Rick Strahl (An MS MVP) has a great tool kit for managing localization via the DB - offer the ability to update and modify on demand through a controlled environment and does much of the heavy lifting for you. Histoolkit offer the following features:
To Resx or not to Resx
The default resource storage mechanism in .NET
uses Resx based resources. Resx refers to the file extension of XML
files that serve as the raw input for resources that are native to
.NET. Although XML is the input storage format that you see in Visual
Studio and the .Resx files, the final resource format is a binary
format (.Resources) that gets compiled into .NET assemblies by the
compiler. These compiled resources can be stored either alongside with
code in binary assemblies or on their own in resource satellite
assemblies whose sole purpose is to provide resources. Typically in
.NET the Invariant culture resources are embedded into the base
assembly with any other cultures housed in satellite assemblies stored
in culture specific sub-directories.
If you’re using Visual Studio
the resource compilation process is pretty much automatic – when you
add a .Resx file to a project VS.NET automatically compiles the
resources and embeds them into assemblies and creates the satellite
assemblies along with the required directory structure for each of the
supported locales. ASP.NET 2.0 expands on this base process by further
automating the resource servicing model and automatically compiling
Resx resources that are found App_GlobalResources and
App_LocalResources and making them available to the application with a
Resource Provider that’s specific to ASP.NET. The resource provider
makes resource access easier and more consistent from within ASP.NET
apps.
The .NET framework itself uses .Resx resources to serve
localized content so it seems only natural that the tools the
framework provides make resource creation tools available to serve
this same model.
Resx works well enough, but it’s not very flexible
when it comes to actually editing resources. The tool support in
Visual Studio is really quite inadequate to support localization
because VS doesn’t provide an easy way to cross reference resources
across multiple locales. And although ASP.NET’s design editor can help
with generating resources initially for all controls on a page – via
the Generate Local Resources Tool – it only works with data in the
default Invariant Culture Resx file.
Resx Resources are also static
– they are after all compiled into an assembly. If you want to make
changes to resources you will need to recompile to see those changes.
ASP.NET 2.0 introduces Global and Local Resources which can be stored
on the server and can be updated dynamically – the ASP.NET compiler
can actually compile them at runtime. However, if you use a
precompiled Web deployment model the resources still end up being
static and cannot be changed at runtime. So once you’re done with
compilation the resources are fixed.
Changing resources at runtime
may not seem like a big deal, but it can be quite handy during the
resource localization process. Wouldn’t it be nice if you could edit
resources at runtime, make a change and then actually see that change
in the UI immediately?
Using Database Resources
This brings me to storing resources in a
database. Databases are by nature more dynamic and you can make
changes to data in a database without having to recompile an
application. In addition, database data is more easily shared among
multiple developers and localizers so it’s easier to make changes to
resources in a team environment.
When you think about resource
editing it’s basically a data entry task – you need to look up
individual resource values, see all the different language variations
and then add and edit the values for each of the different locales.
While all of this could be done with the XML in the Resx files
directly it’s actually much easier to build a front end to a database
than XML files scattered all over the place. A database also gives you
much more flexibility to display the resource data in different views
and makes it easy to do things like batch updates and renames of keys
and values.
The good news is that the resource schemes in .NET are
not fixed and you can extend them. .NET and ASP.NET 2.0 allow you
create custom resource managers (core .NET runtime) and resource
providers (ASP.NET 2.0) to serve resources from anywhere including out
of a database.