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Internationalization
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====================
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Internationalization (I18N) refers to the process of designing a software application so that it can be adapted to
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various languages and regions without engineering changes. For Web applications, this is of particular importance
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because the potential users may be worldwide.
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Locale and Language
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-------------------
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There are two languages defined in Yii application: [[\yii\base\Application::$sourceLanguage|source language]] and
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[[\yii\base\Application::$language|target language]].
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Source language is the language original application messages are written in such as:
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'I am a message!');
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```
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> **Tip**: Default is English and it's not recommended to change it. The reason is that it's easier to find people translating from
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> English to any language than from non-English to non-English.
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Target language is what's currently used. It's defined in application configuration like the following:
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```php
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// ...
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return array(
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'id' => 'applicationID',
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'basePath' => dirname(__DIR__),
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'language' => 'ru_RU' // ← here!
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```
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Later you can easily change it in runtime:
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```php
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\Yii::$app->language = 'zh_CN';
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```
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Basic message translation
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-------------------------
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Yii basic message translation in its basic variant works without additional PHP extension. What it does is finding a
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translation of the message from source language into target language. Message itself is specified as the second
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`\Yii::t` method parameter:
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'This is a string to translate!');
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```
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Yii tries to load approprite translation from one of the message sources defined via `i18n` component configuration:
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```php
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'components' => array(
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// ...
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'i18n' => array(
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'translations' => array(
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'app*' => array(
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'class' => 'yii\i18n\PhpMessageSource',
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//'basePath' => '@app/messages',
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//'sourceLanguage' => 'en_US',
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'fileMap' => array(
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'app' => 'app.php',
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'app/error' => 'error.php',
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),
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),
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),
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),
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),
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```
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In the above `app*` is a pattern that specifies which categories are handled by the message source. In this case we're
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handling everything that begins with `app`.
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`class` defines which message source is used. The following message sources are available:
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- PhpMessageSource that uses PHP files.
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- GettextMessageSource that uses GNU Gettext MO or PO files.
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- DbMessageSource that uses database.
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`basePath` defines where to store messages for the currently used message source. In this case it's `messages` directory
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in your application directory. In case of using database this option should be skipped.
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`sourceLanguage` defines which language is used in `\Yii::t` second argument. If not specified, application's source
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language is used.
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`fileMap` specifies how message categories specified in the first argument of `\Yii::t()` are mapped to files when
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`PhpMessageSource` is used. In the example we're defining two categories `app` and `app/error`.
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Instead of configuring `fileMap` you can rely on convention which is `messages/BasePath/LanguageID/CategoryName.php`.
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### Named placeholders
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You can add parameters to a translation message that will be substituted with the corresponding value after translation.
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The format for this is to use curly brackets around the parameter name as you can see in the following example:
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```php
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$username = 'Alexander';
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'Hello, {username}!', array(
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'username' => $username,
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));
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```
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Note that the parameter assignment is without the brackets.
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### Positional placeholders
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```php
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$sum = 42;
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'Balance: {0}', $sum);
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```
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> **Tip**: Try keep message strings meaningful and avoid using too many positional parameters. Remember that
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> translator has source string only so it should be obvious about what will replace each placeholder.
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Advanced placeholder formatting
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-------------------------------
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In order to use advanced features you need to install and enable [intl](http://www.php.net/manual/en/intro.intl.php) PHP
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extension. After installing and enabling it you will be able to use extended syntax for placeholders. Either short form
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`{placeholderName, argumentType}` that means default setting or full form `{placeholderName, argumentType, argumentStyle}`
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that allows you to specify formatting style.
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Full reference is [available at ICU website](http://icu-project.org/apiref/icu4c/classMessageFormat.html) but since it's
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a bit crypric we have our own reference below.
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### Numbers
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```php
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$sum = 42;
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'Balance: {0, number}', $sum);
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```
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You can specify one of the built-in styles (`integer`, `currency`, `percent`):
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```php
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$sum = 42;
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'Balance: {0, number, currency}', $sum);
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```
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Or specify custom pattern:
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```php
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$sum = 42;
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'Balance: {0, number, ,000,000000}', $sum);
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```
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[Formatting reference](http://icu-project.org/apiref/icu4c/classicu_1_1DecimalFormat.html).
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### Dates
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'Today is {0, date}', time());
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```
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Built in formats (`short`, `medium`, `long`, `full`):
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'Today is {0, date, short}', time());
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```
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Custom pattern:
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'Today is {0, date, YYYY-MM-dd}', time());
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```
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[Formatting reference](http://icu-project.org/apiref/icu4c/classicu_1_1SimpleDateFormat.html).
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### Time
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'It is {0, time}', time());
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```
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Built in formats (`short`, `medium`, `long`, `full`):
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'It is {0, time, short}', time());
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```
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Custom pattern:
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'It is {0, date, HH:mm}', time());
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```
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[Formatting reference](http://icu-project.org/apiref/icu4c/classicu_1_1SimpleDateFormat.html).
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### Spellout
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', '{n,number} is spelled as {n, spellout}', array(
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'n' => 42,
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));
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```
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### Ordinal
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'You are {n, ordinal} visitor here!', array(
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'n' => 42,
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));
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```
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Will produce "You are 42nd visitor here!".
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### Duration
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'You are here for {n, duration} already!', array(
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'n' => 42,
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));
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```
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Will produce "You are here for 47 sec. already!".
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### Plurals
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Different languages have different ways to inflect plurals. Some rules are very complex so it's very handy that this
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functionality is provided without the need to specify inflection rule. Instead it only requires your input of inflected
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word in certain situations.
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', 'There {n, plural, =0{are no cats} =1{is one cat} other{are # cats}}!', array(
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'n' => 0,
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));
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```
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Will give us "There are no cats!".
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In the plural rule arguments above `=0` means exactly zero, `=1` stands for exactly one `other` is for any other number.
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`#` is replaced with the `n` argument value. It's not that simple for languages other than English. Here's an example
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for Russian:
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```
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Здесь {n, plural, =0{котов нет} =1{есть один кот} one{# кот} few{# кота} many{# котов} other{# кота}}!
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```
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In the above it worth mentioning that `=1` matches exactly `n = 1` while `one` matches `21` or `101`.
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To learn which inflection forms you should specify for your language you can referer to
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[rules reference at unicode.org](http://unicode.org/repos/cldr-tmp/trunk/diff/supplemental/language_plural_rules.html).
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### Selections
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You can select phrases based on keywords. The pattern in this case specifies how to map keywords to phrases and
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provides a default phrase.
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```php
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echo \Yii::t('app', '{name} is {gender} and {gender, select, female{she} male{he} other{it}} loves Yii!', array(
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'name' => 'Snoopy',
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'gender' => 'dog',
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));
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```
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Will produce "Snoopy is dog and it loves Yii!".
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In the expression `female` and `male` are possible values. `other` handler values that do not match. Strings inside
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brackets are sub-expressions so could be just a string or a string with more placeholders.
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Formatters
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----------
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In order to use formatters you need to install and enable [intl](http://www.php.net/manual/en/intro.intl.php) PHP
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extension.
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