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locale(4)

NAME

locale - Contains one or more categories that describe a locale

DESCRIPTION

A locale definition source file contains one or more categories that describe a locale. You can convert a locale definition source file into a locale by using the localedef command. Locales can be modified only by editing a locale definition source file and then using the localedef command again on the new source file. Each locale source file section defines a category of locale data. A source file cannot contain more than one section for the same category. The following standard categories are supported: LC_COLLATE Defines character or string collation information LC_CTYPE Defines character classification, case conversion, and other character properties or attributes LC_MESSAGES Defines the format for affirmative and negative responses LC_MONETARY Defines rules and symbols for formatting monetary numeric information LC_NUMERIC Defines a list of rules and symbols for formatting nonmonetary numeric information LC_TIME Defines a list of rules and symbols for formatting time and date information You can include optional declarations at the beginning of your locale source file to override the default comment and escape characters used in locale category definitions: · Escape character The escape character is used in decimal or hexadecimal constants when these are specified in the locale file. The default escape character is the backslash (\). To define another escape character, include a line with the following format: escape_char <char_symbol> · Comment character The comment character is the first character of any comment entries in the locale file. The default comment character is the number sign (#). To define another comment character, use the following format: comment_char <char_symbol> In the preceding formats, <char_symbol> is the character's symbolic name as defined in the charmap file used to build the locale's codeset. One or more blank characters (spaces or tabs) must separate escape_char or comment_char from <char_symbol>. Each category source definition consists of the following: · The category header (category_name) · The associated keyword/value pairs that comprise the category body · The category trailer (END category_name) For example: LC_CTYPE <source for LC_CTYPE category> END LC_CTYPE The source for all of the categories is specified using keywords, strings, character literals, and character symbols. Each keyword identifies either a definition or a rule. The remainder of the statement containing the keyword contains the operands to the keyword. Operands are separated from the keyword by one or more blank characters (spaces or tabs). A statement may be continued on the next line by placing a \ (backslash) as the last character before the newline character that terminates the line. Lines containing the # (comment character) in the first column are treated as comment lines. A symbolic name begins with the < (left-angle bracket) character and ends with the > (right-angle bracket) character. The characters between the < and the > can be any characters from the Portable Character Set, except for control and space characters. For example, <A-diaeresis> could be a symbolic name for a character. Any symbolic name referenced in the locale source file must be defined in the Portable Character Set or in the character set description (charmap) file for that locale. A character literal is the character itself, or else a decimal, hexadecimal, or octal constant. A decimal constant is of the following form: \dddd or \ddd where d is a decimal digit. A hexadecimal constant is of the following form: \xxx where x is a hexadecimal digit. An octal constant is of the following form: \ooo or \oo where o is an octal digit. The explicit definition of each category in a locale definition source file is not required. When a category is undefined in a locale definition source file, the category value defaults to the value in the C locale definition. The LC_COLLATE Category The LC_COLLATE category defines the relative order between collating elements. A collation element is the unit of comparison for collation. A collation element may be a character or a sequence of characters. Every collation element in the locale has a set of weights, which determine if the collation element collates before, equal to, or after the other collation elements in the locale. Each collation element is assigned collation weights by the localedef command when the locale definition source file is compiled. These collation weights are then used by applications programs that compare strings. Comparison of strings is performed by comparing the collation weights of each character in the string until either a difference is found or the strings are determined to be equal. This comparison may be performed several times if the locale defines multiple collation orders. For example, in the French locale, the strings are compared using a primary set of collation weights. If they are equal on the basis of this comparison, they are compared again using a secondary set of collation weights. A collating element has a set of collation weights associated with it that is equal to the number of collation orders defined for the locale. Every character defined in the charmap file (or every character in the portable character set if no charmap file is specified) is itself a collating element. Additional collating elements can be defined using the collating-element statement. The syntax is as follows: collating-element <character_symbol> from <string> The LC_COLLATE category begins with the keyword LC_COLLATE and ends with the keyword END LC_COLLATE. The following keywords are recognized in the LC_COLLATE category: copy The copy statement specifies the name of an existing locale to be used as the definition of this category. If you specify a copy statement, you can specify no other keywords in the category. collating-element The collating-element statement is used to specify multicharacter collating elements. The character_symbol argument defines a collating element that is a string of one or more characters as a single collating element. The character_symbol argument cannot duplicate any symbolic name in the current charmap file or any other symbolic name defined in this collation definition. The string argument specifies a string