Translatable behavior offers a very handy solution for translating specific record fields in diferent languages. Further more, it loads the translations automatically for a locale currently used, which can be set to Translatable Listener on it`s initialization or later for other cases through the Entity itself
Features:
2012-01-28
2012-01-04
2011-12-11
2011-11-08
Update 2011-04-21
Update 2011-04-16
Update 2011-04-04
Note list:
Portability:
This article will cover the basic installation and functionality of Translatable behavior
Content:
Read the documentation or check the example code on how to setup and use the extensions in most optimized way.
Note: that Translatable interface is not necessary, except in cases there you need to identify entity as being Translatable. The metadata is loaded only once then cache is activated
<?php
namespace Entity;
use Gedmo\Mapping\Annotation as Gedmo;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use Gedmo\Translatable\Translatable;
/**
* @ORM\Table(name="articles")
* @ORM\Entity
*/
class Article implements Translatable
{
/** @ORM\Id @ORM\GeneratedValue @ORM\Column(type="integer") */
private $id;
/**
* @Gedmo\Translatable
* @ORM\Column(name="title", type="string", length=128)
*/
private $title;
/**
* @Gedmo\Translatable
* @ORM\Column(name="content", type="text")
*/
private $content;
/**
* @Gedmo\Locale
* Used locale to override Translation listener`s locale
* this is not a mapped field of entity metadata, just a simple property
*/
private $locale;
public function getId()
{
return $this->id;
}
public function setTitle($title)
{
$this->title = $title;
}
public function getTitle()
{
return $this->title;
}
public function setContent($content)
{
$this->content = $content;
}
public function getContent()
{
return $this->content;
}
public function setTranslatableLocale($locale)
{
$this->locale = $locale;
}
}
<?php
namespace Document;
use Gedmo\Mapping\Annotation as Gedmo;
use Doctrine\ODM\MongoDB\Mapping\Annotations as ODM;
use Gedmo\Translatable\Translatable;
/**
* @ODM\Document(collection="articles")
*/
class Article implements Translatable
{
/** @ODM\Id */
private $id;
/**
* @Gedmo\Translatable
* @ODM\String
*/
private $title;
/**
* @Gedmo\Translatable
* @ODM\String
*/
private $content;
/**
* @Gedmo\Locale
* Used locale to override Translation listener`s locale
* this is not a mapped field of entity metadata, just a simple property
*/
private $locale;
public function getId()
{
return $this->id;
}
public function setTitle($title)
{
$this->title = $title;
}
public function getTitle()
{
return $this->title;
}
public function setContent($content)
{
$this->content = $content;
}
public function getContent()
{
return $this->content;
}
public function setTranslatableLocale($locale)
{
$this->locale = $locale;
}
}
Yaml mapped Article: /mapping/yaml/Entity.Article.dcm.yml
---
Entity\Article:
type: entity
table: articles
gedmo:
translation:
locale: localeField
# using specific personal translation class:
# entity: Translatable\Fixture\CategoryTranslation
id:
id:
type: integer
generator:
strategy: AUTO
fields:
title:
type: string
length: 64
gedmo:
- translatable
content:
type: text
gedmo:
- translatable
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<doctrine-mapping xmlns="http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/orm/doctrine-mapping"
xmlns:gedmo="http://gediminasm.org/schemas/orm/doctrine-extensions-mapping">
<entity name="Mapping\Fixture\Xml\Translatable" table="translatables">
<id name="id" type="integer" column="id">
<generator strategy="AUTO"/>
</id>
<field name="title" type="string" length="128">
<gedmo:translatable/>
</field>
<field name="content" type="text">
<gedmo:translatable/>
</field>
<gedmo:translation entity="Gedmo\Translatable\Entity\Translation" locale="locale"/>
</entity>
</doctrine-mapping>
Currently a global locale used for translations is "en_us" which was set in TranslationListener globaly. To save article with its translations:
<?php
$article = new Entity\Article;
$article->setTitle('my title in en');
$article->setContent('my content in en');
$em->persist($article);
$em->flush();
This inserted an article and inserted the translations for it in "en_us" locale only if en_us is not the default locale in case if default locale matches current locale - it uses original record value as translation
Now lets update our article in diferent locale:
<?php
// first load the article
$article = $em->find('Entity\Article', 1 /*article id*/);
$article->setTitle('my title in de');
$article->setContent('my content in de');
$article->setTranslatableLocale('de_de'); // change locale
$em->persist($article);
$em->flush();
This updated an article and inserted the translations for it in "de_de" locale To see and load all translations of Translatable Entity:
