ICU4X
is an implementation of Internationalization Components of Unicode (ICU) intended to be modular, performant and flexible.
The library provides a layer of APIs for all software to enable internationalization capabilities.
To use ICU4X
in the Rust ecosystem one can either add dependencies on selected components, or add a dependency on the meta-crate icu
which brings the full selection of components in the most user-friendly configuration of features.
In this tutorial we are going to build up to writing an app that uses the icu::datetime
component to format a date and time, covering various topics in the process.
For this tutorial we assume the user has basic Rust knowledge. If acquiring it is necessary, the Rust Book provides an excellent introduction.
We also assume that the user is familiar with a terminal and have rust
and cargo
installed.
To verify that, open a terminal and check that the results are similar to:
$ cargo --version
cargo 1.71.1 (7f1d04c00 2023-07-29)
Use cargo
to initialize a binary application:
cargo new --bin myapp
cd myapp
Then add a dependency on ICU4X
's main crate, icu
:
$ cargo add icu
ICU4X
comes with a variety of components allowing to manage various facets of software internationalization.
Most of those features depend on the selection of a Locale
which is a particular combination of language, script, region with optional variants. An examples of such locales are en-US
(American English), sr-Cyrl
(Serbian with Cyrillic script) or ar-EG-u-nu-latn
(Egyptian Arabic with ASCII numerals).
In ICU4X
Locale
is a part of the locid
component. If the user needs just this one feature, they can use icu_locid
crate as a dependency, but since here we already added a dependency on icu
, we can refer to it via icu::locid
.
Let's use this in our application.
Open src/main.rs
and edit it to:
use icu::locid::Locale;
fn main() {
let loc: Locale = "ES-AR".parse()
.expect("should be a valid locale");
if loc.id.language.as_str() == "es" {
println!("¡Hola!");
}
println!("You are using: {}", loc);
}
After saving it, call cargo run
and it should display:
¡Hola!
You are using: es-AR
Notice: Here, ICU4X
canonicalized the locales's syntax which uses lowercase letters for the language portion.
Congratulations! ICU4X
has been used to semantically operate on a locale!
The scenario of working with statically declared Locale
s is common.
It's a bit unergonomic to have to parse them at runtime and handle a parser error in such case.
For that purpose, ICU4X provides a macro one can use to parse it at compilation time:
use icu::locid::{Locale, locale};
const LOCALE: Locale = locale!("ES-AR");
fn main() {
if LOCALE.id.language.as_str() == "es" {
println!("¡Hola amigo!");
}
println!("You are using: {}", LOCALE);
}
In this case, the parsing is performed at compilation time, so we don't need to handle an error case. Try passing an malformed identifier, like "foo-bar" and call cargo check
.
Next, let's add some more complex functionality.
We're going to extend our app to use the icu::datetime
component to format a date and time. This component requires data; we will look at custom data generation later and for now use the default included data,
which is exposed through constructors such as try_new
.
use icu::locid::{Locale, locale};
use icu::calendar::DateTime;
use icu::datetime::{DateTimeFormatter, options::length};
const LOCALE: Locale = locale!("ja"); // let's try some other language
fn main() {
let options = length::Bag::from_date_time_style(length::Date::Long, length::Time::Medium);
let dtf = DateTimeFormatter::try_new(&LOCALE.into(), options.into())
.expect("ja data should be available");
let date = DateTime::try_new_iso_datetime(2020, 10, 14, 13, 21, 28)
.expect("datetime should be valid");
// DateTimeFormatter supports the ISO and native calendars as input via DateTime<AnyCalendar>.
// For smaller codesize you can use TypedDateTimeFormatter<Gregorian> with a DateTime<Gregorian>
let date = date.to_any();
let formatted_date = dtf.format(&date).expect("formatting should succeed");
println!("📅: {}", formatted_date);
}
If all went well, running the app with cargo run
should display:
📅: 2020年10月14日 13:21:28
Here's an internationalized date!
Notice: By default, cargo run
builds and runs a debug
mode of the binary. If you want to evaluate performance, memory or size of this example, use cargo run --release
.
While the locale API is purely algorithmic, many internationalization APIs like the date formatting API require more complex data to work. You've seen this in the previous example where we had to call .expect("ja data should be available")
after the constructor.
Data management is a complex and non-trivial area which often requires customizations for particular environments and integrations into a project's ecosystem.
The way ICU4X
handles data is one of its novelties, aimed at making the data management more flexible and enabling better integration in asynchronous environments.
ICU4X
by default contains data for a a wide range of CLDR locales1, meaning that for most languages, the constructors can be considered infallible and you can expect
or unwrap
them, as we did above.
However, shipping the library with all locales will have a size impact on your binary. It also requires you to update your binary whenever CLDR data changes, which happens twice a year. To learn how to solve these problems, see our data management tutorial.
This concludes this introduction tutorial. With the help of DateTimeFormat
, Locale
and DataProvider
we formatted a date to Japanese, but that's just the start.
Internationalization is a broad domain and there are many more components in ICU4X
.
Next, learn how to generate optimized data for your binary, configure your Cargo.toml file, or continue exploring by reading the docs.