The goal of gtranslate is to translate
between different languages without any Google API authentication which
is pain and you must pay for the key,
gtranslate is free and lightweight.
gtranslate is inspired by deep-translator
package.
You can install the development version of
gtranslate from GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("mohamed-180/gtranslate")This is a basic example which shows you how to use the package:
library(gtranslate)
translate("How are you?", from = "auto", to = "ar")
#[1] "كيف حالك؟"You can pass character vector as text argument
library(gtranslate)
txt <- c("What time is it?", "Go home!", "I'm 30 years old.")
translate(txt, from = "auto", to = "hi") # hi for hindi
#[1] "ये वक़्त क्या है?" "घर जाओ!" "मैं 30 साल का हूँ।"You can also pass any list-like object
library(gtranslate)
library(stringr)
translate(fruit[1:5], to = 'de') # de for German
#[1] "Apfel" "Aprikose" "Avocado" "Banane" "Paprika"You can use lang_codes list to get the
codes of the available languages instead of abbreviations characters as
follows
library(gtranslate)
translate("R is a beatiful language.", from = lang_codes$english, to = lang_codes$turkish)
#[1] "R güzel bir dildir."There are two limitations to
gtranslate:
The number of characters which sends per query must not exceeds
5000 characters, so there is trim_str argument which
TRUE by default to trim the string to less than 5000
characters, You can put it to FALSE but you must handle the
error your self by using tryCatch, split the long string or
any other appropriate way.
According to google, you are allowed to make 5 requests per second, and up to 200k requests per day.