For example:
I18n.t('something')
should outpu开发者_开发技巧t only
something
if the translation missing.
It is possible: See section 4.1.2 Defaults at Rails Internationalization (I18n) API.
I18n.t :missing, :default => 'Not here'
# => 'Not here'
On rails 4 you can change the exception handler.
Add the following to config/initializers/i18n.rb
:
module I18n
class MissingTranslationExceptionHandler < ExceptionHandler
def call(exception, locale, key, options)
if exception.is_a?(MissingTranslation)
key
else
super
end
end
end
end
I18n.exception_handler = I18n::MissingTranslationExceptionHandler.new
Now on you views you can just do:
<p><%= t "Not translated!" %></p>
Guide on the subject: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/i18n.html#using-different-exception-handlers
side-note: this might help figuring out what Rails thinks the current scope is (e.g. when using ".something")
http://unixgods.org/~tilo/Rails/which_l10n_strings_is_rails_trying_to_lookup.html
this way you can better avoid having missing translations because of incorrect placing of translations strings in the L10n-file / incorrect keys
David's answer is the right solution to the question, another (more verbose) way to do it is to rescue and return the key:
def translate_nicely(key)
begin
I18n.translate!(key)
rescue
key
end
end
nope, not possible. If you use I18 you need to have a file that corresponds to the language otherwise I18n will complain.
Of course you can set the default language in your environment.rb file. Should be near the bottom and you can set this for whatever language you want but in your locales/
folder you will need to have a corresponding yml
translation.
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