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When writing the X/Open Portability Guide the authors realized that the
localeconv
function is not enough to provide reasonable access to
locale information. The information which was meant to be available
in the locale (as later specified in the POSIX.1 standard) requires more
ways to access it. Therefore the nl_langinfo
function
was introduced.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe locale | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The nl_langinfo
function can be used to access individual
elements of the locale categories. Unlike the localeconv
function, which returns all the information, nl_langinfo
lets the caller select what information it requires. This is very
fast and it is not a problem to call this function multiple times.
A second advantage is that in addition to the numeric and monetary
formatting information, information from the
LC_TIME
and LC_MESSAGES
categories is available.
The type nl_type
is defined in nl_types.h. The argument
item is a numeric value defined in the header langinfo.h.
The X/Open standard defines the following values:
CODESET
¶nl_langinfo
returns a string with the name of the coded character
set used in the selected locale.
ABDAY_1
¶ABDAY_2
¶ABDAY_3
¶ABDAY_4
¶ABDAY_5
¶ABDAY_6
¶ABDAY_7
¶nl_langinfo
returns the abbreviated weekday name. ABDAY_1
corresponds to Sunday.
DAY_1
¶DAY_2
¶DAY_3
¶DAY_4
¶DAY_5
¶DAY_6
¶DAY_7
¶Similar to ABDAY_1
etc., but here the return value is the
unabbreviated weekday name.
ABMON_1
¶ABMON_2
¶ABMON_3
¶ABMON_4
¶ABMON_5
¶ABMON_6
¶ABMON_7
¶ABMON_8
¶ABMON_9
¶ABMON_10
¶ABMON_11
¶ABMON_12
¶The return value is abbreviated name of the month. ABMON_1
corresponds to January.
MON_1
¶MON_2
¶MON_3
¶MON_4
¶MON_5
¶MON_6
¶MON_7
¶MON_8
¶MON_9
¶MON_10
¶MON_11
¶MON_12
¶Similar to ABMON_1
etc., but here the month names are not abbreviated.
Here the first value MON_1
also corresponds to January.
AM_STR
¶PM_STR
¶The return values are strings which can be used in the representation of time as an hour from 1 to 12 plus an am/pm specifier.
Note that in locales which do not use this time representation these strings might be empty, in which case the am/pm format cannot be used at all.
D_T_FMT
¶The return value can be used as a format string for strftime
to
represent time and date in a locale-specific way.
D_FMT
¶The return value can be used as a format string for strftime
to
represent a date in a locale-specific way.
T_FMT
¶The return value can be used as a format string for strftime
to
represent time in a locale-specific way.
T_FMT_AMPM
¶The return value can be used as a format string for strftime
to
represent time in the am/pm format.
Note that if the am/pm format does not make any sense for the
selected locale, the return value might be the same as the one for
T_FMT
.
ERA
¶The return value represents the era used in the current locale.
Most locales do not define this value. An example of a locale which does define this value is the Japanese one. In Japan, the traditional representation of dates includes the name of the era corresponding to the then-emperor’s reign.
Normally it should not be necessary to use this value directly.
Specifying the E
modifier in their format strings causes the
strftime
functions to use this information. The format of the
returned string is not specified, and therefore you should not assume
knowledge of it on different systems.
ERA_YEAR
¶The return value gives the year in the relevant era of the locale.
As for ERA
it should not be necessary to use this value directly.
ERA_D_T_FMT
¶This return value can be used as a format string for strftime
to
represent dates and times in a locale-specific era-based way.
ERA_D_FMT
¶This return value can be used as a format string for strftime
to
represent a date in a locale-specific era-based way.
ERA_T_FMT
¶This return value can be used as a format string for strftime
to
represent time in a locale-specific era-based way.
ALT_DIGITS
¶The return value is a representation of up to 100 values used to
represent the values 0 to 99. As for ERA
this
value is not intended to be used directly, but instead indirectly
through the strftime
function. When the modifier O
is
used in a format which would otherwise use numerals to represent hours,
minutes, seconds, weekdays, months, or weeks, the appropriate value for
the locale is used instead.
INT_CURR_SYMBOL
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
int_curr_symbol
element of the struct lconv
.
CURRENCY_SYMBOL
¶CRNCYSTR
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
currency_symbol
element of the struct lconv
.
