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react-message-context

v0.6.2

Published

React message provider, using the Context API

Downloads

208

Readme

react-message-context

An efficient React front-end for message formatting libraries. Designed in particular for use with messageformat, but will work with any messages. Provides the best possible API for a front-end developer, without making the back end any more difficult than it needs to be either. Should add at most about 1kB to your compiled & minified bundle size.

Installation

npm install react-message-context

The library has React 16.8 or later as a peer dependency. It is published as an ES module only, which should work directly with almost all tools and environments that support modern development targeting browser environments. For tools such as Jest that define their own import methods, you may need to add something like transformIgnorePatterns: ['node_modules/(?!(react-message-context)/)'] to your configuration.

API Documentation

The changelog is available on GitHub.

Usage Examples

In addition to the examples included below and in the [API documentation], see react-message-context-example for a simple, but fully functional example of using this library along with messageformat and messageformat-loader to handle localized messages, with dynamic loading of non-default locales.


Within a MessageProvider, access to the messages is possible using either the Message component, or via custom hooks such as useMessageGetter:

import React from 'react'
import {
  Message,
  MessageProvider,
  useMessageGetter
} from 'react-message-context'

const messages = {
  message: 'Your message is important',
  answers: {
    sixByNine: ({ base }) => (6 * 9).toString(base),
    universe: 42
  }
}

function Equality() {
  const getAnswer = useMessageGetter('answers')
  const foo = getAnswer('sixByNine', { base: 13 })
  const bar = getAnswer('universe')
  return `${foo} and ${bar} are equal`
}

export const Example = () => (
  <MessageProvider messages={messages}>
    <ul>
      <li>
        <Message id="message" />
      </li>
      <li>
        <Equality />
      </li>
    </ul>
  </MessageProvider>
)

// Will render as:
//   - Your message is important
//   - 42 and 42 are equal

Using MessageProviders within each other allows for multiple locales and namespaces:

import React from 'react'
import { Message, MessageProvider } from 'react-message-context'

export const Example = () => (
  <MessageProvider locale="en" messages={{ foo: 'FOO', qux: 'QUX' }}>
    <MessageProvider locale="fi" messages={{ foo: 'FÖÖ', bar: 'BÄR' }}>
      <ul>
        <li>
          <Message id="foo" />
        </li>
        <li>
          <Message id="foo" locale="en" />
        </li>
        <li>
          <Message id="bar" />
        </li>
        <li>
          <Message id="bar" locale="en" />
        </li>
        <li>
          <Message id="qux" />
        </li>
        <li>
          <Message id="quux">xyzzy</Message>
        </li>
      </ul>
    </MessageProvider>
  </MessageProvider>
)

// Will render as:
// - FÖÖ
// - FOO
// - BÄR
// - bar  (uses fallback to key)
// - QUX  (uses fallback to "en" locale)
// - xyzzy  (uses fallback to child node)