as translated pages regardless of basename or location.

Considering the following example:

  1. /content/about-us.en.md
  2. /content/om.nn.md
  3. /content/presentation/a-propos.fr.md

{{< code-toggle >}} translationKey: "about" {{< /code-toggle >}}

By setting the translationKey front matter parameter to about in all three pages, they will be linked as translated pages.

Because paths and file names are used to handle linking, all translated pages will share the same URL (apart from the language subdirectory).

To localize URLs:

  • For a regular page, set either slug or url in front matter
  • For a section page, set url in front matter

For example, a French translation can have its own localized slug.

{{< code-toggle file="content/about.fr.md" fm=true copy=false >}} title: A Propos slug: "a-propos" {{< /code-toggle >}}

At render, Hugo will build both /about/ and /fr/a-propos/ without affecting the translation link.

Page bundles

To avoid the burden of having to duplicate files, each Page Bundle inherits the resources of its linked translated pages' bundles except for the content files (Markdown files, HTML files etc...).

Therefore, from within a template, the page will have access to the files from all linked pages' bundles.

If, across the linked bundles, two or more files share the same basename, only one will be included and chosen as follows:

  • File from current language bundle, if present.
  • First file found across bundles by order of language Weight.

{{% note %}} Page Bundle resources follow the same language assignment logic as content files, both by file name (image.jpg, image.fr.jpg) and by directory (english/about/header.jpg, french/about/header.jpg). {{%/ note %}}

Reference translated content

To create a list of links to translated content, use a template similar to the following:

{{< code file="layouts/partials/i18nlist.html" >}} {{ if .IsTranslated }}

{{ i18n "translations" }}

    {{ range .Translations }}
  • {{ .Lang }}: {{ .Title }}{{ if .IsPage }} ({{ i18n "wordCount" . }}){{ end }}
  • {{ end }}
{{ end }} {{< /code >}}

The above can be put in a partial (i.e., inside layouts/partials/) and included in any template, whether a single content page or the homepage. It will not print anything if there are no translations for a given page.

The above also uses the i18n function described in the next section.

List all available languages

.AllTranslations on a Page can be used to list all translations, including the page itself. On the home page it can be used to build a language navigator:

{{< code file="layouts/partials/allLanguages.html" >}}

    {{ range $.Site.Home.AllTranslations }}
  • {{ .Language.LanguageName }}
  • {{ end }}
{{< /code >}}

Translation of strings

Hugo uses go-i18n to support string translations. See the project's source repository to find tools that will help you manage your translation workflows.

Translations are collected from the themes/<THEME>/i18n/ folder (built into the theme), as well as translations present in i18n/ at the root of your project. In the i18n, the translations will be merged and take precedence over what is in the theme folder. Language files should be named according to RFC 5646 with names such as en-US.toml, fr.toml, etc.

Artificial languages with private use subtags as defined in RFC 5646 § 2.2.7 are also supported. You may omit the art-x- prefix for brevity. For example:

art-x-hugolang
hugolang

Private use subtags must not exceed 8 alphanumeric characters.

Query basic translation

From within your templates, use the i18n function like this:

{{ i18n "home" }}

The function will search for the "home" id:

{{< code-toggle file="i18n/en-US" >}} [home] other = "Home" {{< /code-toggle >}}

The result will be

Home

Query a flexible translation with variables

Often you will want to use the page variables in the translation strings. To do so, pass the . context when calling i18n:

{{ i18n "wordCount" . }}

The function will pass the . context to the "wordCount" id:

{{< code-toggle file="i18n/en-US" >}} [wordCount] other = "This article has {{ .WordCount }} words." {{< /code-toggle >}}

Assume .WordCount in the context has value is 101. The result will be:

This article has 101 words.

Query a singular/plural translation

In other to meet singular/plural requirement, you must pass a dictionary (map) with a numeric .Count property to the i18n function. The below example uses .ReadingTime variable which has a built-in .Count property.

{{ i18n "readingTime" .ReadingTime }}

The function will read .Count from .ReadingTime and evaluate whether the number is singular (one) or plural (other). After that, it will pass to readingTime id in i18n/en-US.toml file:

{{< code-toggle file="i18n/en-US" >}} [readingTime] one = "One minute to read" other = "{{ .Count }} minutes to read" {{< /code-toggle >}}

Assuming .ReadingTime.Count in the context has value is 525600. The result will be:

525600 minutes to read

If .ReadingTime.Count in the context has value is 1. The result is:

One minute to read

In case you need to pass a custom data: ((dict "Count" numeric_value_only) is minimum requirement)

{{ i18n "readingTime" (dict "Count" 25 "FirstArgument" true "SecondArgument" false "Etc" "so on, so far") }}

Localization

The following localization examples assume your site's primary language is English, with translations to French and German.