of two or more characters that define the character_symbol argument. The following are examples of the syntax for the collating-element statement: collating-element <ch> from "<c><h>" collating-element <e-acute> from "<acute><e>" collating-element <11> from "<1><1>" A character_symbol argument defined by the collating-element statement is recognized only within the LC_COLLATE category. collating-symbol The collating-symbol statement is used to specify collation symbols for use in collation sequence statements. The syntax for the collating-symbol statement is as follows: collating-symbol <collating_symbol> The collating_symbol argument cannot duplicate any symbolic name in the current charmap file or any other symbolic name defined in this collation definition. The following are examples of collating-symbol statements: collating-symbol <UPPER_CASE> collating-symbol <HIGH> A collating_symbol argument defined by the collating-symbol statement is recognized only within the LC_COLLATE category. order_start The order_start statement is followed by one or more collation order statements, assigning collation weights to collating elements. This statement is mandatory. The syntax for the order_start statement is as follows: order_start <sort_rules>;<sort_rules>;...;<sort_rules> collation_order_statements order_end The sort_rules have the following syntax: keyword, keyword,...,keyword where keyword is the keyword forward, backward, or position. The sort_rules directives are optional. If present, they define the rules to apply during string comparison. The number of specified sort_rules directives defines the number of weights each collating element is assigned; that is, the directives define the number of collation orders in the locale. If no sort_rules directives are present, one forward directive is assumed and comparisons are made on a character basis rather than a string basis. If directives are present, the first sort_rules directive applies when comparing strings that use the primary weight, the second when comparing strings that use the secondary weight, and so on. Each set of sort_rules directives is separated by a ; (semicolon). A sort_rules directive consists of one or more comma-separated keywords. The following keywords are supported: forward Specifies that collation weight comparisons proceed from the beginning of a string to the end of the string. backward Specifies that collation weight comparisons proceed from the end of a string to the beginning of the string. position Specifies that collation weight comparisons consider the relative position of nonignored elements in the string. That is, if strings compare as equal, the element with the shortest distance from the starting point of the comparison collates first. The forward and backward keywords are mutually exclusive. The following is an example of a sort_rules directive: order_start forward;backward The following syntax rules apply to collation order statements: · Each collation order statement consists of a <character_symbol> specification, followed by white space and a set of collation orders. · Characters in the character set can be explicitly specified in the collation orders or implicitly specified using the ellipsis symbol (...). · A collation order statement that begins with the UNDEFINED special symbol specifies any characters that are in the character set and not explicitly or implicitly specified by other collation order statements. The optional operands for each collation element are used to define the primary, secondary, or subsequent weights for the collating element. The special symbol IGNORE is used to indicate a collating element that is to be ignored when strings are compared. An ellipsis keyword appearing in place of a collating_element_list indicates the weights are to be assigned, for the characters in the identified range, in numerically increasing order from the weight for the character symbol on the left-hand side of the preceding statement. The use of the ellipsis keyword results in a locale that may collate differently when compiled with different character set description (charmap) source files. For this reason, the localedef command will issue a warning when the ellipsis keyword is encountered. The UNDEFINED special symbol includes all coded character set values not specified explicitly or with an ellipsis symbol. These characters are inserted in the character collation order at the point indicated by the UNDEFINED special symbol in the order of their character code set values. If no UNDEFINED special symbol exists and the collation order does not specify all collation elements from the coded character set, a warning is issued and all undefined characters are placed at the end of the character collation order. The following is an example of a collation order statement in the LC_COLLATE locale definition source file category: order_start forward;backward UNDEFINED IGNORE;IGNORE <LOW> <space> <LOW>;<space> .. <LOW>;... <a> <a>;<a> <a-acute> <a>;<a-acute> <a-grave> <a>;<a-grave> <A> <a>;<A> <A-acute> <a>;<A-acute> <A-grave> <a>;<A-grave> <ch> <ch>;<ch> <Ch> <ch>;<Ch> <s> <s>;<s> <ss> <s><s>;<s><s> <eszet> <s><s>;<eszet><eszet> ... <HIGH>;... <HIGH> order_end This example is interpreted as follows: · The UNDEFINED special symbol indicates that all characters not specified in the definition (either explicitly or by the ellipsis symbol) are ignored for collation purposes. · All collating elements between <space> and <a> have the same primary equivalence class and individual secondary weights based on their coded character set values. · All versions of the letter a (uppercase and lowercase, and with or without diacriticals) belong to the same primary collation class. · The <c><h> multicharacter collating element is represented by the <ch> collating symbol and belongs to the same primary equivalence class as the <C><h> multicharacter collating element. · The <eszet> character is collated as an <s><s> string. That is, one <eszet> character is expanded to two characters before comparing. The LC_CTYPE Category The LC_CTYPE category of a locale definition source file defines character classification, case conversion, and other character attributes. This category begins with an LC_CTYPE category header and terminates with an END LC_CTYPE category trailer. All operands for LC_CTYPE category statements are defined as lists of characters. Each list