<?php
// reload in different language
$article = $em->find('Entity\Article', 1 /*article id*/);
$article->setLocale('ru_ru');
$em->refresh($article);
$article = $em->find('Entity\Article', 1 /*article id*/);
$repository = $em->getRepository('Gedmo\Translatable\Entity\Translation');
$translations = $repository->findTranslations($article);
/* $translations contains:
Array (
[de_de] => Array
(
[title] => my title in de
[content] => my content in de
)
[en_us] => Array
(
[title] => my title in en
[content] => my content in en
)
)*/
As far as our global locale is now "en_us" and updated article has "de_de" values. Lets try to load it and it should be translated in English
<?php
$article = $em->getRepository('Entity\Article')->find(1/* id of article */);
echo $article->getTitle();
// prints: "my title in en"
echo $article->getContent();
// prints: "my content in en"
Usually it is more convinient to persist more translations when creating or updating a record. Translatable allows to do that through translation repository. All additional translations will be tracked by listener and when the flush will be executed, it will update or persist all additional translations.
Note: these translations will not be processed as ordinary fields of your object, in case if you translate a slug additional translation will not know how to generate the slug, so the value as an additional translation should be processed when creating it.
<?php
// persisting multiple translations, assume default locale is EN
$repository = $em->getRepository('Gedmo\\Translatable\\Entity\\Translation');
// it works for ODM also
$article = new Article;
$article->setTitle('My article en');
$article->setContent('content en');
$repository->translate($article, 'title', 'de', 'my article de')
->translate($article, 'content', 'de', 'content de')
->translate($article, 'title', 'ru', 'my article ru')
->translate($article, 'content', 'ru', 'content ru')
;
$em->persist($article);
$em->flush();
// updating same article also having one new translation
$repo
->translate($article, 'title', 'lt', 'title lt')
->translate($article, 'content', 'lt', 'content lt')
->translate($article, 'title', 'ru', 'title ru change')
->translate($article, 'content', 'ru', 'content ru change')
->translate($article, 'title', 'en', 'title en (default locale) update')
->translate($article, 'content', 'en', 'content en (default locale) update')
;
$em->flush();
By default, behind the scenes, when you load a record - translatable hooks into postLoad event and issues additional query to translate all fields. Imagine that, when you load a collection, it may issue a lot of queries just to translate those fields. Including array hydration, it is not possible to hook any postLoad event since it is not an entity being hydrated. These are the main reasons why TranslationWalker was created.
TranslationWalker uses a query hint to hook into any select type query, and when you execute the query, no matter which hydration method you use, it automatically joins the translations for all fields, so you could use ordering filtering or whatever you want on translated fields instead of original record fields.
And in result there is only one query for all this happyness.
If you use translation fallbacks it will be also in the same single query and during the hydration process it will replace the empty fields in case if they do not have a translation in currently used locale.
Now enough talking, here is an example:
<?php
$dql = <<<___SQL
SELECT a, c, u
FROM Article a
LEFT JOIN a.comments c
JOIN c.author u
WHERE a.title LIKE '%translated_title%'
ORDER BY a.title
___SQL;
$query = $em->createQuery($dql);
// set the translation query hint
$query->setHint(
\Doctrine\ORM\Query::HINT_CUSTOM_OUTPUT_WALKER,
'Gedmo\\Translatable\\Query\\TreeWalker\\TranslationWalker'
);
$articles = $query->getResult(); // object hydration
$articles = $query->getArrayResult(); // array hydration
And even a subselect:
<?php
$dql = <<<___SQL
SELECT a, c, u
FROM Article a
LEFT JOIN a.comments c
JOIN c.author u
WHERE a.id IN (
SELECT a2.id
FROM Article a2
WHERE a2.title LIKE '%something_translated%'
AND a2.status = 1
)
ORDER BY a.title
___SQL;
$query = $em->createQuery($dql);
$query->setHint(
\Doctrine\ORM\Query::HINT_CUSTOM_OUTPUT_WALKER,
'Gedmo\\Translatable\\Query\\TreeWalker\\TranslationWalker'
);
NOTE: if you use memcache or apc. You should set locale and other options like fallbacks to query through hints. Otherwise the query will be cached with a first used locale
<?php
// locale
$query->setHint(
\Gedmo\Translatable\TranslatableListener::HINT_TRANSLATABLE_LOCALE,
'en', // take locale from session or request etc.
