Locale: Difference between revisions
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Locales are ways for the operating system to group information about different language and regional settings | Locales are ways for the operating system to group information about different language and regional settings. | ||
The following is an example of a command on an Ubuntu Linux machine to see the installed locales: | The following is an example of a command on an Ubuntu Linux machine to see the installed locales: | ||
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apt-get install locales | apt-get install locales | ||
</source> | </source> | ||
== Locales in Python == | |||
Python uses locales to make sure certain functions are "smart" and do what is expected of them, based on the conventions of a given region. For instance, when using the regular expressions, the meaning of "\w" (word character) is updated to include accented characters when the locale is set to a French language region. Sorting algorithms are also tweaked to correctly reflect how a language chooses to alphabetize. | |||
Once a locale is available, you can set it in Python, for instance: | Once a locale is available, you can set it in Python, for instance: |
Revision as of 23:15, 5 April 2009
Locales are ways for the operating system to group information about different language and regional settings.
The following is an example of a command on an Ubuntu Linux machine to see the installed locales:
ls -l /usr/share/i18n/locales/
It may be necessary to install support for locales. On a Debian/Ubuntu system this can be done with:
apt-get install locales
Locales in Python
Python uses locales to make sure certain functions are "smart" and do what is expected of them, based on the conventions of a given region. For instance, when using the regular expressions, the meaning of "\w" (word character) is updated to include accented characters when the locale is set to a French language region. Sorting algorithms are also tweaked to correctly reflect how a language chooses to alphabetize.
Once a locale is available, you can set it in Python, for instance:
>>> locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, ("nl_NL", "UTF-8"))
'nl_NL.UTF8'
If things work, the command returns a string representing the selected locale. If the given locale is not installed on your system, or if the name is given incorrectly you may see the error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python2.5/locale.py", line 478, in setlocale
return _setlocale(category, locale)
locale.Error: unsupported locale setting