Skip to main content

Lingui CLI

The @lingui/cli tool provides the lingui command, which allows the extraction of messages from source files into message catalogs and the compilation of message catalogs for production use.

Installation

  1. Install @lingui/cli as a development dependency:

    npm install --save-dev @lingui/cli
  2. Add the following scripts to your package.json:

    package.json
    {
    "scripts": {
    "extract": "lingui extract",
    "compile": "lingui compile"
    }
    }
tip

If you use TypeScript, you can add the --typescript flag to the compile script to produce compiled message catalogs with TypeScript types:

package.json
{
"scripts": {
"compile": "lingui compile --typescript"
}
}

Global options

--config <config>

Path to the configuration file. If not set, the default file is loaded as described in the Lingui configuration reference.

Commands

extract

lingui extract [files...]
[--clean]
[--overwrite]
[--format <format>]
[--locale <locale, [...]>]
[--convert-from <format>]
[--verbose]
[--watch [--debounce <delay>]]

The extract command looks for messages in the source files and extracts them

This command scans the source files, identifies messages, and creates a separate message catalog for each language. The process includes the following steps:

  1. Extract messages from files based on the include and exclude options in the catalogs section of the configuration file.
  2. Merge them with existing message catalogs (if any)
  3. Write updated message catalogs.
  4. Print statistics about the extracted messages for each language, showing the total number of messages and the number of missing translations.
tip

Visit the Message Extraction guide to learn more about how it works.

files

Filters source paths to only extract messages from passed files. For ex:

lingui extract src/components

Will only extract messages from src/components/**/* files, you can pass multiple paths.

It's useful if you want to run the extract command on files that are staged, for example using husky, before committing will extract messages from staged files:

package.json
{
"husky": {
"hooks": {
"pre-commit": "lingui extract $(git diff --name-only --staged)"
}
}
}

--clean

By default, the extract command merges messages extracted from source files with the existing message catalogs. This is safe as we won't accidentally lose translated messages.

However, over time, some messages may be removed from the source code. We can use this option to clean up our message catalogs from obsolete messages.

--overwrite

Update translations for sourceLocale from source.

--format <format>

Extract message catalogs to the specified file format (see the format option for more details).

--locale <locale, [...]>

Extract data for the specified locales only.

--convert-from <format>

Convert message catalogs from the previous format (see the format option for more details).

--verbose

Prints additional information.

--watch

Watch mode. Only watches for changes in files in paths defined in the config file or in the command itself. Remember to use this only in development, as this command does not clean up obsolete translations.

--debounce <delay>

Delays the extraction by <delay> milliseconds, bundling multiple file changes together.

extract-template

lingui extract-template [--verbose]

This command extracts messages from source files and creates a .pot template file. Any artifacts created by this command may be ignored in version control. If your message catalogs are not synchronized with the source and don't contain some messages, the application will fall back to the template file. This command is useful to run before building the application.

--verbose

Prints additional information.

compile

lingui compile
[--strict]
[--format <format>]
[--verbose]
[--typescript]
[--namespace <namespace>]
[--watch [--debounce <delay>]]

Once we have all the catalogs ready and translated, we can use this command to compile all the catalogs into minified JS/TS files. It compiles message catalogs in the path directory and outputs minified JavaScript files. The resulting file is basically a string that is parsed into a plain JS object using JSON.parse.

The output looks like this:

export const messages = JSON.parse(`{
// object with keys (translation ids) and values (translations)
}`);

Messages added to the compiled file are collected in a specific order:

  1. Translated messages from the specified locale.
  2. Translated messages from the fallback locale for the specified locale.
  3. Translated message from default fallback locale.
  4. Message key.

It is also possible to merge the translated catalogs into a single file per locale by specifying catalogsMergePath in the configuration.

tip

The compiled files can be safely ignored by your version control system, since these files must be created each time you deploy to production. We recommend you to create the compiled catalogs in CI as part of your deployment process. Always remember to use compiled catalogs in deployments.

.gitignore
your_locale_folder/**/*.js

--overwrite

Overwrite source locale translations from source.

--strict

Fail if a catalog has missing translations.

--format <format>

Format of message catalogs (see the format option for more details).

--verbose

Prints additional information.

--namespace

Specify the namespace for compiled message catalogs (see also compileNamespace for global configuration).

--typescript

Is the same as using compileNamespace with the value "ts". Generates a {compiledFile}.ts file and the exported object is typed using TS.

--watch

Watch mode. Watches only for changes in locale files in your defined locale catalogs. For example, locales\en\messages.po.

--debounce <delay>

Delays compilation by <delay> milliseconds to avoid multiple compilations for subsequent file changes.

Configuring the source locale

One drawback to checking for missing translations is that the English message catalog doesn't need translations because our source code is in English. This can be addressed by configuring the sourceLocale in the configuration file.

Compiling Catalogs in CI

If you're using CI, it's a good idea to add the compile command to your build process. Alternatively, you can also use a Webpack loader, Vite plugin or Metro transformer.

Depending on your localization setup, you might also want to run the extract command in CI and upload the extracted messages to a translation service.

Further reading