);
// fallback
$query->setHint(
\Gedmo\Translatable\TranslatableListener::HINT_FALLBACK,
1, // fallback to default values in case if record is not translated
);
$articles = $query->getResult(); // object hydration
Theres no need for any words anymore.. right? I recommend you to use it extensively since it is a way better performance, even in cases where you need to load single translated entity.
Note: Even in COUNT select statements translations are joined to leave a possibility to filter by translated field, if you do not need it, just do not set the hint. Also take into account that it is not possibble to translate components in JOIN WITH statement, example
JOIN a.comments c WITH c.message LIKE '%will_not_be_translated%'`
Note: any find related method calls cannot hook this hint automagically, we will use a different approach when persister overriding feature will be available in Doctrine
In case if translation query walker is used, you can additionally override:
<?php
$query->setHint(Gedmo\TranslationListener::HINT_FALLBACK, 1);
will fallback to default locale translations instead of empty values if used. And will override the translation listener setting for fallback.
<?php
$query->setHint(Gedmo\TranslationListener::HINT_FALLBACK, 0);
will do the opposite.
<?php
$query->setHint(Gedmo\TranslationListener::HINT_INNER_JOIN, true);
will use INNER joins for translations instead of LEFT joins, so that in case if you do not want untranslated records in your result set for instance.
<?php
$query->setHint(Gedmo\TranslationListener::HINT_TRANSLATABLE_LOCALE, 'en');
would override the translation locale used to translate the resultset.
Note: all these query hints lasts only for the specific query.
In some cases we need a default translation as a fallback if record does not have a translation on globaly used locale. In that case Translation Listener takes the current value of Entity. So if default locale is specified and it matches the locale in which record is being translated - it will not create extra translation but use original values instead. If translation fallback is set to false it will fill untranslated values as blanks
To set the default locale:
<?php
$translatableListener->setDefaultLocale('en_us');
To set translation fallback:
<?php
$translatableListener->setTranslationFallback(true); // default is false
Note: Default locale should be set on the TranslatableListener initialization once, since it can impact your current records if it will be changed. As it will not store extra record in translation table by default.
If you need to store translation in default locale, set:
<?php
$translatableListener->setPersistDefaultLocaleTranslation(true); // default is false
This would always store translations in all locales, also keeping original record translated field values in default locale set.
In some cases if there are thousands of records or even more.. we would like to have a single table for translations of this Entity in order to increase the performance on translation loading speed. This example will show how to specify a different Entity for your translations by extending the mapped superclass.
ArticleTranslation Entity:
<?php
namespace Entity\Translation;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use Gedmo\Translatable\Entity\MappedSuperclass\AbstractTranslation;
/**
* @ORM\Table(name="article_translations", indexes={
* @ORM\Index(name="article_translation_idx", columns={"locale", "object_class", "field", "foreign_key"})
* })
* @ORM\Entity(repositoryClass="Gedmo\Translatable\Entity\Repository\TranslationRepository")
*/
class ArticleTranslation extends AbstractTranslation
{
/**
* All required columns are mapped through inherited superclass
*/
}
Note: We specified the repository class to be used from extension. It is handy for specific methods common to the Translation Entity
Note: This Entity will be used instead of default Translation Entity only if we specify a class annotation @Gedmo\TranslationEntity(class="my\translation\entity"):
<?php
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
/**
* @ORM\Table(name="articles")
* @ORM\Entity
* @Gedmo\TranslationEntity(class="Entity\Translation\ArticleTranslation")
*/
class Article
{
// ...
}
Now all translations of Article will be stored and queried from specific table
Translatable has AbstractPersonalTranslation mapped superclass, which must be extended and mapped based on your entity which you want to translate. Note: translations are not automapped because of user preference based on cascades or other possible choices, which user can make. Personal translations uses foreign key constraint which is fully managed by ORM and allows to have a collection of related translations. User can use it anyway he likes, etc.: implementing array access on entity, using left join to fill collection and so on.