consists of one or more semicolon-separated characters or symbolic character names. An ellipsis (...) can represent a series of characters; for example, <a>;...;<z> represents the characters in the range a through z. There are multiple sets of property keywords that are recognized in the LC_CTYPE category. One set contains property keywords and associated rules defined for locales by the XSH standard. A keyword in this set can be defined in locales based on any codeset, assuming that the associated property applies to characters in the language supported by the locale. Another set of property keywords is defined by the Unicode standard. Define these keywords only in locales using one of the Unicode character encoding formats. Some national language standards also define properties for characters. Japanese locales define quite a few supplemental properties to conform with national standards. The following two subsections describe the sets of keywords as defined by XSH and Unicode. See Japanese(5) for descriptions of properties defined in Japanese locales. Property Keywords Defined by the XSH Standard The following keywords defined by XSH are recognized in the LC_CTYPE category. In the descriptions, the term "automatically included" means that an error does not occur if the referenced characters are included or omitted. The characters will be provided if they are missing and will be accepted if they are present. copy Specifies the name of an existing locale to be used as the definition of this category If you include a copy statement, no other keyword can be specified. upper Defines uppercase letter characters No character defined by the cntrl, digit, punct, or space keyword can be specified. If upper is not defined, A through Z default to upper. lower Defines lowercase letter characters No character defined by the cntrl, digit, punct, or space keyword can be specified. If lower is not defined, a through z default to lower. alpha Defines all letter characters No character defined by the cntrl, digit, punct, or space keyword can be specified. Characters defined by the upper and lower keywords are automatically included in this character class. digit Defines numeric digit characters Only the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 can be specified. If digit is not defined, 0 through 9 default to digit. space Defines white-space characters No character defined by the upper, lower, alpha, digit, graph, or xdigit keyword can be specified. If space is not defined, the space, formfeed, newline, carriage-return, tab, and vertical tab characters default to space. cntrl Defines control characters No character defined by the upper, lower, alpha, digit, punct, graph, print, or xdigit keyword can be specified. punct Defines punctuation characters The space character and characters defined by the upper, lower, alpha, digit, cntrl, or xdigit keywords cannot be specified. graph Defines printable characters, excluding the space character If this keyword is not specified, characters defined by the upper, lower, alpha, digit, xdigit, and punct keywords are automatically included in this character class. No character defined by the cntrl keyword can be specified. print Defines printable characters, including the space character If this keyword is not specified, the space character and characters defined by the upper, lower, alpha, digit, xdigit, and punct keywords are automatically included in this character class. No character defined by the cntrl keyword can be specified. xdigit Defines hexadecimal digit characters Only the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 can be specified. Any character can be specified for the hexadecimal values for 10 to 15, however. These alternate hexadecimal digits are not used by standard conversion routines when converting digit strings from hexadecimal to numeric quantities. If xdigit is not defined, the numbers 0 through 9 and the letters A through F and a through f default to xdigit. blank Defines blank characters If this keyword is not specified, the space and horizontal tab characters are included in this character class. Any characters defined by this statement are automatically included in the space class. toupper Defines the mapping of lowercase characters to uppercase characters Operands for this keyword consist of comma-separated character pairs. Each character pair is enclosed in () (parentheses) and separated from the next pair by a ; (semicolon). The first character in each pair is considered a lowercase character; the second character is considered an uppercase character. Only characters defined by the lower and upper keywords can be specified. If toupper is not defined, a through z is mapped to A through Z by default. tolower Defines the mapping of uppercase characters to lowercase characters Operands for this keyword consist of comma-separated character pairs. Each character pair is enclosed in () (parentheses) and separated from the next pair by a ; (semicolon). The first character in each pair is considered an uppercase character; the second character is considered a lowercase character. Only characters defined by the lower and upper keywords can be specified. The tolower keyword is optional. If this keyword is not specified, the mapping defaults to the reverse mapping of the toupper keyword, if specified. If the toupper and tolower keywords are both unspecified, the mapping for each defaults to that of the C locale. Additional keywords can be specified to define supplemental character classifications. For example: charclass vowel vowel <a>;<e>;<i>;<o>;<u>;<y> Within the context of the XSH standard, the Unicode character properties discussed in the next subsection fall into the category of supplemental property definitions. Note that a supplemental property definition can be accessed in programs only by using the wctype() and iswctype() interfaces. The LC_CTYPE category does not support multicharacter elements. For example, the German Eszet character is traditionally classified as a lowercase letter. There is no corresponding uppercase letter; in proper capitalization of German text, the Eszet character is replaced by the two characters SS. This kind of conversion is outside of the scope of the toupper and tolower keywords. The following is an example of a possible LC_CTYPE category listed in a locale definition source file: LC_CTYPE #"alpha" is by default "upper" and "lower" #"alnum" is by definition "alpha" and "digit" #"print" is by default "alnum", "punct" and the space character #"graph" is by default "alnum" and "punct" #"tolower" is by default the reverse mapping of "toupper" # upper <A>;<B>;<C>;<D>;<E>;<F>;<G>;<H>;<I>;<J>;<K>;<L>;<M>;\ <N>;<O>;<P>;<Q>;<R>;<S>;<T>;<U>;<V>;<W>;<X>;<Y>;<Z> # lower <a>;<b>;<c>;<d>;<e>;<f>;<g>;<h>;<i>;<j>;<k>;<l>;<m>;\ <n>;<o>;<p>;<q>;<r>;<s>;<t>;<u>;<v>;<w>;<x>;<y>;<z> # digit <zero>;<one>;<two>;<three>;<four>;<five>;<six>;\ <seven>;<eight>;<nine> # space <tab>;<newline>;<vertical-tab>;<form-feed>;\ <carriage-return>;<space> # cntrl <alert>;<backspace>;<tab>;<newline>;<vertical-tab>;\ <form-feed>;<carriage-return>;<NUL>;<SOH>;<STX>;\ <ETX>;<EOT>;<ENQ>;<ACK>;<SO>;<SI>;<DLE>;<DC1>;<DC2>;\ <DC3>;<DC4>;<NAK>;<SYN>;<ETB>;<CAN>;<EM>;<SUB>;\ <ESC>;<IS4>;<IS3>;<IS2>;<IS1>;<DEL> # punct <exclamation-mark>;<quotation-mark>;<number-sign>;\ <dollar-sign>;<percent-sign>;<ampersand>;<asterisk>;\ <apostrophe>;<left-parenthesis>;<right-parenthesis>;\ <plus-sign>;<comma>;<hyphen>;<period>;<slash>;\ <colon>;<semicolon>;<less-than-sign>;<equals-sign>;\ <greater-than-sign>;<question-mark>;<commercial-at>;\ <left-square-bracket>;<backslash>;<circumflex>;\ <right-square-bracket>;<underline>;<grave-accent>;\ <left-curly-bracket>;<vertical-line>;<tilde>;\ <right-curly-bracket> # xdigit <zero>;<one>;<two>;<three>;<four>;<five>;<six>;\ <seven>;<eight>;<nine>;<A>;<B>;<C>;<D>;<E>;<F>;\ <a>;<b>;<c>;<d>;<e>;<f> # blank <space>;<tab> # toupper (<a>,<A>);(<b>,<B>);(<c>,<C>);(<d>,<D>);(<e>,<E>);\ (<f>,<F>);(<g>,<G>);(<h>,<H>);(<i>,<I>);(<j>,<J>);\ (<k>,<K>);(<l>,<L>);(<m>,<M>);(<n>,<N>);(<o>,<O>);\ (<p>,<P>);(<q>,<Q>);(<r>,<R>);(<s>,<S>);(<t>,<T>);\ (<u>,<U>);(<v>,<V>);(<w>,<W>);(<x>,<X>);(<y>,<Y>);\ (<z>,<Z>) # END LC_CTYPE Property Keywords Defined by the Unicode Standard Property keywords defined by the Unicode standard can be normative or informative. For example, a normative property might tell you whether a character is a letter, a digit, or something else while an informative property might tell you whether a letter is uppercase or lowercase. There is also a set of properties, all normative, that applies only to languages whose scripts are bidirectional (like Chinese, Korean, Japanese, and Arabic). General Category: Normative Keywords Mn Mark, non-spacing Mc Mark, spacing combining Me Mark, enclosing Nd Number, decimal digit Nl Number, letter No Number, other Zs Separator, space Zl Separator, line Zp Separator, paragraph Cc Other, control Cf Other, format Cs Other, surrogate Co Other, private use Cn Other, not assigned General Category: Informative Keywords Lu Letter, uppercase Ll Letter, lowercase Lt Letter, titlecase Lm Letter, modifier Lo Letter, other Pc Punctuation, connector Pd Punctuation, dash Pf Punctuation, final quote Pi Punctuation, initial quote Ps Punctuation, open Pe Punctuation, close Po Punctuation, other Sm Symbol, math Sc Symbol, currency Sk Symbol, modifier So Symbol, other Bidirectional Category: Strong Types L Left-right; for most alphabetic, syllabic, and logographic characters (such as ideographs in Asian languages) R Right-left; for Arabic, Hebrew, and punctuation in those languages Bidirectional Category: Weak Types EN European number ES European number separator ET European number terminator AN Arabic number CS Common number separator Bidirectional Category: Separators B Block separator S Segment separator Bidirectional Category: Neutrals WS Whitespace ON Other neutrals: all other characters like punctuation and symbols Note For locales included with the DIGITAL UNIX product, only the .UTF-8 locales include Unicode property keywords in addition to those specified in the XSH standard. Programmers who want to use Unicode keywords with .UTF-8 locales to determine a character's classification must use the wctype() and iswctype() functions. Other functions, such as iswdigit(), iswalpha(), and toupper(), access only definitions of properties specified in the XSH standard. The LC_MESSAGES Category The LC_MESSAGES category of a locale definition source file defines the format for affirmative and negative system responses. This category begins with an LC_MESSAGES category header and terminates with an END LC_MESSAGES category trailer. All operands for the LC_MESSAGES category are defined as strings or extended regular expressions bounded by " " (double quotes). These operands are separated from the keyword they define by one or more blank characters (spaces or tabs). Two adjacent "" (double quotes) indicate an undefined value. The following keywords are recognized in the LC_MESSAGES category: copy Specifies the name of an existing locale to be used as the definition of this category If you include a copy statement, you cannot include other keywords. yesexpr Specifies an extended regular expression that describes the acceptable affirmative response to a question expecting an affirmative or negative response noexpr Specifies an extended regular expression that describes the acceptable negative response to a question expecting an affirmative or negative response yesstr Specifies the locale's equivalent of an acceptable affirmative response This string is accessible to applications through the nl_langinfo subroutine as nl_langinfo (YESSTR). Note that yesstr is likely to be withdrawn from the XPG4 standard; yesexpr is the recommended alternative. nostr Specifies the locale's equivalent of an acceptable negative response This string is accessible to applications through the nl_langinfo subroutine as nl_langinfo (NOSTR). Note that nostr is likely to be withdrawn from the XPG4 standard; noexpr is the recommended alternative. The following is an example of a possible LC_MESSAGES category listed in a locale definition source file: LC_MESSAGES # yesexpr "<circumflex><left-square-bracket><y><Y>\ <right-square-bracket>" noexpr "<circumflex><left-square-bracket><n><N>\ <right-square-bracket>" yesstr "<y><e><s>" nostr "<n><o>" # END LC_MESSAGES The LC_MONETARY Category The LC_MONETARY category of a locale definition source file defines rules and symbols for formatting monetary numeric information. This category begins with an LC_MONETARY category header and terminates with an END LC_MONETARY category trailer. All operands for the LC_MONETARY category keywords are defined as string or integer values. String values are bounded by " " (double quotes). All values