Manual:Messages API

See also Localisation for general guidelines and in particular Localisation.

Using messages in PHP
The message system in MediaWiki can seem complex at first, due to the number of features it has. These features are related to proper formatting and escaping of the output as well as supporting as many languages as possible. The three cases covering almost all cases are:
 * 1) plain: as-is, no processing at all except variable substitution
 * 2) text: light wiki-parsing, all parser functions and magic words are expanded ( constructs)
 * 3) parse: full wiki-parsing

Except for  which returns HTML that can be outputted as-is, all the other formats should be properly escaped depending on the context. Usually the context is HTML. There are many ways in which this escaping can happen.

Handling messages
Here is a simple example:

is a global function which acts as a wrapper for the Message class, creating a Message object. This example then invokes Message method  which fetches the text of the 'submit' message in the current language, performs light wiki-parsing, and returns the (unescaped) message text.

Here is a more complex example using a message that takes a count and supports linguistic plural handling: The following sections explain the code.

Parameters
You pass parameters to messages that need them in several ways:

The first approach is most common, use the second approach when mixing different types of parameters, and you can use the third to construct message objects dynamically from other data. There are different types of parameters:

The first one is a normal message substitution parameter. The second one formats the number before substitution; if the message uses NaN undefineds then you need to use this. In some cases you might not want to use numParams even though you have a number, for example a revision id. The third one substitutes the rawParams after the message has been otherwise processed; this means that these parameters are not available to parser functions nor are they escaped if escaping output format is used (see below). Make sure you escape them properly yourself.

Output modes and escaping
The Message class, and thus the object returned by wfMessage, has five output modes:


 * plain - returns the message text as-is; only parameters are substituted.
 * text - transforms the message text (MessageCache::transform which transforms all ' – ')
 * escaped - same as 'text', but also escapes it (htmlspecialchars)
 * parse - parses the message text from wikitext to HTML (MessageCache::parse which calls the Parser)
 * parseAsBlock - the output is wrapped in block level html element, if not already, similarly to OutputPage::addWikiMsg

Remember that most Xml:: and Html:: functions escape everything fed into them, so use text format with those to avoid double escaping. Hence the most common output format is text.

Language
To override the language in which you want the message, there is one method and one shortcut for the common case of using wiki content language. In the latter case you can use either language code or language object. The usual language fallback chains apply, so the actual message you get may be in a different language than requested, if translation does not exist.

Chaining
Most Message methods return the current object, so you can conveniently call one after another to operate on an object before finally returning its text. This is called call chaining. Here is an example:

Choosing message function
The general message function in MediaWiki is. However, since in a message the value of magic words can depend on the context, there are various wrappers to this function, that automatically set the correct context.

OutputPage has few methods that append directly to the generated output. The useful ones are:

Both of the above parse the wikitext in the context of current page before appending it to output buffer.

Classes extending ContextSource have a method  that automatically sets the current context (language, current page etc.). It is therefore recommended to use  for those classes, like special pages. Here is a non-exhaustive list of such classes:
 * CategoryViewer
 * HTMLForm
 * LogEventsList
 * DifferenceEngine
 * OutputPage
 * IndexPager
 * ImageHistoryList
 * ApiBase
 * ChangesList
 * Skin

Suggestion for how to pass messages around
When you are building a new interface and need to pass messages from other parts of the code, consider using  objects for that. They are far more flexible than plain string message keys (no parameters!) or arrays of strings and message keys. Lots of old code does not yet accept Message objects.

Using messages in JavaScript

 * ''See also ResourceLoader/Default modules

To use the messages, we need to use ResourceLoader to make sure that the messages are available at client side first. For this, in your ResourceLoader modules, define the messages to be exported to client side. It is important to note that loading the mediawiki.jqueryMsg module significantly changes the behavior of mw.message and mw.msg. Generally, you should always load jqueryMsg.

Abbreviated real example:

The messages defined in the above example will be available at client side and can be accessed by. Some examples

We can also pass the dynamic parameters to the message (i.e. the values for $1, $2, etc.) as shown below.

Note how we are using [jQuery].text to automatically escape our output properly. If this is not possible, here are few other examples:
 * If using jQuery's, escape manually
 * If manually building an html string, escape manually by creating a message object and calling  (instead of the   shortcut ):

There are some more or less used aliases like  and   that nowdays map to , but their use is either deprecated or discouraged.

In the above examples, note that the message should be defined in an i18n file. If the message key is not found in any i18n file, the result will be the message key in angle brackets – like .

To use a message that is natively HTML and has no other logic or variables, such as MediaWiki:stub-threshold, use:

Raw html messages are highly discouraged.

Format options
If you don't specify the output format, mw.message just returns a Message object. To output the message itself, you should specify an output format. The formats are mostly the same as in PHP side:
 * returns the message text as-is; only parameters are substituted.
 * Transforms the message text (all  blocks are replaced with transformed results).
 * HTML escaped version of 'text'.
 * Parses the message text from wikitext to HTML. However, only certain features beyond the {{ directives are currently supported, like links.

Warning: If mediawiki.jqueryMsg module is not loaded, all of the above are essentially just plain with possible escaping.

Note: There is no equivalent of parseAsBlock. Where necessary, wrap the output to an element yourself.

Feature support in JavaScript

 * Mediawiki 1.19 onwards, the messages for JavaScript can contain PLURAL and GENDER directives.
 * MediaWiki 1.20 onwards, the messages for JavaScript can contain GRAMMAR directive.
 * MediaWiki 1.21 (1.21wmf8) onwards, the messages for JavaScript can contain uses of the INT directive.
 * MediaWiki 1.21 (1.21wmf10) onwards, the messages can also have both wikilinks and external links. However, features like the pipe trick are not supported.

The keywords are case insensitive, but uppercase is preferred.

Notes about gender, grammar, plural
In general, GENDER, GRAMMAR and PLURAL magic words work identically in both PHP and JavaScript sides.
 * 1) You must use,  ,   or   output formats for them to work.
 * 2) You need to pass the relevant parameter (username for GENDER; number for PLURAL) as normal parameter to the message.
 * 3) *For plural in PHP, you need to use  for the number, see also.

JavaScript examples
If you have a message, say,, in JavaScript, you can use it as given below:

Instead of passing the gender directly, we can pass a User object - i.e. mw.User object with a gender attribute to mw.msg. For e.g., the current user object.

If the gender passed to mw.msg is invalid or unknown, gender neutral form will be used as defined for each language.

If you have a message, say , in JavaScript, you can use it as given below:

Rationale
Problems with the deprecated message system:
 * Many functions with many parameters are confusing
 * The most common use case is not the simplest invocation
 * The simple implementation is wrong (wfMsg)
 * wfMsg replaces variables after {{-transform, does not parse nor escape
 * When a fallback message is used, parsing in the wrong language can lead to really broken results. Think about a message in a language which has three plurals that falls back to English which has only two. In this case the English text is parsed as if it had three plurals.  This also affects other language dependent stuff like grammar.
 * The  directive affects all parameters, where it is usually needed only for some of them
 * The  directive (or {{-transform, ,  ,  , etc) is hard to get right

The suggested solution for all these problems is above, expect parsing in a wrong language, since that problem is much deeper.

Old wfMsgExt

 * ''This section is outdated

wfMsgExt is a deprecated function within GlobalFunctions.php to retrieve the contents of a system message as listed in Special:Allmessages


 * function wfMsgExt( $key, $options ) : string.

returned string is value of the specified system message for the currently active language.

$key string representing a valid message-id

$options is a string containing one of the following options (or an array containing one or more of these strings):