DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
SETLOCALE(3) DragonFly Library Functions Manual SETLOCALE(3)
NAME
setlocale -- natural language formatting for C
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <locale.h>
char *
setlocale(int category, const char *locale);
DESCRIPTION
The setlocale() function sets the C library's notion of natural language
formatting style for particular sets of routines. Each such style is
called a `locale' and is invoked using an appropriate name passed as a C
string.
The setlocale() function recognizes several categories of routines.
These are the categories and the sets of routines they select:
LC_ALL Set the entire locale generically.
LC_COLLATE Set a locale for string collation routines. This controls
alphabetic ordering in strcoll() and strxfrm().
LC_CTYPE Set a locale for the ctype(3) and multibyte(3) functions.
This controls recognition of upper and lower case,
alphabetic or non-alphabetic characters, and so on.
LC_MESSAGES Set a locale for message catalogs, see catopen(3) function.
LC_MONETARY Set a locale for formatting monetary values; this affects
the localeconv() function.
LC_NUMERIC Set a locale for formatting numbers. This controls the
formatting of decimal points in input and output of floating
point numbers in functions such as printf() and scanf(), as
well as values returned by localeconv().
LC_TIME Set a locale for formatting dates and times using the
strftime() function.
Only three locales are defined by default, the empty string "" which
denotes the native environment, and the "C" and "POSIX" locales, which
denote the C language environment. A locale argument of NULL causes
setlocale() to return the current locale. By default, C programs start
in the "C" locale. The only function in the library that sets the locale
is setlocale(); the locale is never changed as a side effect of some
other routine.
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, setlocale() returns the string associated
with the specified category for the requested locale. The setlocale()
function returns NULL and fails to change the locale if the given
combination of category and locale makes no sense.
FILES
$PATH_LOCALE/locale/category
/usr/share/locale/locale/category locale file for the locale locale and
the category category.
ERRORS
No errors are defined.
SEE ALSO
localedef(1), catopen(3), ctype(3), localeconv(3), multibyte(3),
strcoll(3), strxfrm(3), euc(5), utf8(5), environ(7)
STANDARDS
The setlocale() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9899:1999 (``ISO C99'').
HISTORY
The setlocale() function first appeared in 4.4BSD.
DragonFly 5.3 November 21, 2003 DragonFly 5.3