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A simple ruby gem for the DeepL API

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Important

This project has been archived in favour of the official DeepL ruby gem.

Gem Version CircleCI CodeCov

DeepL for ruby

A simple ruby wrapper for the DeepL translation API (v2).

Installation

Install this gem with

gem install deepl-rb
# Load it in your ruby file using `require 'deepl'`

Or add it to your Gemfile:

gem 'deepl-rb', require: 'deepl'

Usage

Setup an environment variable named DEEPL_AUTH_KEY with your authentication key:

export DEEPL_AUTH_KEY="your-api-token"

Alternatively, you can configure the API client within a ruby block:

DeepL.configure do |config|
  config.auth_key = 'your-api-token'
end

You can also configure the API host and the API version:

DeepL.configure do |config|
  config.auth_key = 'your-api-token'
  config.host = 'https://api-free.deepl.com' # Default value is 'https://api.deepl.com'
  config.version = 'v1' # Default value is 'v2'
end

Available languages

Available languages can be retrieved via API:

languages = DeepL.languages

puts languages.class
# => Array
puts languages.first.class
# => DeepL::Resources::Language
puts "#{languages.first.code} -> #{languages.first.name}"
# => "ES -> Spanish"

Note that source and target languages may be different, which can be retrieved by using the type option:

puts DeepL.languages(type: :source).count
# => 24
puts DeepL.languages(type: :target).count
# => 26

All languages are also defined on the official API documentation.

Note that target languages may include the supports_formality flag, which may be checked using the DeepL::Resources::Language#supports_formality?.

Translate

To translate a simple text, use the translate method:

translation = DeepL.translate 'This is my text', 'EN', 'ES'

puts translation.class
# => DeepL::Resources::Text
puts translation.text
# => 'Este es mi texto'

Enable auto-detect source language by skipping the source language with nil:

translation = DeepL.translate 'This is my text', nil, 'ES'

puts translation.detected_source_language
# => 'EN'

Translate a list of texts by passing an array as an argument:

texts = ['Sample text', 'Another text']
translations = DeepL.translate texts, 'EN', 'ES'

puts translations.class
# => Array
puts translations.first.class
# => DeepL::Resources::Text

You can also use custom query parameters, like tag_handling, split_sentences, non_splitting_tags or ignore_tags:

translation = DeepL.translate '<p>A sample</p>', 'EN', 'ES',
                              tag_handling: 'xml', split_sentences: false,
                              non_splitting_tags: 'h1', ignore_tags: %w[code pre]

puts translation.text
# => "<p>Una muestra</p>"

The following parameters will be automatically converted:

Parameter Conversion
preserve_formatting Converts false to '0' and true to '1'
split_sentences Converts false to '0' and true to '1'
outline_detection Converts false to '0' and true to '1'
splitting_tags Converts arrays to strings joining by commas
non_splitting_tags Converts arrays to strings joining by commas
ignore_tags Converts arrays to strings joining by commas
formality No conversion applied
glossary_id No conversion applied

Glossaries

To create a glossary, use the glossaries.create method. The glossary entries argument should be an array of text pairs. Each pair includes the source and the target translations.

entries = [
  ['Hello World', 'Hola Tierra'],
  ['car', 'auto']
]
glossary = DeepL.glossaries.create 'Mi Glosario', 'EN', 'ES', entries

puts glossary.class
# => DeepL::Resources::Glossary
puts glossary.id
# => 'aa48c7f0-0d02-413e-8a06-d5bbf0ca7a6e'
puts glossary.entry_count
# => 2

Created glossaries can be used in the translate method by specifying the glossary_id option:

translation = DeepL.translate 'Hello World', 'EN', 'ES', glossary_id: 'aa48c7f0-0d02-413e-8a06-d5bbf0ca7a6e'

puts translation.class
# => DeepL::Resources::Text
puts translation.text
# => 'Hola Tierra'

translation = DeepL.translate "I wish we had a car.", 'EN', 'ES', glossary_id: 'aa48c7f0-0d02-413e-8a06-d5bbf0ca7a6e'

puts translation.class
# => DeepL::Resources::Text
puts translation.text
# => Ojalá tuviéramos un auto.

To list all the glossaries available, use the glossaries.list method:

glossaries = DeepL.glossaries.list

puts glossaries.class
# => Array
puts glossaries.first.class
# => DeepL::Resources::Glossary

To find an existing glossary, use the glossaries.find method:

glossary = DeepL.glossaries.find 'aa48c7f0-0d02-413e-8a06-d5bbf0ca7a6e'

puts glossary.class
# => DeepL::Resources::Glossary

The glossary resource does not include the glossary entries. To list the glossary entries, use the glossaries.entries method:

entries = DeepL.glossaries.entries 'aa48c7f0-0d02-413e-8a06-d5bbf0ca7a6e'

puts entries.class
# => Array
puts entries.size
# => 2
pp entries.first
# => ["Hello World", "Hola Tierra"]

To delete an existing glossary, use the glossaries.destroy method:

glossary_id = DeepL.glossaries.destroy 'aa48c7f0-0d02-413e-8a06-d5bbf0ca7a6e'

puts glossary_id
# => aa48c7f0-0d02-413e-8a06-d5bbf0ca7a6e

You can list all the language pairs supported by glossaries using the glossaries.language_pairs method:

language_pairs = DeepL.glossaries.language_pairs

puts language_pairs.class
# => Array
puts language_pairs.first.class
# => DeepL::Resources::LanguagePair
puts language_pairs.first.source_lang
# => en
puts language_pairs.first.target_lang
# => de

Monitor usage

To check current API usage, use:

usage = DeepL.usage

puts usage.character_count
# => 180118
puts usage.character_limit
# => 1250000

Handle exceptions

You can capture and process exceptions that may be raised during API calls. These are all the possible exceptions:

Exception class Description
DeepL::Exceptions::AuthorizationFailed The authorization process has failed. Check your auth_key value.
DeepL::Exceptions::BadRequest Something is wrong in your request. Check exception.message for more information.
DeepL::Exceptions::LimitExceeded You've reached the API's call limit.
DeepL::Exceptions::QuotaExceeded You've reached the API's character limit.
DeepL::Exceptions::RequestError An unkown request error. Check exception.response and exception.request for more information.
DeepL::Exceptions::NotSupported The requested method or API endpoint is not supported.

An exampling of handling a generic exception:

def my_method
  item = DeepL.translate 'This is my text', nil, 'ES'
rescue DeepL::Exceptions::RequestError => e
  puts 'Oops!'
  puts "Code: #{e.response.code}"
  puts "Response body: #{e.response.body}"
  puts "Request body: #{e.request.body}"
end

Integrations

Ruby on Rails

You may use this gem as a standalone service by creating an initializer on your config/initializers folder with your DeepL configuration. For example:

# config/initializers/deepl.rb
DeepL.configure do |config|
  # Your configuration goes here
end

Since the DeepL service is defined globally, you can use service anywhere in your code (controllers, models, views, jobs, plain ruby objects… you name it).

i18n-tasks

You may also take a look at i18n-tasks, which is a gem that helps you find and manage missing and unused translations. deepl-rb is used as one of the backend services to translate content.

Development

Clone the repository, and install its dependencies:

git clone https://github.com/wikiti/deepl-rb
cd deepl-rb
bundle install

To run tests (rspec and rubocop), use

bundle exec rake test