147 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
147 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
---
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title: Localization
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label: Localization
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order: 50
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desc: Add and maintain as many locales as you need by adding Localization to your Payload config, set options for default locale, fallbacks, fields and more.
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keywords: localization, internationalization, i18n, config, configuration, documentation, Content Management System, cms, headless, javascript, node, react, express
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---
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Payload features deep field-based localization support. Maintaining as many locales as you need is easy. All localization support is opt-in by default. To do so, follow the two steps below.
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### Enabling in the Payload config
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Add the `localization` property to your Payload config to enable localization project-wide. You'll need to provide a list of all locales that you'd like to support as well as set a few other options.
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**Example Payload config set up for localization:**
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```ts
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import { buildConfig } from 'payload/config'
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export default buildConfig({
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collections: [
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// collections go here
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],
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localization: {
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locales: [
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'en',
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'es',
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'de',
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],
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defaultLocale: 'en',
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fallback: true,
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},
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});
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```
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**Here is a brief explanation of each of the options available within the `localization` property:**
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**`locales`**
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Array-based list of all locales that you would like to support. These strings do not need to be in any specific format. It's up to you to define how to represent your locales. Common patterns are to use two-letter ISO 639 language codes or four-letter language and country codes (ISO 3166‑1) such as `en-US`, `en-UK`, `es-MX`, etc.
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**`defaultLocale`**
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Required string that matches one of the locales from the array provided. By default, if no locale is specified, documents will be returned in this locale.
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**`fallback`**
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Boolean enabling "fallback" locale functionality. If a document is requested in a locale, but a field does not have a localized value corresponding to the requested locale, then if this property is enabled, the document will automatically fall back to the fallback locale value. If this property is not enabled, the value will not be populated.
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### Field by field localization
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Payload localization works on a **field** level—not a document level. In addition to configuring the base Payload config to support localization, you need to specify each field that you would like to localize.
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**Here is an example of how to enable localization for a field:**
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```js
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{
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name: 'title',
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type: 'text',
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// highlight-start
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localized: true,
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// highlight-end
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}
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```
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With the above configuration, the `title` field will now be saved in the database as an object of all locales instead of a single string.
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All field types with a `name` property support the `localized` property—even the more complex field types like `array`s and `block`s.
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<Banner>
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<strong>Note:</strong><br/>
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Enabling localization for field types that support nested fields will automatically create localized "sets" of all fields contained within the field. For example, if you have a page layout using a blocks field type, you have the choice of either localizing the full layout, by enabling localization on the top-level blocks field, or only certain fields within the layout.
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</Banner>
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<Banner type="warning">
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<strong>Important:</strong>
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<br />
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When converting an existing field to or from `localized: true` the data
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structure in the document will change for this field and so existing data for
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this field will be lost. Before changing the localization setting on fields
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with existing data, you may need to consider a field migration strategy.
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</Banner>
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### Retrieving localized docs
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When retrieving documents, you can specify which locale you'd like to receive as well as which fallback locale should be used.
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##### REST API
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REST API locale functionality relies on URL query parameters.
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**`?locale=`**
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Specify your desired locale by providing the `locale` query parameter directly in the endpoint URL.
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**`?fallback-locale=`**
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Specify fallback locale to be used by providing the `fallback-locale` query parameter. This can be provided as either a valid locale as provided to your base Payload config, or `'null'`, `'false'`, or `'none'` to disable falling back.
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**Example:**
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```
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fetch('https://localhost:3000/api/pages?locale=es&fallback-locale=none');
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```
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##### GraphQL API
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In the GraphQL API, you can specify `locale` and `fallbackLocale` args to all relevant queries and mutations.
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The `locale` arg will only accept valid locales, but locales will be formatted automatically as valid GraphQL enum values (dashes or special characters will be converted to underscores, spaces will be removed, etc.). If you are curious to see how locales are auto-formatted, you can use the [GraphQL playground](/docs/graphql/overview#graphql-playground).
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The `fallbackLocale` arg will accept valid locales as well as `none` to disable falling back.
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**Example:**
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```graphql
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query {
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Posts(locale: de, fallbackLocale: none) {
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docs {
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title
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}
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}
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}
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```
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<Banner>
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In GraphQL, specifying the locale at the top level of a query will automatically apply it throughout all nested relationship fields. You can override this behavior by re-specifying locale arguments in nested related document queries.
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</Banner>
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##### Local API
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You can specify `locale` as well as `fallbackLocale` within the Local API as well as properties on the `options` argument. The `locale` property will accept any valid locale, and the `fallbackLocale` property will accept any valid locale as well as `'null'`, `'false'`, `false`, and `'none'`.
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**Example:**
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```js
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const posts = await payload.find({
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collection: 'posts',
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locale: 'es',
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fallbackLocale: false,
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})
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```
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<Banner type="alert">
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<strong>Tip:</strong><br/>The REST and Local APIs can return all localization data in one request by passing 'all' or '*' as the <strong>locale</strong> parameter. The response will be structured so that field values come back as the full objects keyed for each locale instead of the single, translated value.
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</Banner>
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