are separated from the keyword they define by one or more blank characters (spaces or tabs). Two adjacent "" (double quotes) indicate an undefined string value. A -1 (negative one) indicates an undefined integer value. The following keywords are recognized in the LC_MONETARY category: copy Specifies the name of an existing locale to be used as the definition of this category If you include a copy statement, no other keyword will be specified. int_curr_symbol Specifies the string used for the international currency symbol The operand for the int_curr_symbol keyword is a 4-character string. The first three characters contain the alphabetic international currency symbol. The fourth character specifies a character separator between the international currency symbol and a monetary quantity. currency_symbol Specifies the string used for the local currency symbol. mon_decimal_point Specifies the string used for the decimal delimiter that is used to format monetary quantities mon_thousands_sep Specifies the character separator used for grouping digits to the left of the decimal delimiter in formatted monetary quantities mon_grouping Specifies a string that defines the size of each group of digits in formatted monetary quantities The operand for the mon_grouping keyword consists of a sequence of semicolon-separated integers. Each integer specifies the number of digits in a group. The initial integer defines the size of the group immediately to the left of the decimal delimiter. The subsequent integers define succeeding groups to the left of the previous group. If the last integer is not -1, grouping for any remaining digits is performed using that that integer. If the last integer is -1, no further grouping is performed. The following is an example of the interpretation of the mon_grouping statement. Assuming the value to be formatted is 123456789 and the operand for the mon_thousands_sep keyword is ' (single quotation mark), the following results occur: mon_grouping Formatted Value 3;-1 123456'789 3 123'456'789 3;2;-1 1234'56'789 3;2 12'34'56'789 positive_sign Specifies the string used to indicate a nonnegative-valued formatted monetary quantity negative_sign Specifies the string used to indicate a negative-valued formatted monetary quantity int_frac_digits Specifies an integer value representing the number of fractional digits (those after the decimal delimiter) to be displayed in a formatted monetary quantity using the int_curr_symbol value frac_digits Specifies an integer value representing the number of fractional digits (those after the decimal delimiter) to be displayed in a formatted monetary quantity using the currency_symbol value p_cs_precedes Specifies an integer value indicating whether the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string precedes or follows the value for a nonnegative-formatted monetary quantity The following integer values are recognized: 0 Indicates that the currency symbol follows the monetary quantity 1 Indicates that the currency symbol precedes the monetary quantity p_sep_by_space Specifies an integer value indicating whether the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string is separated by a space from a nonnegative- formatted monetary quantity The following integer values are recognized: 0 Indicates that no space separates the currency symbol from the monetary quantity 1 Indicates that a space separates the currency symbol from the monetary quantity 2 Indicates that a space separates the currency symbol and the positive_sign string, if adjacent n_cs_precedes Specifies an integer value indicating whether the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string precedes or follows the value for a negative- formatted monetary quantity The following integer values are recognized: 0 Indicates that the currency symbol follows the monetary quantity 1 Indicates that the currency symbol precedes the monetary quantity n_sep_by_space Specifies an integer value indicating whether the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string is separated by a space from a negative- formatted monetary quantity The following integer values are recognized: 0 Indicates that no space separates the currency symbol from the monetary quantity 1 Indicates that a space separates the currency symbol from the monetary quantity 2 Indicates that a space separates the currency symbol and the negative_sign string, if adjacent p_sign_posn Specifies an integer value indicating the positioning of the positive_sign string for a nonnegative-formatted monetary quantity The following integer values are recognized: 0 Indicates that a left_parenthesis and right_parenthesis symbol enclose both the monetary quantity and the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string 1 Indicates that the positive_sign string precedes the quantity and the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string 2 Indicates that the positive_sign string follows the quantity and the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string 3 Indicates that the positive_sign string immediately precedes the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string 4 Indicates that the positive_sign string immediately follows the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string n_sign_posn Specifies an integer value indicating the positioning of the negative_sign string for a negative-formatted monetary quantity The following integer values are recognized: 0 Indicates that a left_parenthesis and right_parenthesis symbol enclose both the monetary quantity and the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string 1 Indicates that the negative_sign string precedes the quantity and the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string 2 Indicates that the negative_sign string follows the quantity and the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string 3 Indicates that the negative_sign string immediately precedes the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string 4 Indicates that the negative_sign string immediately follows the int_curr_symbol or currency_symbol string debit_sign Specifies the string used for the debit symbol (DB) to indicate a negative-formatted monetary quantity The debit_sign keyword is an extension to the X/Open Portability Guide and may not be portable to all systems that conform to that standard. credit_sign Specifies the string used