setlocale — set the current locale
#include <locale.h>
char
*setlocale( |
int | category, |
const char * | locale) ; |
The setlocale
() function is
used to set or query the program's current locale.
If locale
is not
NULL, the program's current locale is modified according to
the arguments. The argument category
determines which parts
of the program's current locale should be modified.
LC_ALL
for all of the locale.
LC_COLLATE
for regular expression matching (it determines the meaning of range expressions and equivalence classes) and string collation.
LC_CTYPE
for regular expression matching, character classification, conversion, case-sensitive comparison, and wide character functions.
LC_MESSAGES
for localizable natural-language messages.
LC_MONETARY
for monetary formatting.
LC_NUMERIC
for number formatting (such as the decimal point and the thousands separator).
LC_TIME
for time and date formatting.
The argument locale
is a pointer to a
character string containing the required setting of
category
. Such a
string is either a well-known constant like "C" or "da_DK"
(see below), or an opaque string that was returned by another
call of setlocale
().
If locale
is
""
each part of the locale that
should be modified is set according to the environment
variables. The details are implementation-dependent. For
glibc, first (regardless of category
), the environment
variable LC_ALL
is inspected,
next the environment variable with the same name as the
category (LC_COLLATE
,
LC_CTYPE
, LC_MESSAGES
, LC_MONETARY
, LC_NUMERIC
, LC_TIME
) and finally the environment
variable LANG
. The first
existing environment variable is used. If its value is not a
valid locale specification, the locale is unchanged, and
setlocale
() returns NULL.
The locale “C” or
“POSIX” is a portable
locale; its LC_CTYPE
part
corresponds to the 7-bit ASCII character set.
A locale name is typically of the form language
[_territory
][.codeset
][@modifier
], where language
is an ISO 639
language code, territory
is an ISO 3166
country code, and codeset
is a character set or
encoding identifier like ISO-8859-1
or UTF-8
. For a list of all
supported locales, try "locale −a", cf. locale(1).
If locale
is NULL,
the current locale is only queried, not modified.
On startup of the main program, the portable “C” locale is selected as default. A program may be made portable to all locales by calling:
setlocale(LC_ALL, "");
after program initialization, by using the values returned from a localeconv(3) call for locale-dependent information, by using the multi-byte and wide character functions for text processing if MB_CUR_MAX > 1, and by using strcoll(3), wcscoll(3) or strxfrm(3), wcsxfrm(3) to compare strings.
A successful call to setlocale
() returns an opaque string that
corresponds to the locale set. This string may be allocated
in static storage. The string returned is such that a
subsequent call with that string and its associated category
will restore that part of the process's locale. The return
value is NULL if the request cannot be honored.
Linux (that is, glibc) supports the portable locales
“C”“POSIX” In the good old days there used
to be support for the European Latin-1 "ISO-8859-1"
locale (e.g., in
libc-4.5.21 and libc-4.6.27), and the Russian "KOI-8"
(more precisely,
"koi-8r") locale (e.g., in libc-4.6.27), so that having an
environment variable LC_CTYPE=ISO-8859-1
sufficed
to make isprint(3) return the right
answer. These days non-English speaking Europeans have to
work a bit harder, and must install actual locale files.
locale(1), localedef(1), isalpha(3), localeconv(3), nl_langinfo(3), rpmatch(3), strcoll(3), strftime(3), charsets(7), locale(7)
This page is part of release 2.79 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, and information about reporting
bugs, can be found at
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
(c) 1993 by Thomas Koenig (ig25rz.uni-karlsruhe.de) and 1999 by Bruno Haible (haibleclisp.cons.org) Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Since the Linux kernel and libraries are constantly changing, this manual page may be incorrect or out-of-date. The author(s) assume no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein. The author(s) may not have taken the same level of care in the production of this manual, which is licensed free of charge, as they might when working professionally. Formatted or processed versions of this manual, if unaccompanied by the source, must acknowledge the copyright and authors of this work. License. Modified Sat Jul 24 18:20:12 1993 by Rik Faith (faithcs.unc.edu) Modified Tue Jul 15 16:49:10 1997 by Andries Brouwer (aebcwi.nl) Modified Sun Jul 4 14:52:16 1999 by Bruno Haible (haibleclisp.cons.org) Modified Tue Aug 24 17:11:01 1999 by Andries Brouwer (aebcwi.nl) Modified Tue Feb 6 03:31:55 2001 by Andries Brouwer (aebcwi.nl) |