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AIX Version 4.3 System Management Guide: Operating System and Devices
Understanding Locale
A locale is made up of the language,
territory, and code set combination used to identify a set of language
conventions. These conventions include information on collation, case
conversion, and character classification, the language of message catalogs,
date-and-time representation, the monetary symbol, and numeric
representation.
Locale information contained in locale
definition source files must first be converted into a locale database by
the localedef
command. The setlocale
subroutine can then access this information and set locale information for
applications. To deal with locale data in a logical manner, locale definition
source files are divided into six categories. Each category contains a
specific aspect of the locale data. The LC_* environment variables and
the LANG environment variable can be used in specifying the desired
locale.
Locale Naming Conventions
Each locale is named by its locale definition
source file name. These files are named for the language, territory, and code
set information they describe. The following format is used for naming a
locale definition file:
language[_territory][.codeset][@modifier]
For example, the locale for the Danish
language spoken in Denmark using the ISO8859-1 code set is
da_DK.ISO8859-1. The da stands for the Danish
language and the DK stands for Denmark. The short form of
da_DK is sufficient to indicate this locale. The same language
and territory using the IBM-850 code set is indicated by either
Da_DK.IBM-850 or the short form Da_DK.
System-defined locale definition files are
provided to show the format of locale categories and their keywords. The
/usr/lib/nls/loc directory contains the locale definition files for
system-defined locales. The C, or POSIX, locale defines the ANSI C-defined
standard locale inherited by all processes at startup time. The other
system-defined locale definition source files are:
Locale |
Language |
Country |
Code Set |
Ar_AA |
Arabic |
Arabic Countries |
IBM-1046 |
ar_AA |
Arabic |
Arabic Countries |
IS08859-6 |
be_BY |
Byelorussian |
Belarus |
ISO8859-5 |
bg_BG |
Bulgarian |
Bulgaria |
IS08859-5 |
cs_CZ |
Czech |
Czech Republic |
IS08859-2 |
Da_DK |
Danish |
Denmark |
IBM-850 |
da_DK |
Danish |
Denmark |
ISO8859-1 |
De_CH |
German |
Switzerland |
IBM-850 |
de_CH |
German |
Switzerland |
ISO8859-1 |
De_DE |
German |
Germany |
IBM-850 |
de_DE |
German |
Germany |
ISO8859-1 |
el_GR |
Greek |
Greece |
ISO8859-7 |
En_GB |
English |
Great Britain |
IBM-850 |
en_GB |
English |
Great Britain |
ISO8859-1 |
En_US |
English |
United States |
IBM-850 |
en_US |
English |
United States |
ISO8859-1 |
Es_ES |
Spanish |
Spain |
IBM-850 |
es_ES |
Spanish |
Spain |
ISO8859-1 |
Et_EE |
Estonian |
Estonia |
IBM-922 |
ET_EE |
Estonian |
Estonia |
UTF-8 |
Fi_FI |
Finnish |
Finland |
IBM-850 |
fi_FI |
Finnish |
Finland |
ISO8859-1 |
Fr_BE |
French |
Belgium |
IBM-850 |
fr_BE |
French |
Belgium |
ISO8859-1 |
Fr_CA |
French |
Canada |
IBM-850 |
fr_CA |
French |
Canada |
ISO8859-1 |
Fr_FR |
French |
France |
IBM-850 |
fr_FR |
French |
France |
ISO8859-1 |
Fr_CH |
French |
Switzerland |
IBM-850 |
fr_CH |
French |
Switzerland |
ISO8859-1 |
hr_HR |
Croatian |
Croatia |
ISO8859-2 |
hu_HU |
Hungarian |
Hungary |
ISO8859-2 |
Is_IS |
Icelandic |
Iceland |
IBM-850 |
is_IS |
Icelandic |
Iceland |
ISO8859-1 |
It_IT |
Italian |
Italy |
IBM-850 |
it_IT |
Italian |
Italy |
ISO8859-1 |
lw_IL |
Hebrew |
Israel |
IBM-856 |
iw_IL |
Hebrew |
Israel |
ISO8859-8 |
Ja_JP |
Japanese |
Japan |
IBM-943 |
ja_JP |
Japanese |
Japan |
IBM-eucJP |
ko_KR |
Korean |
Korea |
IBM-eucKR |
Lt_LT |
Lithuanian |
Lithuania |
IBM-921 |
LT_LT |
Lithuanian |
Lithuania |
UTF-8 |
Lv_LV |
Latvian |
Latvia |
IBM-921 |
LV_LV |
Latvian |
Latvia |
UTF-8 |
mk_MK |
Macedonian |
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia |
ISO-8859-5 |
Nl_BE |
Dutch |
Belgium |
IBM-850 |
nl_BE |
Dutch |
Belgium |
ISO8859-1 |
Nl_NL |
Dutch |
Netherlands |
IBM-850 |
nl_NL |
Dutch |
Netherlands |
ISO8859-1 |
No_NO |
Norwegian |
Norway |
IBM-850 |
no_NO |
Norwegian |
Norway |
ISO8859-1 |
pl_PL |
Polish |
Poland |
ISO8859-2 |
pt_BR |
Brazillian |
Brazil |
ISO8859-1 |
Pt_PT |
Portuguese |
Portugal |
IBM-850 |
pt_PT |
Portuguese |
Portugal |
ISO8859-1 |
ro_RO |
Romanian |
Romania |
ISO8859-2 |
ru_RU |
Russian |
Russia |
ISO8859-5 |
sh_SP |
Serbian Latin |
Yugoslavia |
ISO8859-2 |
sl_SI |
Slovene |
Slovenia |
ISO8859-2 |
sk_SK |
Slovak |
Slovakia |
ISO8859-2 |
sq_AL |
Albanian |
Albania |
ISO8859-1 |
sr_SP |
Serbian Cyrillic |
Yugoslavia |
ISO8859-5 |
Sv_SE |
Swedish |
Sweden |
IBM-850 |
sv_SE |
Swedish |
Sweden |
ISO8859-1 |
th_TH |
Thai |
Thailand |
TIS-620 |
TH_TH |
Thai |
Thailand |
UTF-8 |
tr_TR |
Turkish |
Turkey |
ISO8859-9 |
Uk_UA |
Ukrainian |
Ukraine |
IBM-1124 |
Vi_VN |
Vietnamese |
Vietnam |
IBM-1129 |
VI_VN |
Vietnamese |
Vietnam |
UTF-8 |
Zh_CN |
Simplified Chinese |
People's Republic of China |
GBK |
zh_CN |
Simplified Chinese |
People's Republic of China |
IBM-eucCN |
ZH_CN |
Chinese |
People's Republic of China |
UTF-8 |
zh_TW |
Chinese (trad) |
Republic of China |
IBM-eucTW |
Zh_TW |
Chinese (trad) |
Republic of China |
big5 |
Installation Default Locale
The installation default locale refers to the
locale selected at installation. For example, when prompted, a user can
specify the French language as spoken in Canada during the installation
process. The code set automatically defaults to the ISO8859-1 code set. With
this information, the system sets the value of the default locale, specified
by the LANG environment variable, to fr_CA
(fr for ISO8859-1 French and CA for Canada). Every
process uses this locale unless the LC_* or LANG environment
variables are modified. The default locale can be changed by using the System
Management Interface Tool (SMIT)
Manage Language Environment menu.
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