Labels in Media Manager 5 can do a bit more than the usual labels.
...
First and foremost it is possible to interpolate values into labels by using double curly brackets, e.g.
{{label}}
...
is
...
a
...
required
...
field*
...
which will replace replace {{label}}
with with an actual label of a metafield at runtime, so the output of this label might be be Title is a required field*
.
...
More complex labels than above are available, such as
{count,
...
cardinalPlural,
...
one
...
{Asset
...
was
...
added
...
to
...
the
...
collection}
...
other
...
{Assets
...
were
...
added
...
to
...
the
...
collection}}
...
which can change the available text depending on a parameter. This label is supposed to be read like this:
{PARAMETER_NAME,
...
FUNCTION_NAME,
...
ACTIONS}
...
PARAMETER_NAME
is is a predefined name given based on a variable in the actual code. This should NOT be changed during configuration. The purpose of of PARAMETER_NAME
is is to give the administrator a hint as to what the variable does.
FUNCTION_NAME
is is one of 3 defined functions, each described later on in this documentation.
cardinalPlural
...
ordinalPlural
...
select
...
ACTIONS
describes describes how Media Manager should execute the given function, and is very function specific, but always follows the same pattern:
{EXAMPLE_NAME,
...
EXAMPLE_FUNCTION,
...
VALUE1
...
{Insert
...
this
...
when
...
value
...
1}
...
VALUE2
...
{Insert
...
this
...
when
...
value
...
2}}
...
The pattern is a value/key followed by some text in curly brackets brackets {}
.
All these rules can be nested arbitrarily, e.g. {uploading, select, false {{open, select, true {Hide} false {Show}} menu} true {{{finished}} / {{total}} {total, cardinalPlural, one {asset} other {assets}} uploaded}}
...
Select picks whatever available value, the actual parameter value matches. If none matches, it falls back to to other
.
For example:
{saving,
...
select,
...
true
...
{Saving...}
...
false
...
{Save}}
...
when when saving
has has the value value true
Saving...
will will be the output. When the value is is false
Save
will will be the output.
The following are values outputted for different data types:
data type | output |
---|---|
boolean |
|
number |
|
string |
|
Cardinal plurality
Cardinal plurality is when something is counted, e.g. "one asset", "two assets", "three assets" and so on. Cardinal plurality is denoted by the the FUNCTION_NAME
cardinalPlural
.
Cardinal Plurality supports two kinds of values. Either straight up numbers, specified by by =0
for for exactly zero or or =420
for for exactly 420. These should mostly not be used, but are available due to the spec implementation.
The other kind of values are: zero zero one (singular) two (dual) few (paucal) many (also used for fractions if they have a separate class) other (required—general plural form—also used if the language only has a single form)
For example
{count,
...
cardinalPlural,
...
one
...
{Asset
...
was
...
added
...
to
...
the
...
collection}
...
other
...
{Assets
...
were
...
added
...
to
...
the
...
collection}}
...
Which outputs "Asset was added to the collection" is count is 1 in english, and "Assets were added to the collection" if count is not 1.
Which ones are available depends on the chosen language. A full list can be seen here: http://www.unicode.org/cldr/charts/latest/supplemental/language_plural_rules.html.
Media Manager 5 has rules for the following languages: English Danish German English Danish German Swedish
If any additional languages are required, please add a feature request to the MM5 project on JIRA. They don't take very long to add, but we don't want to ship more of them than needed.
For more details about the exact details of plurality rules, check check http://cldr.unicode.org/index/cldr-spec/plural-rules.
Ordinal plurality
Ordinal plurality is when something is in relation to something else, e.g. "the first asset", "the second asset", "the third asset" and so on. Ordinal plurality is denoted by the the FUNCTION_NAME
ordinalPlural
.
Ordinal plurality otherwise behaves like Cardinal Plurality, expect some of the plurality rules are slightly different.