This is SDK for AutoLocalise.
A lightweight, efficient auto-translation SDK for React and Next.js applications. This SDK provides seamless integration for automatic content translation with support for server-side rendering.
You don't need to prepare any translation files, just provide your API key and the SDK will handle the rest.
- 🌐 React and Next.js support
- 🚀 Automatic string translation
- 🎯 Dynamic parameter interpolation
- 🔍 Persist translation tracking
- 🎨 Nested text formatting support
- ⚙️ Configurable cache TTL
- ⚡️ Tree-shakeable and side-effect free
- 🔄 Server-side rendering support
- ⚡️ Hybrid client/server translation hydration
npm install react-autolocalise
# or
yarn add react-autolocalise
import { TranslationProvider } from "react-autolocalise";
const App = () => {
const config = {
apiKey: "your-api-key",
sourceLocale: "en", // Your app's original language
targetLocale: "es", // Language to translate to
// cacheTTL: 24, // Cache validity in hours (optional, defaults to 24)
};
return (
<TranslationProvider config={config}>
<YourApp />
</TranslationProvider>
);
};
Basic usage:
import { useAutoTranslate } from "react-autolocalise";
const MyComponent = () => {
const { t, loading, error } = useAutoTranslate();
return (
<div>
<h1>{t("Welcome to our app!", false)}</h1>
<p>{t("This text will be automatically translated")}</p>
</div>
);
};
Use with nested text formatting:
import React from "react";
import { FormattedText } from "react-autolocalise";
const MyComponent = () => {
return (
<div>
<FormattedText>
<p>
Hello, we <div style={{ color: "red" }}>want</div> you to be{" "}
<span style={{ fontWeight: "bold" }}>happy</span>!
</p>
</FormattedText>
<FormattedText persist={false}>
Hello,
<p style={{ color: "red" }}>World</p>
</FormattedText>
</div>
);
};
Use with params:
import { useAutoTranslate } from "react-autolocalise";
const MyComponent = () => {
const { t } = useAutoTranslate();
const name = "John";
return (
<div>
<p>
{t("Welcome, {{1}}!, Nice to meet you. {{2}}.")
.replace("{{1}}", name)
.replace("{{2}}", t("Have a great day!"))}
</p>
</div>
);
};
This SDK provides reliable SSR support with automatic locale detection and server-side translation. The new approach is simple, predictable, and SEO-friendly.
Create a middleware file to detect user's locale and set up dynamic routing:
// src/middleware.ts
import { NextResponse } from "next/server";
import type { NextRequest } from "next/server";
export function middleware(request: NextRequest) {
const { pathname } = request.nextUrl;
// Skip middleware for API routes, static files, and Next.js internals or anything you want
if (
pathname.startsWith("/api") ||
pathname.startsWith("/_next") ||
pathname.includes(".")
) {
return NextResponse.next();
}
// Get locale from accept-language header
const acceptLanguage = request.headers.get("accept-language");
const browserLocale = acceptLanguage?.split(",")[0]?.split("-")[0] || "en";
// Support any locale dynamically, you can also predefine a list here to control the target languages
const locale = browserLocale;
// Redirect root to locale-specific URL
if (pathname === "/") {
return NextResponse.redirect(new URL(`/${locale}`, request.url));
}
// If path doesn't start with a locale, redirect to add locale
const pathSegments = pathname.split("/");
const firstSegment = pathSegments[1];
// Simple check: if first segment is not a 2-letter code, add locale
if (!firstSegment || firstSegment.length !== 2) {
return NextResponse.redirect(new URL(`/${locale}${pathname}`, request.url));
}
return NextResponse.next();
}
export const config = {
matcher: ["/((?!api|_next/static|_next/image|favicon.ico).*)"],
};
The withServerTranslation
HOC provides the cleanest server-side translation experience with zero string duplication. Here are the most common use cases:
// app/[locale]/page.tsx
import { withServerTranslation } from "react-autolocalise/server";
const config = {
apiKey: "your-api-key",
sourceLocale: "en", // Your app's original language
};
// Clean HOC approach - automatically uses locale from props
const HomePage = withServerTranslation(config, ({ t, tf, locale }) => (
<div>
<h1>{t("Welcome to our app")}</h1>
<p>{t("This content is automatically translated")}</p>
{tf(
<>
Experience <strong>powerful</strong> and <em>reliable</em> translations!
