1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
|
---
title: "Multi-language Support"
linkTitle: "Multi-language Support"
weight: 7
description: >
Support multiple languages in your site.
---
If you'd like to provide site content in multiple languages, the Docsy theme and Hugo make it easy to both add your translated content and for your users to navigate between language versions.
## Content and configuration
To add content in multiple languages, you first need to define the available languages in a `languages` section in your site configuration. Each language can have its own language-specific configuration. For example, the Docsy Example Site config specifies that it provides content in English and Norwegian, and that the language version visitors will see by default is English:
```toml
contentDir = "content/en"
defaultContentLanguage = "en"
defaultContentLanguageInSubdir = false
...
[languages]
[languages.en]
title = "Docsy"
description = "Docsy does docs"
languageName ="English"
# Weight used for sorting.
weight = 1
[languages.no]
title = "Docsy"
description = "Docsy er operativsystem for skyen"
languageName ="Norsk"
contentDir = "content/no"
time_format_default = "02.01.2006"
time_format_blog = "02.01.2006"
```
Any setting not defined in a `[languages]` block will fall back to the global value for that setting: so, for example, the content directory used for the site above will be `content/en` unless the user selects the Norwegian language option.
Once you've updated your site config, you create a content root directory for each language version in your source repo, such as `content/en` for English text, and add your [content](/docs/adding-content/content/) as usual. See the [Hugo Docs](https://gohugo.io/content-management/multilingual) on multi-language support for more information.
{{% alert title="Tip" %}}
If there's any possibility your site might be translated into other languages, consider creating your site with your content in a language-specific subdirectory, as it means you don't need to move it if you add another language.
{{% /alert %}}
For adding multiple language versions of other site elements such as button text, see the [internationalization bundles](#internationalization-bundles) section below.
## Selecting a language
If you configure more than one language in `config.toml`, the Docsy theme adds a language selector drop down to the top-level menu. Selecting a language takes the user to the translated version of the current page, or the home page for the given language.
## Internationalization bundles
All UI strings (text for buttons etc.) are bundled inside `/i18n` in the theme, with a `.toml` file for each language.
If your chosen language isn't currently in the theme and you create your own `.toml` file for all the common UI strings (for example, if you translate the UI text into Japanese and create a copy of `en.toml` called `jp.toml`), we recommend you do this **in the theme** rather than in your own project, so it can be reused by others. Any additional strings or overridden values can be added to your project's `/i18n` folder.
{{% alert title="Hugo Tip" %}}
Run `hugo server --i18n-warnings` when doing translation work, as it will give you warnings on what strings are missing.
{{% /alert %}}
|