Translating Modules¶
This section explains how to provide translation abilities to your module.
Note
If you want to contribute to the translation of Odoo itself, please refer to the Odoo Wiki page.
Exporting translatable term¶
A number of terms in your modules are implicitly translatable. As a result, even if you haven’t done any specific work towards translation, you can export your module’s translatable terms and may find content to work with.
Translations export is performed via the administration interface by logging into the backend interface and opening
leave the language to the default (new language/empty template)
select the PO File format
select your module
click Export and download the file
This gives you a file called yourmodule.pot
which should be moved to
the yourmodule/i18n/
directory. The file is a PO Template which
simply lists translatable strings and from which actual translations (PO files)
can be created. PO files can be created using msginit, with a dedicated
translation tool like POEdit or by simply copying the template to a new file
called language.po
. Translation files should be put in
yourmodule/i18n/
, next to yourmodule.pot
, and will be
automatically loaded by Odoo when the corresponding language is installed (via
)
Note
translations for all loaded languages are also installed or updated when installing or updating a module
Implicit exports¶
Odoo automatically exports translatable strings from “data”-type content:
in non-QWeb views, all text nodes are exported as well as the content of the
string
,help
,sum
,confirm
andplaceholder
attributesQWeb templates (both server-side and client-side), all text nodes are exported except inside
t-translation="off"
blocks, the content of thetitle
,alt
,label
andplaceholder
attributes are also exportedfor
Field
, unless their model is marked with_translate = False
:their
string
andhelp
attributes are exportedif
selection
is present and a list (or tuple), it’s exportedif their
translate
attribute is set toTrue
, all of their existing values (across all records) are exported
help/error messages of
_constraints
and_sql_constraints
are exported
Explicit exports¶
When it comes to more “imperative” situations in Python code or Javascript code, Odoo cannot automatically export translatable terms so they must be marked explicitly for export. This is done by wrapping a literal string in a function call.
In Python, the wrapping function is odoo._()
:
title = _("Bank Accounts")
In JavaScript, the wrapping function is generally odoo.web._t()
:
title = _t("Bank Accounts");
Warning
Only literal strings can be marked for exports, not expressions or variables. For situations where strings are formatted, this means the format string must be marked, not the formatted string
The lazy version of _
and _t
is odoo._lt()
in python and
odoo.web._lt()
in javascript. The translation lookup is executed only
at rendering and can be used to declare translatable properties in class methods
of global variables.
Note
Translations of a module are not exposed to the front end by default and
thus are not accessible from JavaScript. In order to achieve that, the
module name has to be either prefixed with website
(just like
website_sale
, website_event
etc.) or explicitly register by implementing
_get_translation_frontend_modules_name()
for the ir.http
model.
This could look like the following:
from odoo import models
class IrHttp(models.AbstractModel):
_inherit = 'ir.http'
@classmethod
def _get_translation_frontend_modules_name(cls):
modules = super()._get_translation_frontend_modules_name()
return modules + ['your_module']
Variables¶
Don’t the extract may work but it will not translate the text correctly:
_("Scheduled meeting with %s" % invitee.name)
Do set the dynamic variables as a parameter of the translation lookup (this will fallback on source in case of missing placeholder in the translation):
_("Scheduled meeting with %s", invitee.name)
Blocks¶
Don’t split your translation in several blocks or multiples lines:
# bad, trailing spaces, blocks out of context
_("You have ") + len(invoices) + _(" invoices waiting")
_t("You have ") + invoices.length + _t(" invoices waiting");
# bad, multiple small translations
_("Reference of the document that generated ") + \
_("this sales order request.")
Do keep in one block, giving the full context to translators:
# good, allow to change position of the number in the translation
_("You have %s invoices wainting") % len(invoices)
_.str.sprintf(_t("You have %s invoices wainting"), invoices.length);
# good, full sentence is understandable
_("Reference of the document that generated " + \
"this sales order request.")
Plural¶
Don’t pluralize terms the English-way:
msg = _("You have %(count)s invoice", count=invoice_count)
if invoice_count > 1:
msg += _("s")
Do keep in mind every language has different plural forms:
if invoice_count > 1:
msg = _("You have %(count)s invoices", count=invoice_count)
else:
msg = _("You have one invoice")
Read vs Run Time¶
Don’t invoke translation lookup at server launch:
ERROR_MESSAGE = {
# bad, evaluated at server launch with no user language
'access_error': _('Access Error'),
'missing_error': _('Missing Record'),
}
class Record(models.Model):
def _raise_error(self, code):
raise UserError(ERROR_MESSAGE[code])
Don’t invoke translation lookup when the javascript file is read:
# bad, js _t is evaluated too early
var core = require('web.core');
var _t = core._t;
var map_title = {
access_error: _t('Access Error'),
missing_error: _t('Missing Record'),
};
Do use lazy translation lookup method:
ERROR_MESSAGE = {
'access_error': _lt('Access Error'),
'missing_error': _lt('Missing Record'),
}
class Record(models.Model):
def _raise_error(self, code):
# translation lookup executed at error rendering
raise UserError(ERROR_MESSAGE[code])
or do evaluate dynamically the translatable content:
# good, evaluated at run time
def _get_error_message(self):
return {
access_error: _('Access Error'),
missing_error: _('Missing Record'),
}
Do in the case where the translation lookup is done when the JS file is
read, use _lt
instead of _t
to translate the term when it is used:
# good, js _lt is evaluated lazily
var core = require('web.core');
var _lt = core._lt;
var map_title = {
access_error: _lt('Access Error'),
missing_error: _lt('Missing Record'),
};