google-cloud-translate 2.3.0 → 3.1.0

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Files changed (35) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +4 -4
  2. data/.yardopts +5 -8
  3. data/AUTHENTICATION.md +67 -81
  4. data/LICENSE.md +201 -0
  5. data/MIGRATING.md +302 -0
  6. data/README.md +139 -0
  7. data/lib/google-cloud-translate.rb +5 -146
  8. data/lib/google/cloud/translate.rb +79 -178
  9. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/helpers.rb +107 -0
  10. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/version.rb +6 -2
  11. metadata +38 -138
  12. data/CHANGELOG.md +0 -164
  13. data/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md +0 -40
  14. data/CONTRIBUTING.md +0 -188
  15. data/LICENSE +0 -201
  16. data/OVERVIEW.md +0 -390
  17. data/TROUBLESHOOTING.md +0 -37
  18. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v2.rb +0 -169
  19. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v2/api.rb +0 -255
  20. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v2/credentials.rb +0 -58
  21. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v2/detection.rb +0 -132
  22. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v2/language.rb +0 -68
  23. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v2/service.rb +0 -209
  24. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v2/translation.rb +0 -120
  25. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3.rb +0 -144
  26. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/credentials.rb +0 -42
  27. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/doc/google/cloud/translate/v3/translation_service.rb +0 -663
  28. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/doc/google/longrunning/operations.rb +0 -51
  29. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/doc/google/protobuf/any.rb +0 -131
  30. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/doc/google/protobuf/timestamp.rb +0 -113
  31. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/doc/google/rpc/status.rb +0 -39
  32. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/translation_service_client.rb +0 -930
  33. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/translation_service_client_config.json +0 -66
  34. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/translation_service_pb.rb +0 -226
  35. data/lib/google/cloud/translate/v3/translation_service_services_pb.rb +0 -68
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data/.yardopts CHANGED
@@ -1,15 +1,12 @@
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  --no-private
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- --title=Google Cloud Translation API
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+ --title=Cloud Translation API
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+ --exclude _pb\.rb$
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  --markup markdown
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  --markup-provider redcarpet
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- --main OVERVIEW.md
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6
 
7
7
  ./lib/**/*.rb
8
8
  -
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- OVERVIEW.md
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+ README.md
10
10
  AUTHENTICATION.md
11
- CONTRIBUTING.md
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- TROUBLESHOOTING.md
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- CHANGELOG.md
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- CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
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- LICENSE
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+ MIGRATING.md
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+ LICENSE.md
data/AUTHENTICATION.md CHANGED
@@ -1,30 +1,40 @@
1
1
  # Authentication
2
2
 
3
- In general, the google-cloud-translate library uses [Service
4
- Account](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/creating-managing-service-accounts)
5
- credentials to connect to Google Cloud services. When running on Google Cloud
6
- Platform (GCP), including Google Compute Engine (GCE), Google Kubernetes Engine
7
- (GKE), Google App Engine (GAE), Google Cloud Functions (GCF) and Cloud Run,
8
- the credentials will be discovered automatically. When running on other
3
+ In general, the google-cloud-translate library uses
4
+ [Service Account](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/creating-managing-service-accounts)
5
+ credentials to connect to Google Cloud services. When running within
6
+ [Google Cloud Platform environments](#google-cloud-platform-environments) the
7
+ credentials will be discovered automatically. When running on other
9
8
  environments, the Service Account credentials can be specified by providing the
10
- path to the [JSON
11
- keyfile](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/managing-service-account-keys) for
12
- the account (or the JSON itself) in environment variables. Additionally, Cloud
13
- SDK credentials can also be discovered automatically, but this is only
14
- recommended during development.
9
+ path to the
10
+ [JSON keyfile](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/managing-service-account-keys)
11
+ for the account (or the JSON itself) in
12
+ [environment variables](#environment-variables). Additionally, Cloud SDK
13
+ credentials can also be discovered automatically, but this is only recommended
14
+ during development.
