Setting the UI language
The UI of the editor can be localized. CKEditor 5 currently supports around 90 languages and the number is growing.
If you want to help translate CKEditor 5 into your native language, join the CKEditor 5 project on Transifex. Your help will be much appreciated!
# Demo
See the demo of the editor in Spanish:
Un lenguaje (del provenzal lenguatge y este del latín lingua) es un sistema de comunicación estructurado para el que existe un contexto de uso y ciertos principios combinatorios formales. Existen contextos tanto naturales como artificiales.
If you are interested in creating features that can be localized, check out the localization guide.
# Right–to–left (RTL) languages support
CKEditor 5 supports right–to–left languages out–of–the–box. When one of RTL languages is used, the WYSIWYG editor adapts its UI for the best editing experience, for instance, mirroring various elements like toolbars, dropdowns, buttons, etc.
# Demo
See the demo of the editor in Arabic:
لغة
اللغة نسق من الإشارات والرموز، يشكل أداة من أدوات المعرفة، وتعتبر اللغة أهم وسائل التفاهم والاحتكاك بين أفراد المجتمع في جميع ميادين الحياة. وبدون اللغة يتعذر نشاط الناس المعرفي. وترتبط اللغة بالتفكير ارتباطًا وثيقًا؛ فأفكار الإنسان تصاغ دومًا في قالب لغوي، حتى في حال تفكيره الباطني. ومن خلال اللغة فقط تحصل الفكرة على وجودها الواقعي. كما ترمز اللغة إلى الأشياء المنعكسة فيها.
If you want to change the language of the content only (different languages for the UI and the content), check out the Setting the language of the content section to learn more.
We are doing our best to deliver the best RTL support to our users and we constantly improve the editor. Check out the RTL support issue on GitHub to learn more and stay up–to–date. Your feedback is much appreciated!
# Loading additional languages from CDN, npm and zip file
By default, the editor will display in English. This is the language built into the ckeditor.js
files. In order to change the language of the editor UI, you need to load additional language file(s). Check out the following sections to see how to do that:
- CDN,
- npm,
- Zip download.
Next, you can configure the editor to use the chosen language:
ClassicEditor
.create( document.querySelector( '#editor' ), {
// The language code is defined in the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_639-1 standard.
language: 'es'
} )
.then( editor => {
console.log( editor );
} )
.catch( error => {
console.error( error );
} );
# CDN
To use a different language than the default one (English), you need to load the editor together with the preferred language:
<script src="https://cdn.ckeditor.com/ckeditor5/[version.number]/[distribution]/ckeditor.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.ckeditor.com/ckeditor5/[version.number]/[distribution]/translations/[lang].js"></script>
For example:
<script src="https://cdn.ckeditor.com/ckeditor5/34.1.0/classic/ckeditor.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.ckeditor.com/ckeditor5/34.1.0/classic/translations/de.js"></script>
See the CDN installation guide for more information.
# npm
After installing the build from npm, languages will be available in node_modules/@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-[name]/build/translations/[lang].js
.
A single language can be loaded directly to your code by importing e.g. '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic/build/translations/de.js'
.
See the npm installation guide for more information.
# Zip
All additional languages are included in the .zip
file. You need to include the ckeditor.js
file together with the chosen language file:
<script src="[ckeditor-path]/ckeditor.js"></script>
<script src="[ckeditor-path]/translations/de.js"></script>
See the zip installation guide for more information.
# Building the editor using a specific language
Currently, it is possible to change the UI language at the build stage and after the build. A single build of the editor supports the language which was defined in the CKEditor 5 webpack plugin’s configuration. Check the whole translation process to see how you can change the language later.
If you use one of the predefined editor builds, refer to Creating custom builds to learn how to change the language of your build.
If you build CKEditor 5 from scratch or integrate it directly into your application, then all you need to do is to:
-
Install the
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev-webpack-plugin
package:npm install --save @ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev-webpack-plugin
-
Add it to your webpack configuration:
Note: The language code is defined in the ISO 639-1 standard.
const CKEditorWebpackPlugin = require( '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev-webpack-plugin' ); // Define webpack plugins... plugins: [ new CKEditorWebpackPlugin( { // The main language that will be built into the main bundle. language: 'en', // Additional languages that will be emitted to the `outputDirectory`. // This option can be set to an array of language codes or `'all'` to build all found languages. // The bundle is optimized for one language when this option is omitted. additionalLanguages: 'all', // For more advanced options see https://github.com/ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev/tree/master/packages/ckeditor5-dev-webpack-plugin. } ), // Other webpack plugins... ] // ...
-
Run webpack. The CKEditor 5 plugin for webpack will emit additional files for each language specified in the
additionalLanguages
option. They will contain translations for messages from thet()
function calls. The files will be created in thetranslations
directory (or another one if theoutputDirectory
option is specified). Translations from the language specified in thelanguage
option will be automatically included in the build. -
If you want to change the language after the build ends, you will need to edit the
index.html
file, add the translation file, and set the UI language to the target one.<script src="../build/ckeditor.js"></script> <script src="../build/translations/de.js"></script> <script> ClassicEditor .create( document.querySelector( '#editor' ), { language: 'de' } ) .then( editor => { window.editor = editor; } ) .catch( err => { console.error( err.stack ); } ); </script>
We are aware that the current localization method is not sufficient for some needs. It does not support different bundlers (e.g. Rollup or Browserify). We will be extending the localization possibilities in the future.
# Setting the language of the content
In CKEditor 5 you can separately configure the language of the UI and the language of the content. This means you can use the English UI of the editor but type your content in Arabic or Hebrew. The language of the content has an impact on the editing experience, for instance it affects screen readers and spell checkers. It is also particularly useful for typing in certain languages (e.g. right–to–left ones) because it changes the default alignment of the text.
Configure config.language
to change the language of the content. In this example, the UI of the editor will be English but the content will be Arabic:
ClassicEditor
.create( document.querySelector( '#editor' ), {
language: {
// The UI will be English.
ui: 'en',
// But the content will be edited in Arabic.
content: 'ar'
}
} )
.then( editor => {
window.editor = editor;
} )
.catch( err => {
console.error( err.stack );
} );
لغة
اللغة نسق من الإشارات والرموز، يشكل أداة من أدوات المعرفة، وتعتبر اللغة أهم وسائل التفاهم والاحتكاك بين أفراد المجتمع في جميع ميادين الحياة. وبدون اللغة يتعذر نشاط الناس المعرفي. وترتبط اللغة بالتفكير ارتباطًا وثيقًا؛ فأفكار الإنسان تصاغ دومًا في قالب لغوي، حتى في حال تفكيره الباطني. ومن خلال اللغة فقط تحصل الفكرة على وجودها الواقعي. كما ترمز اللغة إلى الأشياء المنعكسة فيها.
If you are unsure about the language that the content will be typed in, do not set it. The language of the content will then be inherited from the language of the UI.
# Related features
There are other CKEditor 5 features that will help you control the content language:
- Text part Language – Set the language of the selected content part to support multilingual texts.
Every day, we work hard to keep our documentation complete. Have you spotted an outdated information? Is something missing? Please report it via our issue tracker.