Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I have a situation where I need to set my process' locale to en-US.

I know how to do this for the current thread:

System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture = 
     System.Globalization.CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("en-US");

But my application uses BackgroundWorkers to do some processing, and the locale for these worker threads seems not to be affected by the above change to their spawning main-thread.

So how can I set the locale for all the threads in my application without setting it in each one manually?

share|improve this question

3 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

You'll have to change the operating system locale if you want to do that. For what reason do you want BackgroundWorkers to run in en-US?

You should have your business layer running in an invariant culture, and only have a specific culture for the end user's UI.

If you are using the BackgroundWorker component, and have to do this you could try something like this in the DoWork method:

// In DoWork
System.Globalization.CultureInfo before = System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture;
try

{
    System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture = 
        new System.Globalization.CultureInfo("en-US");
 // Proceed with specific code
}

finally
{
    System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentUICulture = before;
}
share|improve this answer
The background worker may very well be running in the UI layer (as a BackgroundWorker component on a Form for instance) – Fredrik Mörk Sep 22 '09 at 13:45
@Fredrik- Yes (especially if it is the Background Worker component), but you don't update the UI on the background worker thread. At least you don't if you are using it properly. – RichardOD Sep 22 '09 at 14:13
The background worker does double.Parse(string) on some input, which breaks for certain locales that have weird decimal point representations. So, I still need to know how to set the locale for the entire process. Are you saying this isn't possible? – Assaf Lavie Sep 23 '09 at 7:37
Assaf- can you post a code sample. Do none of my suggestions work for you? – RichardOD Sep 23 '09 at 7:54
1  
I ended up inheriting from BW and setting the CurrentCulture before every thread function... – Assaf Lavie Sep 27 '09 at 14:57
show 1 more comment

We use helper class for BackgroudWorker like this:

public static class BackgroundWorkerHelper
{
public static void RunInBackground(Action doWorkAction, Action completedAction, CultureInfo cultureInfo)
    {
        var worker = new BackgroundWorker();
        worker.DoWork += (_, args) =>
        {
            System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture = cultureInfo;
            System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentUICulture = cultureInfo;
            doWorkAction.Invoke();
        };
        worker.RunWorkerCompleted += (_, args) =>
        {
            System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture = cultureInfo;
            System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentUICulture = cultureInfo;
            completedAction.Invoke();
        };

        worker.RunWorkerAsync();
    }
}

Example usage:

BackgroundWorkerHelper.RunInBackground(() => { Work(); }, () => { AfterWork(); },Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture);
share|improve this answer

With 4.0, you will need to manage this yourself by setting the culture for each thread. But with 4.5, you can define a culture for the appdomain and that is the preferred way to handle this. The relevant apis are CultureInfo.DefaultThreadCurrentCulture and CultureInfo.DefaultThreadCurrentUICulture.

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.