SwiftGenStrings is a command line application that can be used as a drop-in replacement for the standard genstrings
command for Swift sources. The latter only supports the short form of the Localized
function but breaks as soon as you use any parameters other than key
and comment
as in
Localized("DATE_RANGE", value: "%@ – %@", comment: "A range of dates")
The upstream issue is tracked here.
SwiftGenStrings [<files> ...] [-s <substitute>] [-o <output-directory>]
ARGUMENTS:
<files> List of files, that are used as source of Localizable.strings generation.
OPTIONS:
-s <substitute> (Optional) Substitute for Localized, useful when different macro is used.
-o <output-directory> (Optional) Specifies what directory Localizable.strings table is created in. Not specifying output directory will print script output content
to standard output (console).
--version Show the version.
-h, --help Show help information.
To gather strings in current directory, run:
$ find . -name "*.swift" | xargs SwiftGenStrings
If you have any 3rd party code like CocoaPods or Carthage in your project directory, you might want to exclude it from localization. To do that, run the following:
$ find . \( -name "*.swift" ! -path "./Carthage/*" ! -path "./Pods/*" \) | xargs SwiftGenStrings
The quickest and easiest way to install SwiftGenStrings is via Mint
$ mint install kayak/SwiftGenStrings
We tag releases and upload prebuilt binaries to GitHub. Checkout the releases tab or go straight to the latest release.
The project provides a Makefile
. To export a binary run:
$ make release
The exported binary can be found under Products/SwiftGenStrings
. Alternatively you can use make install
to install the compiled library directly into /usr/local/bin/SwiftGenStrings
Since SwiftGenStrings is a SPM package, running tests is easy:
$ swift test
- Xcode 12
- Swift 5.3
- SwiftGenStrings currently doesn't support multiple tables, only the default one -
Localizable.strings
. - It is not possible to use
Localized
in string interpolation e.g.:let hello = "--- \(Localized("Hello world!", comment: ""))"
will not pickup the localized string.