CRNCYSTR
is a deprecated alias still required by Unix98.
MON_DECIMAL_POINT
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
mon_decimal_point
element of the struct lconv
.
MON_THOUSANDS_SEP
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
mon_thousands_sep
element of the struct lconv
.
MON_GROUPING
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
mon_grouping
element of the struct lconv
.
POSITIVE_SIGN
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
positive_sign
element of the struct lconv
.
NEGATIVE_SIGN
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
negative_sign
element of the struct lconv
.
INT_FRAC_DIGITS
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
int_frac_digits
element of the struct lconv
.
FRAC_DIGITS
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
frac_digits
element of the struct lconv
.
P_CS_PRECEDES
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
p_cs_precedes
element of the struct lconv
.
P_SEP_BY_SPACE
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
p_sep_by_space
element of the struct lconv
.
N_CS_PRECEDES
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
n_cs_precedes
element of the struct lconv
.
N_SEP_BY_SPACE
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
n_sep_by_space
element of the struct lconv
.
P_SIGN_POSN
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
p_sign_posn
element of the struct lconv
.
N_SIGN_POSN
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
n_sign_posn
element of the struct lconv
.
INT_P_CS_PRECEDES
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
int_p_cs_precedes
element of the struct lconv
.
INT_P_SEP_BY_SPACE
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
int_p_sep_by_space
element of the struct lconv
.
INT_N_CS_PRECEDES
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
int_n_cs_precedes
element of the struct lconv
.
INT_N_SEP_BY_SPACE
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
int_n_sep_by_space
element of the struct lconv
.
INT_P_SIGN_POSN
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
int_p_sign_posn
element of the struct lconv
.
INT_N_SIGN_POSN
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
int_n_sign_posn
element of the struct lconv
.
DECIMAL_POINT
¶RADIXCHAR
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
decimal_point
element of the struct lconv
.
The name RADIXCHAR
is a deprecated alias still used in Unix98.
THOUSANDS_SEP
¶THOUSEP
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
thousands_sep
element of the struct lconv
.
The name THOUSEP
is a deprecated alias still used in Unix98.
GROUPING
¶The same as the value returned by localeconv
in the
grouping
element of the struct lconv
.
YESEXPR
¶The return value is a regular expression which can be used with the
regex
function to recognize a positive response to a yes/no
question. The GNU C Library provides the rpmatch
function for
easier handling in applications.
NOEXPR
¶The return value is a regular expression which can be used with the
regex
function to recognize a negative response to a yes/no
question.
YESSTR
¶The return value is a locale-specific translation of the positive response to a yes/no question.
Using this value is deprecated since it is a very special case of message translation, and is better handled by the message translation functions (see Message Translation).
The use of this symbol is deprecated. Instead message translation should be used.
NOSTR
¶The return value is a locale-specific translation of the negative response
to a yes/no question. What is said for YESSTR
is also true here.
The use of this symbol is deprecated. Instead message translation should be used.
The file langinfo.h defines a lot more symbols but none of them is official. Using them is not portable, and the format of the return values might change. Therefore we recommended you not use them.
Note that the return value for any valid argument can be used for
in all situations (with the possible exception of the am/pm time formatting
codes). If the user has not selected any locale for the
appropriate category, nl_langinfo
returns the information from the
"C"
locale. It is therefore possible to use this function as
shown in the example below.
If the argument item is not valid, a pointer to an empty string is returned.
An example of nl_langinfo
usage is a function which has to
print a given date and time in a locale-specific way. At first one
might think that, since strftime
internally uses the locale
information, writing something like the following is enough:
size_t i18n_time_n_data (char *s, size_t len, const struct tm *tp) { return strftime (s, len, "%X %D", tp); }
The format contains no weekday or month names and therefore is
internationally usable. Wrong! The output produced is something like
"hh:mm:ss MM/DD/YY"
. This format is only recognizable in the
USA. Other countries use different formats. Therefore the function
should be rewritten like this:
size_t i18n_time_n_data (char *s, size_t len, const struct tm *tp) { return strftime (s, len, nl_langinfo (D_T_FMT), tp); }
Now it uses the date and time format of the locale selected when the program runs. If the user selects the locale correctly there should never be a misunderstanding over the time and date format.
Previous: localeconv
: It is portable but …, Up: Accessing Locale Information [Contents][Index]