</>
)}
<p>Current language: {locale}</p>
</div>
));
export default async function Page({
params,
}: {
params: Promise<{ locale: string }>;
}) {
const { locale } = await params;
return <HomePage locale={locale} />;
}
// For apps targeting a specific language (e.g., Spanish market)
const config = {
apiKey: "your-api-key",
sourceLocale: "en",
targetLocale: "es", // Always translate to Spanish
};
const Page = withServerTranslation(config, ({ t, tf }) => (
<div>
<h1>{t("Welcome to our app")}</h1>
<p>{t("All content will be in Spanish")}</p>
{tf(
<>
Built for <strong>Spanish</strong> speaking users!
</>
)}
</div>
));
export default Page;
The server-side rendering approach provides excellent SEO benefits:
- Translated content in HTML: Search engines see fully translated content on first load
- Locale-specific URLs: Clean URLs like
/zh/about
,/fr/contact
for better indexing - Dynamic locale support: Automatically handles any language without pre-configuration
- Fast server-side translation: Efficient caching reduces API calls and improves performance
Generating SEO Metadata:
// app/[locale]/layout.tsx
import { translateServerStrings } from "react-autolocalise/server";
const config = {
apiKey: "your-api-key",
sourceLocale: "en",
};
export async function generateMetadata({
params,
}: {
params: Promise<{ locale: string }>;
}) {
const { locale } = await params;
const strings = [
"My Awesome App - Best Solution for Your Business",
"Discover the most powerful tools to grow your business online",
];
const translations = await translateServerStrings(strings, locale, config);
return {
title: translations["My Awesome App - Best Solution for Your Business"],
description:
translations[
"Discover the most powerful tools to grow your business online"
],
};
}
The locale format follows the ISO 639-1 language code standard, optionally combined with an ISO 3166-1 country code:
- Language code only: 'en', 'fr', 'zh', 'ja', etc.
- Language-Region: 'pa-Arab', 'fr-CA', 'zh-TW', 'pt-BR', etc.
In React web applications, you can get the user's preferred locale from the browser:
// Get the primary locale
const browserLocale = navigator.language; // e.g., 'en-US'
// Get all preferred locales
const preferredLocales = navigator.languages; // e.g., ['en-US', 'en']
// Extract just the language code if needed
const languageCode = browserLocale.split("-")[0]; // e.g., 'en'
Prop | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
config | TranslationConfig | Configuration object for the translation service |
Returns an object with:
t
: Translation functionloading
: Boolean indicating initialization of translationserror
: Error object if translation loading failed
Prop | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
config | TranslationConfig | Configuration object for the translation service |
Returns an object with:
t
: Translation functionloading
: Boolean indicating initialization of translationserror
: Error object if translation loading failed
Property | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
apiKey | string | Yes | Your API key for the translation service |
sourceLocale | string | Yes | Source locale for translations |
targetLocale | string | Yes | Target locale |
cacheTTL | number | No | Cache validity period in hours (default: 24) |
Tips: When sourceLocale
=== targetLocale
no translation requests will be sent.
The 'persist' means the string will be persisted so that you can review and edit in the dashboard, default is true, if the content is dynamic or you don't want to see in the dashboard, pass 'false'.
import { useAutoTranslate } from "react-autolocalise";
const MyComponent = () => {
const { t } = useAutoTranslate();
return (
<div>
<h1>{t("Welcome to our app!", false)}</h1>
</div>
);
};
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.
MIT