for the credit symbol (CR) to indicate a nonnegative-formatted monetary quantity The credit_sign keyword is an extension to the X/Open Portability Guide and may not be portable to all systems that conform to that standard. left_parenthesis Specifies the character, equivalent to a ( (left parenthesis), used by the p_sign_posn and n_sign_posn statements to enclose a monetary quantity and currency symbol The left_parenthesis keyword is an extension to the X/Open Portability Guide and may not be portable to all systems that conform to that standard. right_parenthesis Specifies the character, equivalent to a ) (right parenthesis), used by the p_sign_posn and n_sign_posn statements to enclose a monetary quantity and currency symbol The right_parenthesis keyword is an extension to the X/Open Portability Guide and may not be portable to all systems that conform to that standard. A unique customized monetary format can be produced by changing the value of a single statement. For example, the following table shows the results of using all combinations of defined values for the p_cs_precedes, p_sep_by_space, and p_sign_posn statements: ____________________________________________________________________ p_sep_by_space = 2 1 0 ____________________________________________________________________ p_cs_precedes = 1 p_sign_posn = 0 ($1.25) ($ 1.25) ($1.25) p_sign_posn = 1 + $1.25 +$ 1.25 +$1.25 p_sign_posn = 2 $1.25 + $ 1.25+ $1.25+ p_sign_posn = 3 + $1.25 +$ 1.25 +$1.25 p_sign_posn = 4 $ +1.25 $+ 1.25 $+1.25 p_cs_precedes = 0 p_sign_posn = 0 (1.25 $) (1.25 $) (1.25$) p_sign_posn = 1 +1.25 $ +1.25 $ +1.25$ p_sign_posn = 2 1.25$ + 1.25 $+ 1.25$+ p_sign_posn = 3 1.25+ $ 1.25 +$ 1.25+$ p_sign_posn = 4 1.25$ + 1.25 $+ 1.25$+ ____________________________________________________________________ The following is an example of a possible LC_MONETARY category in a locale definition source file: LC_MONETARY # int_curr_symbol "<U><S><D>" currency_symbol "<dollar-sign>" mon_decimal_point "<period>" mon_thousands_sep "<comma>" mon_grouping <3> positive_sign "<plus-sign>" negative_sign "<hyphen>" int_frac_digits <2> frac_digits <2> p_cs_precedes <1> p_sep_by_space <2> n_cs_precedes <1> n_sep_by_space <2> p_sign_posn <3> n_sign_posn <3> debit_sign "<D><B>" credit_sign "<C><R>" left_parenthesis "<left-parenthesis>" right_parenthesis "<right-parenthesis>" # END LC_MONETARY The LC_NUMERIC Category The LC_NUMERIC category of a locale definition source file defines rules and symbols for formatting nonmonetary numeric information. This category begins with an LC_NUMERIC category header and terminates with an END LC_NUMERIC category trailer. All operands for the LC_NUMERIC category keywords are defined as string or integer values. String values are bounded by " " (double quotes). All values are separated from the keyword they define by one or more blank characters (spaces or tabs). Two adjacent double quote characters ("") indicate an undefined string value. A -1 (negative one) indicates an undefined integer value. The following keywords are recognized in the LC_NUMERIC category: copy Specifies the name of an existing locale to be used as the definition of this category If you include a copy statement, no other keyword will be specified. decimal_point Specifies the decimal delimiter string used to format nonmonetary numeric quantities This keyword cannot be omitted and cannot be set to the undefined string value. thousands_sep Specifies the string separator used for grouping digits to the left of the decimal delimiter in formatted nonmonetary numeric quantities grouping Defines the size of each group of digits in formatted monetary quantities The operand for the grouping keyword consists of a sequence of semicolon-separated integers. Each integer specifies the number of digits in a group. The initial integer defines the size of the group immediately to the left of the decimal delimiter. The subsequent integers define succeeding groups to the left of the previous group. Grouping is performed for each integer specified for the grouping keyword. If the last integer is not -1, the size of the last integer is repeatedly used to group any remaining digits. If the last integer is -1, no more grouping is performed. The following is an example of the interpretation of the grouping statement. Assuming the value to be formatted is 123456789 and the operand for the thousands_sep keyword is ' (single quote), the following results occur: grouping Formatted Value 3;-1 123456'789 3 123'456'789 3;2;-1 1234'56'789 3;2 12'34'56'789 The following is an example of a possible LC_NUMERIC category listed in a locale definition source file: LC_NUMERIC # decimal_point "<period>" thousands_sep "<comma>" grouping <3> # END LC_NUMERIC The LC_TIME Category The LC_TIME category of a locale definition source file defines rules and symbols for formatting time and date information. This category begins with an LC_TIME category header and terminates with an END LC_TIME category trailer. All operands for the LC_TIME category keywords are defined as string or integer values. String values are bounded by " " (double quotes). All values are separated from the keyword they define by one or more blank characters (spaces or tabs). Two adjacent double quote characters ("") indicate an undefined string value. Field descriptors are used by commands and subroutines that query the LC_TIME category to represent elements of time and date formats. The field descriptors used by commands and subroutines that query the LC_TIME category for time formatting are described in this section, immediately following the descriptions of valid keywords. The following keywords are recognized in the LC_TIME category: copy Specifies the name of an existing locale to be used as the definition of this category If you include a copy statement, no other keyword will be specified. abday Defines the abbreviated weekday names corresponding to the %a field descriptor Recognized values consist of 7 semicolon-separated strings. The first string corresponds to the abbreviated name for the first day of the week (Sun), the second to the abbreviated name for the second day of the week, and so on. day Defines the full spelling of the weekday names corresponding to the %A field descriptor Recognized values consist of 7 semicolon-separated strings. The first string corresponds to the full spelling of the name of the first day of the week (Sunday), the second to the name of the second day of the week, and so on. abmon Defines the abbreviated month names corresponding to the %b field descriptor Recognized values consist of 12 semicolon-separated strings. The first string corresponds to the abbreviated name for the first month of the year (Jan), the second to the abbreviated name for the second month of the year, and so on. mon Defines the full spelling of the month names corresponding to the %B field descriptor Recognized values consist of 12 semicolon-separated strings. The first string corresponds to the full spelling of the name for the first month of the year (January), the second to the full spelling of the name for the second month of the year, and so on. d_t_fmt Defines the string used for the standard date-and-time format corresponding to the %c field descriptor The string can contain any combination of characters and field descriptors. d_fmt Defines the string used for the standard date format corresponding to the %x field descriptor The string can contain any combination of characters and field descriptors. t_fmt Defines the string used for the standard time format corresponding to the %X field descriptor The string can contain any combination of characters and field descriptors. am_pm Defines the strings used to represent a.m. (before noon) and p.m. (after noon) corresponding to the %p field descriptor Recognized values consist of two semicolon-separated strings. The first string corresponds to the a.m. designation, the last string to the p.m. designation. t_fmt_ampm Defines the string used for the standard 12-hour time format that includes an am_pm value (%p field descriptor) This statement corresponds to the %r field descriptor. The string can contain any combination of characters and field descriptors. If the string is empty, the 12-hour format is not supported by the locale. era Defines how the years are counted and displayed for each era in a locale, corresponding to the %E field descriptor modifier For each era, there must be one string in the following format: direction:offset:start_date:end_date:name:format The variables for the era string format are defined as follows: direction Specifies a - (minus) or + (plus) character The - character indicates that years count in the negative direction when moving from the start date to the end date. The + character indicates that years count in the positive direction when moving from the start date to the end date. offset Specifies a number representing the first year of the era start_date Specifies the starting date of the era in yyyy/mm/dd format, where yyyy, mm, and dd are the year, month, and day, respectively, on the Gregorian calendar Years prior to the year AD 1 are represented as negative numbers. For example, an era beginning March 5th in the year 100 BC would be represented as -100/03/05. end_date Specifies the ending date of the era in the same form used for the start_date variable or one of the two special values -* or +*. A -* value indicates that the ending date of the era extends backward to the beginning of time A +* value indicates that the ending date of the era extends forward to the end of time. Therefore, the ending date can be chronologically before or after the starting date of the era. For example, the strings for the Christian eras AD and BC would be entered as follows: +:0:0000/01/01:+*:AD:%o %N +:1:-0001/12/31:-*:BC:%o %N name Specifies a string representing the name of the era that is substituted for the %N field descriptor format Specifies a strftime() format string to use when formatting the %EY field descriptor This string can contain any strftime() format control characters (except %EY) and locale-dependent multibyte characters. An era value consists of one string (enclosed in quotes) for each era. If more than one era is specified, each era string is separated by a ; (semicolon). era_year Defines the string used to represent the year in alternate-era format corresponding to the %Ey field descriptor The string can contain any combination of characters and field descriptors. era_d_fmt Defines the string used to represent the date in alternate-era format corresponding to the %Ex field descriptor The string can contain any combination of characters and field descriptors. era_t_fmt Defines the locale's alternative time format, as represented by the %EX field descriptor for strftime() era_d_t_fmt Defines the locale's alternative date-and-time format, as represented by the %Ec field descriptor for strftime() alt_digits Defines alternate strings for digits corresponding to the %O field descriptor Recognized values consist of a group of semicolon-separated strings. The first string represents the alternate string for 0 (zero), the second string represents the alternate string for 1, and so on. A maximum of 100 alternate strings can be specified. m_d_recent Defines the string used to print out the month/date/time format for some commands (ls, find, who, ar) This format corresponds to the "%b %e %H:%M" format for the POSIX locale. (Optional) This format is an extension to the X/Open Portability Guide and may not be supported on all systems that conform to that standard. m_d_old Defines the string used to print out the month/date/year format for some commands (ls, find, who, ar) This format corresponds to the "%b %e %Y" format for the POSIX locale. (Optional) This format is an extension to the X/Open Portability Guide and may not be supported on all systems that conform to that standard. The LC_TIME locale definition source file uses field descriptors to represent elements of time and date formats. Combinations of these field descriptors create other field descriptors or create time and date format strings. When used in format strings that contain field descriptors and other characters, field descriptors are replaced by their current values. All other characters are copied without change. The following field descriptors are used by commands and subroutines that query the LC_TIME category for time formatting: %a Represents the abbreviated weekday name (for example, Sun) defined by the abday statement %A Represents the full weekday name (for example, Sunday) defined by the day statement %b Represents the abbreviated month name (for example, Jan) defined by the abmon statement %B Represents the full month name (for example, January) defined by the month statement %c Represents