21

I am trying to output dates in the Italian format using date() as follows:

<?php 
    setlocale(LC_ALL, 'it_IT');
    echo date("D d M Y", $row['eventtime']); 
?>

However, it is still coming out in the English format. What else could I do? Is there something wrong?

The solution has to be script specific and not server-wide.

4
  • I used your solution here: inmaremma.net Just that the accent characters are rendered as question marks. I believe I correctly set html language to italian with <html lang="it-IT"> Apr 11, 2014 at 9:27
  • @AdiCumpanasu You'll likely also need to set the charset to UTF-8. Place the following between <head> and </head>: <meta charset="utf-8">.
    – Sampson
    Apr 11, 2014 at 14:00
  • solved it wrapping like this: utf8_encode( strftime("%A %d %B %Y") ) Apr 11, 2014 at 14:40

4 Answers 4

43

date() is not locale-aware. You should use strftime() and its format specifiers to output locale-aware dates (from the date() PHP manual):

To format dates in other languages, you should use the setlocale() and strftime() functions instead of date().

Regarding Anti Veeranna's comment: he is absolutely right, since you have to be very careful with setting locales as they are sometimes not limited to the current script scope. The best way would be:

$oldLocale = setlocale(LC_TIME, 'it_IT');
echo utf8_encode( strftime("%a %d %b %Y", $row['eventtime']) );
setlocale(LC_TIME, $oldLocale);
3
15

I found that setlocale isn't reliable, as it is set per process, not per thread (the manual mentions this). This means other running scripts can change the locale at any time. A solution is using IntlDateFormatter from the intl php extension.

$fmt = new \IntlDateFormatter('it_IT', NULL, NULL);
$fmt->setPattern('d MMMM yyyy HH:mm'); 
// See: http://userguide.icu-project.org/formatparse/datetime for pattern syntax
echo $fmt->format(new \DateTime()); 

If it doesn't work you might need to:

  • Install intl php extension (ubuntu example): sudo apt-get install php5-intl

  • Install the locale you want to use: sudo locale-gen it_IT

3
  • 1
    This solution is more reliable than the accepted answer (having intl php extension installed and the appropriate locale available)
    – clami219
    Apr 23, 2020 at 16:51
  • Since strftime is depreciated in php8.0, IntlDateFormatter is a great solution! It can also be written shorter like this (including the timezone (if required) and pattern in the object call): $fmt = new \IntlDateFormatter('it_IT', NULL, NULL, 'Europe/Rome', NULL, 'd MMMM yyyy HH:mm');
    – LaZza
    Oct 12, 2022 at 16:03
  • The given install command is misleading. It should be made clear that one need to install the same version that the browser's PHP extension uses (e.g. for PHP 7.4 use "php7.4-intl" for the name, or the latest (use "php-intl")! Feb 10 at 16:44
4

it_IT locale has to be installed/enabled by your server admin, otherwise this will not work.

So, Jonathan's solution is probably the best.

3
  • I have full access to the server, any ideas where i can check which local are installed? Jul 11, 2009 at 20:19
  • by typing 'locale -a' if that server is running some variant of Linux/BSD. Jul 11, 2009 at 20:21
  • To check and install a locale on the server: askubuntu.com/a/76106 Jun 14, 2020 at 9:16
0

About the article on http://www.phpnews.it/articoli/ottenere-date-in-italiano/response, the blog suggest an alternative method, but the code is not working, here is the correct code:

function timestamp_to_date_italian($date)
    {       
        $months = array(
                '01' => 'Gennaio', 
                '02' => 'Febbraio', 
                '03' => 'Marzo', 
                '04' => 'Aprile',
                '05' => 'Maggio', 
                '06' => 'Giugno', 
                '07' => 'Luglio', 
                '08' => 'Agosto',
                '09' => 'Settembre', 
                '10' => 'Ottobre', 
                '11' => 'Novembre',
                '12' => 'Dicembre');

        list($day, $month, $year) = explode('-',date('d-m-Y', $date));      
        return $day . ' ' . $months[$month] . ' ' . $year;

    }

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