A minimal, but complete solution for internationalization in Next.js apps.
π New β¨: next-intl
is adding support for Next.js 13 and the app
directory. A preview version with support for React Server Components is now available for early adopters.
This library complements the internationalized routing capabilities of Next.js by managing translations and providing them to components.
- π Proven ICU syntax: This covers interpolation, plurals, ordinal pluralization, label selection based on enums and rich text. I18n is an essential part of the user experience, therefore this library doesn't compromise on flexibility and never leaves you behind when you need to fine tune a translation.
- π Built-in date, time and number formatting: You can use global formats for a consistent look & feel of your app and integrate them with translations.
- π‘ Hooks-only API: This ensures that you can use the same API for
children
as well as for attributes which expect strings. - β Type-safe: If you're using TypeScript, you'll benefit from autocompletion for available message keys and compile-time errors for typos.
- βοΈ Battle-tested building blocks: This library is a minimal wrapper around built-in browser APIs and supplemental lower-level APIs from Format.JS.
- π Fast: By integrating with both static as well as server side rendering you always get the best possible performance from your app.
This library is based on the premise that messages can be grouped by namespaces (typically a component name).
// LatestFollower.js
function LatestFollower({user}) {
const t = useTranslations('LatestFollower');
return (
<>
<Text>{t('latestFollower', {username: user.name})}</Text>
<IconButton aria-label={t('followBack')} icon={<FollowIcon />} />
</>
);
}
// en.json
{
"LatestFollower": {
"latestFollower": "{username} started following you",
"followBack": "Follow back"
}
}