vote up 0 vote down star

Hi, my site changes its locale dependent upon either user settings or browser settings (where the user hasn't set their preference). I am using amline charts, the stock chart specifically, which requires the date format in 'MM/DD/YYYY' or 'DD-MM-YYYY', I guess so the chart knows how to understand the dates. There are many ways to format a date dependent upon the computer locale, however I can't find a way to get the locale format (as above).

thanks in advance.

flag

1 Answer

vote up 1 vote down

The Zend Framework comes with a Zend_Locale class which in turn accesses a bunch of XML files in Unicode Locale Data Markup Language (LDML). Those contain, among lots of other things, localized date formats. Take a look at the Unicode Common Locale Data Repository (CLDR) for more information.

As an example, the XML file for German would contain stuff like

<dateFormats>
    <dateFormatLength type="full">
    	<dateFormat>
    		<pattern>EEEE, d. MMMM yyyy</pattern>
    	</dateFormat>
    </dateFormatLength>
    <dateFormatLength type="long">
    	<dateFormat>
    		<pattern>d. MMMM yyyy</pattern>
    	</dateFormat>
    </dateFormatLength>
    <dateFormatLength type="medium">
    	<dateFormat>
    		<pattern>dd.MM.yyyy</pattern>
    	</dateFormat>
    </dateFormatLength>
    <dateFormatLength type="short">
    	<dateFormat>
    		<pattern>dd.MM.yy</pattern>
    	</dateFormat>
    </dateFormatLength>
</dateFormats>

Now, I haven't used this myself, but from briefly browsing through it I'd guess that Zend_Locale_Data::getContent() is your friend and should give you all the information you need.

If you don't wanna use ZF you can just access these files directly with the XML parser of your choice (you can probably find the XML files somewhere on unicode.org).

link|flag
CLDR is the best resource for getting locale information. – shadowhand Jul 13 at 16:26

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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