15
15
 
16
- ## Project and Credential Lookup
16
+ ## Quickstart
17
17
 
18
- The google-cloud-translate library aims to make authentication as simple as
19
- possible, and provides several mechanisms to configure your system without
20
- providing **Project ID** and **Service Account Credentials** directly in code.
18
+ 1. [Create a service account and credentials](#creating-a-service-account).
19
+ 2. Set the [environment variable](#environment-variables).
21
20
 
22
- **Project ID** is discovered in the following order:
21
+ ```sh
22
+ export TRANSLATE_CREDENTIALS=path/to/keyfile.json
23
+ ```
24
+
25
+ 3. Initialize the client.
26
+
27
+ ```ruby
28
+ require "google/cloud/translate"
23
29
 
24
- 1. Specify project ID in method arguments
25
- 2. Specify project ID in configuration
26
- 3. Discover project ID in environment variables
27
- 4. Discover GCE project ID
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+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
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+ ```
32
+
33
+ ## Credential Lookup
34
+
35
+ The google-cloud-translate library aims to make authentication
36
+ as simple as possible, and provides several mechanisms to configure your system
37
+ without requiring **Service Account Credentials** directly in code.
28
38
 
29
39
  **Credentials** are discovered in the following order:
30
40
 
@@ -33,57 +43,28 @@ providing **Project ID** and **Service Account Credentials** directly in code.
33
43
  3. Discover credentials path in environment variables
34
44
  4. Discover credentials JSON in environment variables
35
45
  5. Discover credentials file in the Cloud SDK's path
36
- 6. Discover GCE credentials
46
+ 6. Discover GCP credentials
37
47
 
38
48
  ### Google Cloud Platform environments
39
49
 
40
- While running on Google Cloud Platform environments such as Google Compute
41
- Engine, Google App Engine and Google Kubernetes Engine, no extra work is needed.
42
- The **Project ID** and **Credentials** and are discovered automatically. Code
43
- should be written as if already authenticated. Just be sure when you [set up the
44
- GCE instance][gce-how-to], you add the correct scopes for the APIs you want to
45
- access. For example:
46
-
47
- * **All APIs**
48
- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform`
49
- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform.read-only`
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- * **BigQuery**
51
- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery`
52
- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery.insertdata`
53
- * **Compute Engine**
54
- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/compute`
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- * **Datastore**
56
- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/datastore`
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- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email`
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- * **DNS**
59
- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/ndev.clouddns.readwrite`
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- * **Pub/Sub**
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- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/pubsub`
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- * **Storage**
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- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.full_control`
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- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_only`
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- * `https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_write`
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+ When running on Google Cloud Platform (GCP), including Google Compute Engine
51
+ (GCE), Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE), Google App Engine (GAE), Google Cloud
52
+ Functions (GCF) and Cloud Run, **Credentials** are discovered automatically.
53
+ Code should be written as if already authenticated.
66
54
 
67
55
  ### Environment Variables
68
56
 
69
- The **Project ID** and **Credentials JSON** can be placed in environment
70
- variables instead of declaring them directly in code. Each service has its own
71
- environment variable, allowing for different service accounts to be used for
72
- different services. (See the READMEs for the individual service gems for
73
- details.) The path to the **Credentials JSON** file can be stored in the
74
- environment variable, or the **Credentials JSON** itself can be stored for
75
- environments such as Docker containers where writing files is difficult or not
76
- encouraged.
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-
78
- The environment variables that Translation checks for project ID are:
79
-
80
- 1. `TRANSLATE_PROJECT`
81
- 2. `GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT`
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+ The **Credentials JSON** can be placed in environment variables instead of
58
+ declaring them directly in code. Each service has its own environment variable,
59
+ allowing for different service accounts to be used for different services. (See
60
+ the READMEs for the individual service gems for details.) The path to the
61
+ **Credentials JSON** file can be stored in the environment variable, or the
62
+ **Credentials JSON** itself can be stored for environments such as Docker
63
+ containers where writing files is difficult or not encouraged.
