koenhoeijmakers / laravel-translatable
Laravel Translations
Requires
- php: >=7.2.5
- laravel/framework: ^7.4
Requires (Dev)
- mockery/mockery: ^1.3.1
- orchestra/testbench: ^5.0
- phpunit/phpunit: ^8.5
README
A fresh new way to handle Model translations, the translations are joined into the Model instead of making you query a relation or get every single attribute's translation one by one.
Installation
Require the package.
composer require koenhoeijmakers/laravel-translatable
... and optionally publish the config.
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="KoenHoeijmakers\LaravelTranslatable\TranslatableServiceProvider"
Usage
Setting up a translatable Model.
Start off by creating a migration and a Model,
we'll go with the Animal
Model and the corresponding AnimalTranslation
Model.
Migrations
Schema::create('animals', function (Blueprint $table) { $table->increments('id'); $table->timestamps(); });
Always have a locale
and a foreign_key
to the original Model, in our case animal_id
.
Schema::create('animal_translations', function (Blueprint $table) { $table->increments('id'); $table->unsignedInteger('animal_id'); $table->string('locale'); $table->string('name'); $table->timestamps(); $table->unique(['locale', 'animal_id']); $table->foreign('animal_id')->references('id')->on('animals'); });
Models
Register the trait on the Model, and add the columns that should be translated to the $translatable
property,
But also make them fillable, this is because the saving is handled through events,
this way we don't have to change the save
method and makes the package more interoperable.
So make sure the
$translatable
columns are also$fillable
on both Models.
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model; use KoenHoeijmakers\LaravelTranslatable\HasTranslations; class Animal extends Model { use HasTranslations; protected $translatable = ['name']; protected $fillable = ['name']; }
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model; class AnimalTranslation extends Model { protected $fillable = ['name']; }
This is pretty much all there is to it, but you can read more about the package down here.
About
What makes this package so special is the way it handles the translations, how it retrieves them, how it stores them, and how it queries them.
Querying
Due to how the package handles the translations, querying is a piece of cake,
while for other packages you would have a ->whereTranslation('nl', 'column', '=', 'foo')
method.
But in this package you can just do ->where('column', '=', 'foo')
and it'll know what to query, just query how you used to!
Retrieving
When you retrieve a Model from the database, the package will join the translation table with the translation of the current locale config/app.php
.
This makes it so that any translated column acts like it is "native" to the Model, due to this we don't have to override a lot of methods on the Model which is a big plus.
Need the Model in a different language? Call $model->translate('nl')
and you are done. Now you would like to save the nl
translation? just call ->update()
. The Model knows in which locale it is loaded and it will handle it accordingly.
$animal = Animal::query()->find(1); $animal->translate('nl')->update(['name' => 'Aap']);
Storing
You will be storing your translations as if they're attributes on the Model, so this will work like a charm:
Animal::query()->create(['name' => 'Monkey']);
But i hear you, you would like to store multiple translations in one request! In that so you can use the ->storeTranslation()
or the ->storeTranslations()
method.
$animal = Animal::query()->create(['name' => 'Monkey']); $animal->storeTranslation('nl', [ 'name' => 'Aap', ]); $animal->storeTranslations([ 'nl' => [ 'name' => 'Aap', ], 'de' => [ 'name' => 'Affe', ], ]);