Note that, currently, we take these settings from the database but we
don't provide a way to edit them through the admin interface, so the
locales must be manually introduced through a Rails console.
While we did consider using a comma-separated list, we're using spaces
in order to be consistent with the way we store the allowed content
types settings.
The `enabled_locales` nomenclature, which contrasts with
`available_locales`, is probably subconsciously based on similar
patterns like the one Nginx uses to enable sites.
Note that we aren't using `Setting.enabled_locales` in the globalize
initializer when setting the fallbacks. This means the following test
(which we could add to the shared globalizable examples) would fail:
```
it "Falls back to an enabled locale if the fallback is not enabled" do
Setting["locales.default"] = "en"
Setting["locales.enabled"] = "fr en"
allow(I18n.fallbacks).to receive(:[]).and_return([:fr, :es])
Globalize.set_fallbacks_to_all_available_locales
I18n.with_locale(:fr) do
expect(record.send(attribute)).to eq "In English"
end
end
```
The reason is that the code making this test pass could be:
```
def Globalize.set_fallbacks_to_all_available_locales
Globalize.fallbacks = I18n.available_locales.index_with do |locale|
((I18n.fallbacks[locale] & Setting.enabled_locales) + Setting.enabled_locales).uniq
end
end
```
However, this would make it impossible to run `rake db:migrate` on new
applications because the initializer would try to load the `Setting`
model but the `settings` table wouldn't exist at that point.
Besides, this is a really rare case that IMHO we don't need to support.
For this scenario, an installation would have to enable a locale, create
records with contents in that locale, then disable that locale and have
that locale as a fallback for a language where content for that record
wasn't created. If that happened, it would be solved by creating content
for that record in every enabled language.
The `use_helpers` method was added in ViewComponent 3.8.0, and it's
included by default in all components since version 3.11.0.
Note we sometimes delegated the `can?` method to the controller instead
of the helpers, for no particularly reason. We're unifying that code as
well.
As mentioned in commit 5214d89c8, using the `change` event of a `select`
field to automatically change location is really annoying for keyboard
users, since the event will trigger when pressing the down key to
navigate through the options or when typing a key to start searching for
an option. This might cause a lot of frustration.
Most multilanguage CONSUL sites enable between 2 and 4 languages. In
these cases, it's easier to just display the list of languages to
simplify the selection.
This way in this situation we also make it clear which languages are
available. If we use a `<select>` tag, users will have to open it in
order to check whether the site is available in their preferred
language.
This is also useful when the current language uses characters users
don't recognize; users will recognize their own language in the list of
available languages, while it might be harder to recognize the language
selector allows them to switch to a different language.
In this case, we're also hiding the label because a list of links with
language names is usually self explanatory for sighted users. We're
still providing it for screen reader users so they immediately know the
list allows them to change the language and if they don't need to do so
they can quickly skip it.
Note that in order to simplify the component tests (which for some
reason seem to be whitespace-sensitive), we have to omit whitespace
characters inside the `<option>` tags.
Also note we're simplifying the test with a missing language name; since
a component test doesn't involve a whole request, we don't need a
complex setup (I'm not sure we even need it in system tests).