Turns out you need to create a locale
folder first using mkdir locale
. If you are running the command from within an app folder, you need a locale
folder within that app folder.
Actually you can configure where the locale folder is. In your settings.py add:
LOCALE_PATHS = (
PROJECT_ROOT + '/website/locale', )
Then create a folder for each of the languages you want to translate:
mkdir -p website/locale/de
The problem is that the command is not run from the app directory but from the project directory. This snippet from the docs explains it:
Turns out you need to create a locale
folder first using mkdir locale
.
./manage.py makemessages
[…] Runs over the entire source tree of the current directory and pulls out all strings marked for translation. It creates (or updates) a message file in the conf/locale (in the Django tree) or locale (for project and application) directory.
So, you either run the command from the app directory:
$ cd app
$ django-admin makemessages -l <locale>
… or you define a project wide locale directory using LOCALE_PATHS
and you can run makemessages
from the main directory from there on.
Either way, you should check that the ./locale/
directory is present and create it using
$ mkdir locale
in case it's not.
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