82
64
 
83
- The environment variables that Translation checks for credentials are configured
84
- on {Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::Credentials} when using the current V3 client,
85
- and on {Google::Cloud::Translate::V2::Credentials} when using the legacy V2
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- client:
65
+ The environment variables that google-cloud-translate
66
+ checks for credentials are configured on the service Credentials class (such as
67
+ `::Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::TranslationService::Credentials`):
87
68
 
88
69
  1. `TRANSLATE_CREDENTIALS` - Path to JSON file, or JSON contents
89
70
  2. `TRANSLATE_KEYFILE` - Path to JSON file, or JSON contents
@@ -94,25 +75,34 @@ client:
94
75
  ```ruby
95
76
  require "google/cloud/translate"
96
77
 
97
- ENV["TRANSLATE_PROJECT"] = "my-project-id"
98
78
  ENV["TRANSLATE_CREDENTIALS"] = "path/to/keyfile.json"
99
79
 
100
- translate = Google::Cloud::Translate.new
80
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
101
81
  ```
102
82
 
103
83
  ### Configuration
104
84
 
105
- The **Project ID** and **Credentials JSON** can be configured instead of placing them in environment variables or providing them as arguments.
85
+ The **Credentials JSON** can be configured instead of placing them in
86
+ environment variables. Either on an individual client initialization:
87
+
88
+ ```ruby
89
+ require "google/cloud/translate"
90
+
91
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service do |config|
92
+ config.credentials = "path/to/keyfile.json"
93
+ end
94
+ ```
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+
96
+ Or configured globally for all clients:
106
97
 
107
98
  ```ruby
108
99
  require "google/cloud/translate"
109
100
 
110
101
  Google::Cloud::Translate.configure do |config|
111
- config.project_id = "my-project-id"
112
102
  config.credentials = "path/to/keyfile.json"
113
103
  end
114
104
 
115
- translate = Google::Cloud::Translate.new
105
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
116
106
  ```
117
107
 
118
108
  ### Cloud SDK
@@ -141,23 +131,24 @@ To configure your system for this, simply:
141
131
 
142
132
  ## Creating a Service Account
143
133
 
144
- Google Cloud requires a **Project ID** and **Service Account Credentials** to
145
- connect to the APIs. You will use the **Project ID** and **JSON key file** to
134
+ Google Cloud requires **Service Account Credentials** to
135
+ connect to the APIs. You will use the **JSON key file** to
146
136
  connect to most services with google-cloud-translate.
147
137
 
148
- If you are not running this client on Google Compute Engine, you need a Google
149
- Developers service account.
138
+ If you are not running this client within
139
+ [Google Cloud Platform environments](#google-cloud-platform-environments), you
140
+ need a Google Developers service account.
150
141
 
151
142
  1. Visit the [Google Developers Console][dev-console].
152
- 1. Create a new project or click on an existing project.
153
- 1. Activate the slide-out navigation tray and select **API Manager**. From
143
+ 2. Create a new project or click on an existing project.
144
+ 3. Activate the slide-out navigation tray and select **API Manager**. From
154
145
  here, you will enable the APIs that your application requires.
155
146
 
156
147
  ![Enable the APIs that your application requires][enable-apis]
157
148
 
158
149
  *Note: You may need to enable billing in order to use these services.*
159
150
 
160
- 1. Select **Credentials** from the side navigation.
151
+ 4. Select **Credentials** from the side navigation.
161
152
 
162
153
  You should see a screen like one of the following.
163
154
 
@@ -176,8 +167,3 @@ Developers service account.
176
167
 
177
168
  The key file you download will be used by this library to authenticate API
178
169
  requests and should be stored in a secure location.
179
-
180
- ## Troubleshooting
181
-
182
- If you're having trouble authenticating you can ask for help by following the
183
- {file:TROUBLESHOOTING.md Troubleshooting Guide}.
data/LICENSE.md ADDED
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+ comment syntax for the file format. We also recommend that a
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+ file or class name and description of purpose be included on the
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+ same "printed page" as the copyright notice for easier
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+ identification within third-party archives.