the date-and-time format defined by the d_t_fmt statement %C Represents the century as a decimal number (00 to 99) %d Represents the day of the month as a decimal number (01 to 31) %D Represents the date in %m/%d/%y format (for example, 01/31/91) %e Represents the day of the month as a decimal number (1 to 31) The %e field descriptor uses a 2-digit field. If the day of the month is not a 2-digit number, the leading digit is filled with a space character. %Ec Specifies the locale's alternate appropriate date-and-time representation %EC Specifies the name of the base year (period) in the locale's alternate representation %Ex Specifies the locale's alternate date representation %Ey Specifies the offset from %EC (year only) in the locale's alternate representation %EY Specifies the full alternate year representation %h Represents the abbreviated month name (for example, Jan) defined by the abmon statement This field descriptor is a synonym for the %b field descriptor %H Represents the 24-hour clock hour as a decimal number (00 to 23) %I Represents the 12-hour clock hour as a decimal number (01 to 12) %j Represents the day of the year as a decimal number (001 to 366) %m Represents the month of the year as a decimal number (01 to 12) %M Represents the minutes of the hour as a decimal number (00 to 59) %n Specifies a newline character %N Represents the alternate era name %o Represents the alternate era year %Od Specifies the day of the month by using the locale's alternate numeric symbols %Oe Specifies the day of the month by using the locale's alternate numeric symbols %OH Specifies the hour (24-hour clock) by using the locale's alternate numeric symbols %OI Specifies the hour (12-hour clock) by using the locale's alternate numeric symbols %Om Specifies the month by using the locale's alternate numeric symbols %OM Specifies the minutes by using the locale's alternate numeric symbols %OS Specifies the seconds by using the locale's alternate numeric symbols %OU Specifies the week number of the year (Sunday as the first day of the week) by using the locale's alternate numeric symbols %Ow Specifies the weekday as a number in the locale's alternate representation (Sunday = 0) %OW Specifies the week number of the year (Monday as the first day of the week) by using the locale's alternate numeric symbols %Oy Specifies the year (offset from %C) in alternate representation %p Represents the a.m. or p.m. string defined by the am_pm statement %r Represents the 12-hour clock time with a.m./p.m. notation as defined by the t_fmt_ampm statement %S Represents the seconds of the minute as a decimal number (00 to 59) %t Specifies a tab character %T Represents 24-hour clock time in the format %H:%M:%S (for example, 16:55:15) %U Represents the week of the year as a decimal number (00 to 53) Sunday, or its equivalent as defined by the day statement, is considered the first day of the week for calculating the value of this field descriptor. %w Represents the day of the week as a decimal number (0 to 6) Sunday, or its equivalent as defined by the day statement, is considered as 0 (zero) for calculating the value of this field descriptor. %W Represents the week of the year as a decimal number (00 to 53) Monday, or its equivalent as defined by the day statement, is considered the first day of the week for calculating the value of this field descriptor. %x Represents the date format defined by the d_fmt statement %X Represents the time format defined by the t_fmt statement %y Represents the year of the century (00 to 99) %Y Represents the year as a decimal number (for example, 1989) %Z Represents the time zone name, if one can be determined (for example, EST) No characters are displayed if a time zone cannot be determined. %% Specifies a % (percent sign) character The following is an example of a possible LC_TIME category listed in a locale definition source file: LC_TIME # #Abbreviated weekday names (%a) abday "<S><u><n>";"<M><o><n>";"<T><u><e>";"<W><e><d>";\ "<T><h><u>";"<F><r><i>";"<S><a><t>" #Full weekday names (%A) day "<S><u><n><d><a><y>";"<M><o><n><d><a><y>";\ "<T><u><e><s><d><a><y>";"<W><e><d><n><e><s><d><a><y>";\ <T><h><u><r><s><d><a><y>";"<F><r><i><d><a><y>";\ <S><a><t><u><r><d><a><y>" #Abbreviated month names (%b) abmon "<J><a><n>";"<F><e><b>";"<M><a><r>";"<A><p><r>";\ "<M><a><y>";"<J><u><n>";"<J><u><l>";"<A><u><g>";\ <S><e><p>";"<O><c><t>";"<N><o><v>";"<D><e><c>" #Full month names (%B) mon "<J><a><n><u><a><r><y>";"<F><e><b><r><u><a><r><y>";\ "<M><a><r><c><h>";"<A><p><r><i><l>";"<M><a><y>";\ <J><u><n><e>";"<J><u><l><y>";"<A><u><g><u><s><t>";\ "<S><e><p><t><e><m><b><e><r>";"<O><c><t><o><b><e><r>";\ <N><o><v><e><m><b><e><r>";"<D><e><c><e><m><b><e><r>" #Date-and-time format (%c) #Note that for improved readability, this section uses actual #characters, rather than symbolic names, and is inconsistent with #the other sections in this example. This is bad form. #In practice, symbolic names should be used. d_t_fmt "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y" # #Date format (%x) d_fmt "%m/%d/%y" # #Time format (%X) t_fmt "%H:%M:%S" # #Equivalent of AM/PM (%p) am_pm "<A><M>";"<P><M>" # #12-hour time format (%r) #Note that for improved readability, this section uses actual #characters, rather than symbolic names, and is inconsistent with #the other sections in this example. This is bad form. #In practice, symbolic names should be used. t_fmt_ampm "%I:%M:%S %p" # era "+:0:0000/01/01:+*:AD:%o %N";\ "+:1:-0001/12/31:-*:BC:%o %N" era_year "" era_d_fmt "" alt_digits "<0><t><h>";"<1><s><t>";"<2><n><d>";"<3><r><d>";\ "<4><t><h>";"<5><t><h>";"<6><t><h>";"<7><t><h>";\ "<8><t><h>";"<9><t><h>";"<1><0><t><h>" # END LC_TIME

FILES

/usr/lib/nls/loc/src/* Locale definition source files for supported locales. /usr/lib/nls/loc/charmap/* Character set description (charmap) source files for supported locales. /usr/lib/nls/loc/* Locale binary files. By default, the setlocale() routine searches for locales in the /usr/lib/nls/loc directory. The value of the LOCPATH variable, if set, overrides this search path. Note that the LOCPATH variable is an extension to the XPG4 standard and may not be supported on all systems that conform to that standard. The /usr/lib/nls/loc/src and /usr/lib/nls/loc/charmap directories do not exist when source files are not provided for installed locales.

RELATED INFORMATION

Commands: locale(1), localedef(1). Files: charmap(4).