It gets the t
function and i18n
instance inside your functional component.
import React from 'react';
import { useTranslation } from 'react-i18next';
export function MyComponent() {
const { t, i18n } = useTranslation(); // not passing any namespace will use the defaultNS (by default set to 'translation')
// or const [t, i18n] = useTranslation();
return <p>{t('my translated text')}</p>
}
While most of the time you only need the t
function to translate your content, you can also get the i18n instance (in order to change the language).
i18n.changeLanguage('en-US');
{% hint style="info" %}
The useTranslation
hook will trigger a Suspense if not ready (eg. pending load of translation files). You can set useSuspense
to false if prefer not using Suspense.
{% endhint %}
Use the useTranslation
hook inside your functional components to access the translation function or i18n instance.
{% hint style="success" %} In this tutorial you'll find some ways on how to use this useTranslation hook.
You'll also see how to use it when you need to work with multiple namespaces.
{% endhint %}
// load a specific namespace
// the t function will be set to that namespace as default
const { t, i18n } = useTranslation('ns1');
t('key'); // will be looked up from namespace ns1
// load multiple namespaces
// the t function will be set to first namespace as default
const { t, i18n } = useTranslation(['ns1', 'ns2', 'ns3']);
t('key'); // will be looked up from namespace ns1
t('key', { ns: 'ns2' }); // will be looked up from namespace ns2
// passing in an i18n instance
// use only if you do not like the default instance
// set by i18next.use(initReactI18next) or the I18nextProvider
import i18n from './i18n';
const { t, i18n } = useTranslation('ns1', { i18n });
available in react-i18next version >= 11.12.0
depends on i18next version >= 20.6.0
// having JSON in namespace "translation" like this:
/*{
"very": {
"deeply": {
"nested": {
"key": "here"
}
}
}
}*/
// you can define a keyPrefix to be used for the resulting t function
const { t } = useTranslation('translation', { keyPrefix: 'very.deeply.nested' });
const text = t('key'); // "here"
{% hint style="warning" %}
Do not use the keyPrefix
option if you want to use keys with prefixed namespace notation:
i.e.
const { t } = useTranslation('translation', { keyPrefix: 'very.deeply.nested' });
const text = t('ns:key'); // this will not work
{% endhint %}
available in react-i18next version >= 12.3.1
// you can pass a language to be used for the resulting t function
const { t } = useTranslation('translation', { lng: 'de' });
const text = t('key'); // "hier"
// additional ready will state if translations are loaded or not
const { t, i18n, ready } = useTranslation('ns1', { useSuspense: false });
{% hint style="info" %}
Not using Suspense you will need to handle the not ready state yourself by eg. render a loading component as long !ready
. Not doing so will result in rendering your translations before they loaded which will cause save missing be called although translations exists (just yet not loaded).
{% endhint %}