Note: that query hint will work on personal translations the same way. You can always use a left join like for standard doctrine collections.
Usage example:
<?php
namespace Entity;
use Doctrine\Common\Collections\ArrayCollection;
use Gedmo\Mapping\Annotation as Gedmo;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
/**
* @ORM\Entity
* @Gedmo\TranslationEntity(class="Entity\CategoryTranslation")
*/
class Category
{
/**
* @ORM\Column(type="integer")
* @ORM\Id
* @ORM\GeneratedValue
*/
private $id;
/**
* @Gedmo\Translatable
* @ORM\Column(length=64)
*/
private $title;
/**
* @Gedmo\Translatable
* @ORM\Column(type="text", nullable=true)
*/
private $description;
/**
* @ORM\OneToMany(
* targetEntity="CategoryTranslation",
* mappedBy="object",
* cascade={"persist", "remove"}
* )
*/
private $translations;
public function __construct()
{
$this->translations = new ArrayCollection();
}
public function getTranslations()
{
return $this->translations;
}
public function addTranslation(CategoryTranslation $t)
{
if (!$this->translations->contains($t)) {
$this->translations[] = $t;
$t->setObject($this);
}
}
public function getId()
{
return $this->id;
}
public function setTitle($title)
{
$this->title = $title;
}
public function getTitle()
{
return $this->title;
}
public function setDescription($description)
{
$this->description = $description;
}
public function getDescription()
{
return $this->description;
}
public function __toString()
{
return $this->getTitle();
}
}
Now the translation entity for the Category:
<?php
namespace Entity;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use Gedmo\Translatable\Entity\MappedSuperclass\AbstractPersonalTranslation;
/**
* @ORM\Entity
* @ORM\Table(name="category_translations",
* uniqueConstraints={@ORM\UniqueConstraint(name="lookup_unique_idx", columns={
* "locale", "object_id", "field"
* })}
* )
*/
class CategoryTranslation extends AbstractPersonalTranslation
{
/**
* Convinient constructor
*
* @param string $locale
* @param string $field
* @param string $value
*/
public function __construct($locale, $field, $value)
{
$this->setLocale($locale);
$this->setField($field);
$this->setContent($value);
}
/**
* @ORM\ManyToOne(targetEntity="Category", inversedBy="translations")
* @ORM\JoinColumn(name="object_id", referencedColumnName="id", onDelete="CASCADE")
*/
protected $object;
}
Some example code to persist with translations:
<?php
// assumes default locale is "en"
$food = new Entity\Category;
$food->setTitle('Food');
$food->addTranslation(new Entity\CategoryTranslation('lt', 'title', 'Maistas'));
$fruits = new Entity\Category;
$fruits->setParent($food);
$fruits->setTitle('Fruits');
$fruits->addTranslation(new Entity\CategoryTranslation('lt', 'title', 'Vaisiai'));
$fruits->addTranslation(new Entity\CategoryTranslation('ru', 'title', 'rus trans'));
$em->persist($food);
$em->persist($fruits);
$em->flush();
This would create translations for english and lithuanian, and for fruits, ru additionally.
Easy like that, any suggestions on improvements are very welcome
Suppose you have a Sonata Backend with a simple form like:
<?php
protected function configureFormFields(FormMapper $formMapper) {
$formMapper
->with('General')
->add('title', 'text')
->end()
;
}
Then you can turn it into an 118n Form by providing the following changes.
<?php
protected function configureFormFields(FormMapper $formMapper)
{
$formMapper
->with('General')
->add('title', 'translatable_field', array(
'field' => 'title',
'personal_translation' => 'ExampleBundle\Entity\Translation\ProductTranslation',
'property_path' => 'translations',
))
->end()
;
}
To accomplish this you can add the following code in your bundle:
https://gist.github.com/2437078
/Form/TranslatedFieldType.php /Form/EventListener/addTranslatedFieldSubscriber.php /Resources/services.yml
Then you can change to your needs:
'field' => 'title', //you need to provide which field you wish to translate
'personal_translation' => 'ExampleBundle\Entity\Translation\ProductTranslation', //the personal translation entity
You can use A2lixTranslationFormBundle to facilitate your translations.