Difference between revisions of "Internationalization of Haskell programs using Haskell data types"

From HaskellWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Attribute this page to Felipe Lessa)
Line 8: Line 8:
   
 
<haskell>
 
<haskell>
data Message =
+
data Message =
Hello |
+
Hello
WhatsYourName |
+
| WhatsYourName
MyNameIs String |
+
| MyNameIs String
Ihave_apples Int
+
| Ihave_apples Int
GoodBye
+
| GoodBye
 
</haskell>
 
</haskell>
   
Line 20: Line 20:
   
 
<haskell>
 
<haskell>
render_en_US :: Message -> String
+
render_en_US :: Message -> String
render_en_US Hello = "Hello!"
+
render_en_US Hello = "Hello!"
render_en_US WhatsYourName = "What's your name?"
+
render_en_US WhatsYourName = "What's your name?"
render_en_US (MyNameIs name) = "My name is " ++ name ++ "."
+
render_en_US (MyNameIs name) = "My name is " ++ name ++ "."
render_en_US (Ihave_apples 0) = "I don't have any apples."
+
render_en_US (Ihave_apples 0) = "I don't have any apples."
render_en_US (Ihave_apples 1) = "I have one apple."
+
render_en_US (Ihave_apples 1) = "I have one apple."
render_en_US (Ihave_apples n) = "I have " ++ n ++ " apples."
+
render_en_US (Ihave_apples n) = "I have " ++ n ++ " apples."
render_en_US GoodBye = "Good bye!"
+
render_en_US GoodBye = "Good bye!"
   
render_pt_BR :: Message -> String
+
render_pt_BR :: Message -> String
render_pt_BR Hello = "Olá!"
+
render_pt_BR Hello = "Olá!"
render_pt_BR WhatsYourName = "Como você se chama?"
+
render_pt_BR WhatsYourName = "Como você se chama?"
render_pt_BR (MyNameIs name) = "Eu me chamo " ++ name ++ "."
+
render_pt_BR (MyNameIs name) = "Eu me chamo " ++ name ++ "."
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples 0) = "Não tenho nenhuma maçã."
+
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples 0) = "Não tenho nenhuma maçã."
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples 1) = "Tenho uma maçã."
+
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples 1) = "Tenho uma maçã."
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples 2) = "Tenho uma maçã."
+
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples 2) = "Tenho uma maçã."
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples n) = "Tenho " ++ show n ++ " maçãs."
+
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples n) = "Tenho " ++ show n ++ " maçãs."
render_pt_BR GoodBye = "Tchau!"
+
render_pt_BR GoodBye = "Tchau!"
 
</haskell>
 
</haskell>
   
Line 43: Line 43:
   
 
<haskell>
 
<haskell>
type Lang = String
+
type Lang = String
   
render :: [Lang] -> Message -> String
+
render :: [Lang] -> Message -> String
render ("pt" :_) = render_pt_BR
+
render ("pt" :_) = render_pt_BR
render ("pt_BR":_) = render_pt_BR
+
render ("pt_BR":_) = render_pt_BR
render ("en" :_) = render_en_US
+
render ("en" :_) = render_en_US
render ("en_US":_) = render_en_US
+
render ("en_US":_) = render_en_US
render (_:xs) = render xs
+
render (_:xs) = render xs
render _ = render_en_US
+
render _ = render_en_US
 
</haskell>
 
</haskell>
   
Line 60: Line 60:
   
 
<haskell>
 
<haskell>
putStrLn $ r Hello
+
putStrLn $ r Hello
putStrLn $ r WhatsYourName
+
putStrLn $ r WhatsYourName
name <- getLine
+
name <- getLine
putStrLn $ r MyNameIs "Alice"
+
putStrLn $ r (MyNameIs "Alice")
putStrLn $ r (Ihave_apples $ length name `mod` 4)
+
putStrLn $ r (Ihave_apples $ length name `mod` 4)
putStrLn $ r GoodBye
+
putStrLn $ r GoodBye
 
</haskell>
 
</haskell>
   

Revision as of 13:20, 3 October 2011

You can use Haskell data types for internationalization. The following example is adapted from a haskell-cafe mailing list post by Felipe Lessa.

The idea is to have a data type with all your messages, like

data Message =
    Hello
  | WhatsYourName
  | MyNameIs String
  | Ihave_apples Int
  | GoodBye

For each of your supported languages, you provide a rendering function (they may be in separate source files):

render_en_US :: Message -> String
render_en_US Hello = "Hello!"
render_en_US WhatsYourName = "What's your name?"
render_en_US (MyNameIs name) = "My name is " ++ name ++ "."
render_en_US (Ihave_apples 0) = "I don't have any apples."
render_en_US (Ihave_apples 1) = "I have one apple."
render_en_US (Ihave_apples n) = "I have " ++ n ++ " apples."
render_en_US GoodBye = "Good bye!"

render_pt_BR :: Message -> String
render_pt_BR Hello = "Olá!"
render_pt_BR WhatsYourName = "Como você se chama?"
render_pt_BR (MyNameIs name) = "Eu me chamo " ++ name ++ "."
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples 0) = "Não tenho nenhuma maçã."
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples 1) = "Tenho uma maçã."
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples 2) = "Tenho uma maçã."
render_pt_BR (Ihave_apples n) = "Tenho " ++ show n ++ " maçãs."
render_pt_BR GoodBye = "Tchau!"

Given those functions, you can construct something like

type Lang = String

render :: [Lang] -> Message -> String
render ("pt"   :_) = render_pt_BR
render ("pt_BR":_) = render_pt_BR
render ("en"   :_) = render_en_US
render ("en_US":_) = render_en_US
render (_:xs) = render xs
render _ = render_en_US

So r = render ["fr", "pt"] will do the right thing. You just need to pass this r around in your code.

Using is easy and clear:

putStrLn $ r Hello
putStrLn $ r WhatsYourName
name <- getLine
putStrLn $ r (MyNameIs "Alice")
putStrLn $ r (Ihave_apples $ length name `mod` 4)
putStrLn $ r GoodBye

This approach is used for internationalization in the Yesod web framework, except that instead of one big data type, some type classes are used.