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+
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+ Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
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+
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+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
192
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
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+
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+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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+
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+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
200
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
201
+ limitations under the License.
data/MIGRATING.md ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,302 @@
1
+ ## Migrating to google-cloud-translate 3.0
2
+
3
+ The 3.0 release of the google-cloud-translate client is a significant upgrade
4
+ based on a [next-gen code generator](https://github.com/googleapis/gapic-generator-ruby),
5
+ and includes substantial interface changes. Existing code written for earlier
6
+ versions of this library will likely require updates to use this version.
7
+ This document describes the changes that have been made, and what you need to
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+ do to update your usage.
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+
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+ To summarize:
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+
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+ * The library has been broken out into three libraries. The new gems
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+ `google-cloud-translate-v2` and `google-cloud-translate-v3` contain the
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+ actual client classes for versions V2 and V3 of the Translation
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+ service, and the gem `google-cloud-translate` now simply provides a
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+ convenience wrapper. See [Library Structure](#library-structure) for more
17
+ info.
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+ * When creating V3 client objects, you customize the configuration in a block
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+ instead of passing arguments to the constructor. See
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+ [Creating Clients](#creating-clients) for more info. When creating V2
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+ clients, however, pass settings arguments as before.
22
+ * Previously, positional arguments were used to indicate required arguments.
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+ Now, in the V3 client, all method arguments are keyword arguments, with
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+ documentation that specifies whether they are required or optional.
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+ Additionally, you can pass a proto request object instead of separate
26
+ arguments. See [Passing Arguments](#passing-arguments) for more info. V2
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+ client methods, however, remain unchanged.
28
+ * Previously, some V3 client classes included class methods for constructing
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+ resource paths. These paths are now instance methods on the client objects,
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+ and are also available in a separate paths module. See
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+ [Resource Path Helpers](#resource-path-helpers) for more info.
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+ * Previously, clients reported RPC errors by raising instances of
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+ `Google::Gax::GaxError` and its subclasses. Now, RPC exceptions are of type
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+ `Google::Cloud::Error` and its subclasses. See
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+ [Handling Errors](#handling-errors) for more info.
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+ * Some classes have moved into different namespaces. See
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+ [Class Namespaces](#class-namespaces) for more info.
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+
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+ ### Library Structure
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+
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+ Older releases of the `google-cloud-translate` gem were all-in-one gems that
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+ included potentially multiple clients for multiple versions of the Translation
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+ service. The `Google::Cloud::Translate.new` factory method would
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+ return you an instance of a `Google::Cloud::Translate::V2::Api`
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+ object for the V2 version of the service, or a
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+ `Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::TranslationServiceClient` object for the
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+ V3 version of the service. All these classes were defined in the same gem.
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+
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+ With the 3.0 release, the `google-cloud-translate` gem still provides factory
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+ methods for obtaining clients. (The method signatures will have changed. See
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+ [Creating Clients](#creating-clients) for details.) However, the actual client
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+ classes have been moved into separate gems, one per service version. The
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+ `Google::Cloud::Translate::V2::Api` class, along with its
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+ helpers and data types, is now part of the `google-cloud-translate-v2` gem.
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+ Similarly, the `Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::TranslationService::Client`
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+ class is part of the `google-cloud-translate-v3` gem.
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+
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+ For normal usage, you can continue to install the `google-cloud-translate` gem
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+ (which will bring in the versioned client gems as dependencies) and continue to
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+ use factory methods to create clients. However, you may alternatively choose to
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+ install only one of the versioned gems. For example, if you know you will use only
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+ `V2` of the service, you can install `google-cloud-translate-v2` by itself, and
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+ call `Google::Cloud::Translate::V2.new` to create V2 clients directly.
64
+
65
+ ### Creating Clients
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+
67
+ In older releases, to create a client object, you would use the
68
+ `Google::Cloud::Translate.new` class method. Keyword arguments were available to
69
+ select a service version and to configure parameters such as credentials and
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+ timeouts. Furthermore, you could configure default parameters using the
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+ `Google::Cloud::Translate.configure` method.
