Rails I18n Cheatsheet
Relative Translations
You can prefix translations with a .
to use relative lookups.
For example, if we render a message in a controller action:
class MessagesController < ApplicationController
def create
redirect_to root_path, notice: t(".success")
end
end
This will look for the translation in:
en:
messages:
create:
success: true
HTML Translations
Rails supports HTML safe translations by specifying the _html
suffix or using the html
key.
en:
hello_html: <b>hello!</b>
title:
html: <b>title!</b>
<div><%= t('hello_html') %></div>
<div><%= t('title.html') %></div>
Interpolation
Rails translations support interpolation by passing in a hash of keys and values. If used in HTML translations, the values will be sanitized.
en:
welcome_html: "<b>Welcome %{username}!</b>"
<%= t('welcome_html', username: @current_user.username) %>
Form Placeholders
Rails forms can lookup locales under the helpers.placeholder
key based upon the model and attribute name.
<%= form.text_field :name, placeholder: true %>
en:
helpers:
placeholder:
user:
name: "Your name"