{{< code-toggle file="hugo" >}} defaultContentLanguage = 'en'

[languages] [languages.en] contentDir = 'content/en' languageName = 'English' weight = 1 [languages.fr] contentDir = 'content/fr' languageName = 'Français' weight = 2 [languages.de] contentDir = 'content/de' languageName = 'Deutsch' weight = 3

{{< /code-toggle >}}

Dates

With this front matter:

{{< code-toggle >}} date = 2021-11-03T12:34:56+01:00 {{< /code-toggle >}}

And this template code:

{{ .Date | time.Format ":date_full" }}

The rendered page displays:

Language Value
English Wednesday, November 3, 2021
Français mercredi 3 novembre 2021
Deutsch Mittwoch, 3. November 2021

See time.Format for details.

Currency

With this template code:

{{ 512.5032 | lang.FormatCurrency 2 "USD" }}

The rendered page displays:

Language Value
English $512.50
Français 512,50 $US
Deutsch 512,50 $

See lang.FormatCurrency and lang.FormatAccounting for details.

Numbers

With this template code:

{{ 512.5032 | lang.FormatNumber 2 }}

The rendered page displays:

Language Value
English 512.50
Français 512,50
Deutsch 512,50

See lang.FormatNumber and lang.FormatNumberCustom for details.

Percentages

With this template code:

{{ 512.5032 | lang.FormatPercent 2 }} ---> 512.50%

The rendered page displays:

Language Value
English 512.50%
Français 512,50 %
Deutsch 512,50 %

See lang.FormatPercent for details.

Menus

Localization of menu entries depends on the how you define them:

  • When you define menu entries automatically using the section pages menu, you must use translation tables to localize each entry.
  • When you define menu entries in front matter, they are already localized based on the front matter itself. If the front matter values are insufficient, use translation tables to localize each entry.
  • When you define menu entries in site configuration, you can (a) use translation tables, or (b) create language-specific menu entries under each language key.

Use translation tables

When rendering the text that appears in menu each entry, the example menu template does this:

{{ or (T .Identifier) .Name | safeHTML }}

It queries the translation table for the current language using the menu entry's identifier and returns the translated string. If the translation table does not exist, or if the identifier key is not present in the translation table, it falls back to name.

The identifier depends on how you define menu entries:

For example, if you define menu entries in site configuration:

{{< code-toggle file="hugo" copy=false >}} menu.main identifier = 'products' name = 'Products' pageRef = '/products' weight = 10 menu.main identifier = 'services' name = 'Services' pageRef = '/services' weight = 20 {{< / code-toggle >}}

Create corresponding entries in the translation tables:

{{< code-toggle file="i18n/de" copy=false >}} products = 'Produkte' services = 'Leistungen' {{< / code-toggle >}}

Create language-specific menu entries

For example:

{{< code-toggle file="hugo" copy=false >}} [languages.de] languageCode = 'de-DE' languageName = 'Deutsch' weight = 1

languages.de.menu.main name = 'Produkte' pageRef = '/products' weight = 10

languages.de.menu.main name = 'Leistungen' pageRef = '/services' weight = 20

[languages.en] languageCode = 'en-US' languageName = 'English' weight = 2

languages.en.menu.main name = 'Products' pageRef = '/products' weight = 10

languages.en.menu.main name = 'Services' pageRef = '/services' weight = 20 {{< /code-toggle >}}

For a simple menu with two languages, these menu entries are easy to create and maintain. For a larger menu, or with more than two languages, using translation tables as described above is preferable.

Missing translations

If a string does not have a translation for the current language, Hugo will use the value from the default language. If no default value is set, an empty string will be shown.

While translating a Hugo website, it can be handy to have a visual indicator of missing translations. The enableMissingTranslationPlaceholders configuration option will flag all untranslated strings with the placeholder [i18n] identifier, where identifier is the id of the missing translation.

{{% note %}} Hugo will generate your website with these missing translation placeholders. It might not be suitable for production environments. {{% /note %}}

For merging of content from other languages (i.e. missing content translations), see lang.Merge.

To track down missing translation strings, run Hugo with the --printI18nWarnings flag:

hugo --printI18nWarnings | grep i18n
i18n|MISSING_TRANSLATION|en|wordCount

Multilingual themes support

To support Multilingual mode in your themes, some considerations must be taken for the URLs in the templates. If there is more than one language, URLs must meet the following criteria:

If there is more than one language defined, the LanguagePrefix variable will equal /en (or whatever your CurrentLanguage is). If not enabled, it will be an empty string (and is therefore harmless for single-language Hugo websites).

Generate multilingual content with hugo new

If you organize content with translations in the same directory:

hugo new post/test.en.md
hugo new post/test.de.md

If you organize content with translations in different directories:

hugo new content/en/post/test.md
hugo new content/de/post/test.md