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+
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+ In the 3.0 release, there are separate class methods for creating clients of the
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+ modern (V3) and legacy (V2) Translation services. To create a V2 client, use the
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+ `translation_v2_service` class method, which takes the same keyword arguments
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+ you would have used previously. To create a V3 (or later) client, use the
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+ `translation_service` class method and set options in a configuration block.
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+
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+ Old (V3):
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+ ```
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+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.new credentials: "/path/to/credentials.json"
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+ ```
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+
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+ Old (V2):
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+ ```
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+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.new version: :v2,
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+ credentials: "/path/to/credentials.json"
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+ ```
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+
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+ New (V3):
91
+ ```
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+ # Call the translation_service method to create a V3 client,
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+ # and pass a block to configure the client.
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+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service do |config|
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+ config.credentials = "/path/to/credentials.json"
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+ end
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+
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+ # You can omit the block if you're keeping the default configuration
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+ default_client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
100
+ ```
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+
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+ New (V2):
103
+ ```
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+ # Call the separate translation_v2_service method to create a legacy V2 client,
105
+ # and pass configuration as keyword arguments.
106
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_v2_service(
107
+ credentials: "/path/to/credentials.json")
108
+ ```
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+
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+ ### Passing Arguments
111
+
112
+ In older releases, required arguments would be passed as positional method
113
+ arguments, while most optional arguments would be passed as keyword arguments.
114
+
115
+ With the 3.0 release, the V2 client interface remains the same, but in the V3
116
+ client interface, all RPC arguments are passed as keyword arguments, regardless
117
+ of whether they are required or optional. For example:
118
+
119
+ Old (V3):
120
+ ```
121
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.new
122
+
123
+ # Contents, target language, and project are positional arguments, but
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+ # mime type is a keyword argument
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+ response = client.translate_text ["Hello, world!"], "es", "my-project",
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+ mime_type: "text/plain"
127
+ ```
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+
129
+ New (V3):
130
+ ```
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+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
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+
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+ # All arguments are keyword arguments
134
+ response = client.translate_text content: ["Hello, world!"],
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+ target_language_code: "es",
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+ parent: "my-project",
137
+ mime_type: "text/plain"
138
+ ```
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+
140
+ In the 3.0 release, it is also possible to pass a request object, either
141
+ as a hash or as a protocol buffer.
142
+
143
+ New (V3):
144
+ ```
145
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
146
+
147
+ request = Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::TranslateTextRequest.new(
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+ content: ["Hello, world!"],
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+ target_language_code: "es",
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+ parent: "my-project",
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+ mime_type: "text/plain"
152
+ )
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+
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+ # Pass a request object as a positional argument:
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+ response = client.translate_text request
156
+ ```
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+
158
+ Finally, in older releases, to provide call options, you would pass a
159
+ `Google::Gax::CallOptions` object with the `:options` keyword argument. In the
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+ 3.0 release, pass call options using a _second set_ of keyword arguments.
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+
162
+ Old (V3):
163
+ ```
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+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.new
165
+
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+ options = Google::Gax::CallOptions.new timeout: 10.0
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+
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+ response = client.translate_text ["Hello, world!"], "es", "my-project",
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+ mime_type: "text/plain",
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+ options: options
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+ ```
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+
173
+ New (V3):
174
+ ```
175
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
176
+
177
+ # Use a hash to wrap the normal call arguments (or pass a request object), and
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+ # then add further keyword arguments for the call options.
179
+ response = client.translate_text(
180
+ { content: ["Hello, world!"], target_language_code: "es",
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+ parent: "my-project", mime_type: "text/plain" },
182
+ timeout: 10.0
183
+ )
184
+ ```
185
+
186
+ ### Resource Path Helpers
187
+
188
+ The client library for the V3 service includes helper methods for generating
189
+ the resource path strings passed to many calls. These helpers have changed in
190
+ two ways:
191
+
192
+ * In older releases, they are _class_ methods on the client class. In the 1.0
193
+ release, they are _instance_ methods on the client. They are also available
194
+ on a separate paths module that you can include elsewhere for convenience.
