TranslatableMarkup.php
Same filename in other branches
Namespace
Drupal\Core\StringTranslationFile
-
core/
lib/ Drupal/ Core/ StringTranslation/ TranslatableMarkup.php
View source
<?php
namespace Drupal\Core\StringTranslation;
use Drupal\Component\Render\FormattableMarkup;
use Drupal\Component\Utility\ToStringTrait;
/**
* Provides translatable markup class.
*
* This object, when cast to a string, will return the formatted, translated
* string. Avoid casting it to a string yourself, because it is preferable to
* let the rendering system do the cast as late as possible in the rendering
* process, so that this object itself can be put, untranslated, into render
* caches and thus the cache can be shared between different language contexts.
*
* @see \Drupal\Component\Render\FormattableMarkup
* @see \Drupal\Core\StringTranslation\TranslationManager::translateString()
* @see \Drupal\Core\Annotation\Translation
*/
class TranslatableMarkup extends FormattableMarkup {
use ToStringTrait;
/**
* The translated markup without placeholder replacements.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $translatedMarkup;
/**
* The translation options.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $options;
/**
* The string translation service.
*
* @var \Drupal\Core\StringTranslation\TranslationInterface
*/
protected $stringTranslation;
/**
* Constructs a new class instance.
*
* When possible, use the
* \Drupal\Core\StringTranslation\StringTranslationTrait $this->t(). Otherwise
* create a new \Drupal\Core\StringTranslation\TranslatableMarkup object
* directly.
*
* Calling the trait's t() method or instantiating a new TranslatableMarkup
* object serves two purposes:
* - At run-time it translates user-visible text into the appropriate
* language.
* - Static analyzers detect calls to t() and new TranslatableMarkup, and add
* the first argument (the string to be translated) to the database of
* strings that need translation. These strings are expected to be in
* English, so the first argument should always be in English.
* To allow the site to be localized, it is important that all human-readable
* text that will be displayed on the site or sent to a user is made available
* in one of the ways supported by the
* @link https://www.drupal.org/node/322729 Localization API @endlink.
* See the @link https://www.drupal.org/node/322729 Localization API @endlink
* pages for more information, including recommendations on how to break up or
* not break up strings for translation.
*
* @section sec_translating_vars Translating Variables
* $string should always be an English literal string.
*
* $string should never contain a variable, such as:
* @code
* new TranslatableMarkup($text)
* @endcode
* There are several reasons for this:
* - Using a variable for $string that is user input is a security risk.
* - Using a variable for $string that has even guaranteed safe text (for
* example, user interface text provided literally in code), will not be
* picked up by the localization static text processor. (The parameter could
* be a variable if the entire string in $text has been passed into t() or
* new TranslatableMarkup() elsewhere as the first argument, but that
* strategy is not recommended.)
*
* It is especially important never to call new TranslatableMarkup($user_text)
* or t($user_text) where $user_text is some text that a user entered -- doing
* that can lead to cross-site scripting and other security problems. However,
* you can use variable substitution in your string, to put variable text such
* as user names or link URLs into translated text. Variable substitution
* looks like this:
* @code
* new TranslatableMarkup("@name's blog", array('@name' => $account->getDisplayName()));
* @endcode
* Basically, you can put placeholders like @name into your string, and the
* method will substitute the sanitized values at translation time. (See the
* Localization API pages referenced above and the documentation of
* \Drupal\Component\Render\FormattableMarkup::placeholderFormat()
* for details about how to safely and correctly define variables in your
* string.) Translators can then rearrange the string as necessary for the
* language (e.g., in Spanish, it might be "blog de @name").
*
* @param string $string
* A string containing the English text to translate.
* @param array $arguments
* (optional) An associative array of replacements to make after
* translation. Based on the first character of the key, the value is
* escaped and/or themed. See
* \Drupal\Component\Render\FormattableMarkup::placeholderFormat() for
* details.
* @param array $options
* (optional) An associative array of additional options, with the following
* elements:
* - 'langcode' (defaults to the current language): A language code, to
* translate to a language other than what is used to display the page.
* - 'context' (defaults to the empty context): The context the source
* string belongs to.
* @param \Drupal\Core\StringTranslation\TranslationInterface $string_translation
* (optional) The string translation service.
*
* @throws \InvalidArgumentException
* Exception thrown when $string is not a string.
*
* @see \Drupal\Component\Render\FormattableMarkup::placeholderFormat()
* @see \Drupal\Core\StringTranslation\StringTranslationTrait::t()
*
* @ingroup sanitization
*/
public function __construct($string, array $arguments = [], array $options = [], TranslationInterface $string_translation = NULL) {
if (!is_string($string)) {
$message = $string instanceof TranslatableMarkup ? '$string ("' . $string->getUntranslatedString() . '") must be a string.' : '$string ("' . (string) $string . '") must be a string.';
throw new \InvalidArgumentException($message);
}
parent::__construct($string, $arguments);
$this->options = $options;
$this->stringTranslation = $string_translation;
}
/**
* Gets the untranslated string value stored in this translated string.
*
* @return string
* The string stored in this wrapper.
*/
public function getUntranslatedString() {
return $this->string;
}
/**
* Gets a specific option from this translated string.
*
* @param string $name
* Option name.
*
* @return mixed
* The value of this option or empty string of option is not set.
*/
public function getOption($name) {
return isset($this->options[$name]) ? $this->options[$name] : '';
}
/**
* Gets all options from this translated string.
*
* @return mixed[]
* The array of options.
*/
public function getOptions() {
return $this->options;
}
/**
* Gets all arguments from this translated string.
*
* @return mixed[]
* The array of arguments.
*/
public function getArguments() {
return $this->arguments;
}
/**
* Renders the object as a string.
*
* @return string
* The translated string.
*/
public function render() {
if (!isset($this->translatedMarkup)) {
$this->translatedMarkup = $this->getStringTranslation()
->translateString($this);
}
// Handle any replacements.
if ($args = $this->getArguments()) {
return $this->placeholderFormat($this->translatedMarkup, $args);
}
return $this->translatedMarkup;
}
/**
* Magic __sleep() method to avoid serializing the string translator.
*/
public function __sleep() {
return [
'string',
'arguments',
'options',
];
}
/**
* Gets the string translation service.
*
* @return \Drupal\Core\StringTranslation\TranslationInterface
* The string translation service.
*/
protected function getStringTranslation() {
if (!$this->stringTranslation) {
$this->stringTranslation = \Drupal::service('string_translation');
}
return $this->stringTranslation;
}
/**
* Returns the string length.
*
* @return int
* The length of the string.
*/
public function count() {
return mb_strlen($this->render());
}
}
Classes
Title | Deprecated | Summary |
---|---|---|
TranslatableMarkup | Provides translatable markup class. |
Buggy or inaccurate documentation? Please file an issue. Need support? Need help programming? Connect with the Drupal community.