195
+ * In older releases, arguments to a resource path helper are passed as
196
+ _positional_ arguments. In the 3.0 release, they are passed as named _keyword_
197
+ arguments.
198
+
199
+ Following is an example involving using a resource path helper.
200
+
201
+ Old (V3):
202
+ ```
203
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.new
204
+
205
+ # Call the helper on the client class
206
+ name = Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::TranslationServiceClient.glossary_path(
207
+ "my-project", "my-location", "my-glossary"
208
+ )
209
+
210
+ response = client.get_glossary name
211
+ ```
212
+
213
+ New (V3):
214
+ ```
215
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
216
+
217
+ # Call the helper on the client instance, and use keyword arguments
218
+ name = client.glossary_path project: "my-project", location: "my-location",
219
+ glossary: "my-glossary"
220
+
221
+ response = client.get_glossary name: name
222
+ ```
223
+
224
+ In the 3.0 client, you can also use the paths module as a convenience module.
225
+
226
+ New (V3):
227
+ ```
228
+ # Bring the path methods into the current class
229
+ include Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::TranslationService::Paths
230
+
231
+ def foo
232
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
233
+
234
+ # Call the included helper method
235
+ name = glossary_path project: "my-project", location: "my-location",
236
+ glossary: "my-glossary"
237
+
238
+ response = client.get_glossary name: name
239
+
240
+ # Do something with response...
241
+ end
242
+ ```
243
+
244
+ ### Handling Errors
245
+
246
+ The client reports standard
247
+ [gRPC error codes](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/doc/statuscodes.md)
248
+ by raising exceptions. In older releases, these exceptions were located in the
249
+ `Google::Gax` namespace and were subclasses of the `Google::Gax::GaxError` base
250
+ exception class, defined in the `google-gax` gem. However, these classes were
251
+ different from the standard exceptions (subclasses of `Google::Cloud::Error`)
252
+ thrown by other client libraries such as `google-cloud-storage`.
253
+
254
+ The 3.0 client library now uses the `Google::Cloud::Error` exception hierarchy,
255
+ for consistency across all the Google Cloud client libraries. In general, these
256
+ exceptions have the same name as their counterparts from older releases, but
257
+ are located in the `Google::Cloud` namespace rather than the `Google::Gax`
258
+ namespace.
259
+
260
+ Old (V3):
261
+ ```
262
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.new
263
+
264
+ begin
265
+ response = client.translate_text ["Hello, world!"], "es", "my-project",
266
+ mime_type: "text/plain"
267
+ rescue Google::Gax::Error => e
268
+ # Handle exceptions that subclass Google::Gax::Error
269
+ end
270
+ ```
271
+
272
+ New (V3):
273
+ ```
274
+ client = Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service
275
+
276
+ begin
277
+ response = client.translate_text content: ["Hello, world!"],
278
+ target_language_code: "es",
279
+ parent: "my-project",
280
+ mime_type: "text/plain"
281
+ rescue Google::Cloud::Error => e
282
+ # Handle exceptions that subclass Google::Cloud::Error
283
+ end
284
+ ```
285
+
286
+ ### Class Namespaces
287
+
288
+ In older releases, the client object for V3 was of class
289
+ `Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::TranslationServiceClient`.
290
+ In the 3.0 release, the client object is of class
291
+ `Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::TranslationService::Client`.
292
+ Note that most users will use the `Google::Cloud::Translate.translation_service`
293
+ factory method to create instances of the client object, so you may not need to
294
+ reference the actual class directly. See [Creating Clients](#creating-clients).
295
+
296
+ In older releases, the V3 credentials object was of class
297
+ `Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::Credentials`.
298
+ In the 3.0 release, the credentials object is of class
299
+ `Google::Cloud::Translate::V3::TranslationService::Credentials`.
300
+ Again, most users will not need to reference this class directly.
301
+
302
+ The V2 classes have not been renamed.