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What is the proper way to format currency if you are formatting a currency that is not the native currency of the current culture?

For example, if I am formatting US Dollars for a fr-FR culture do I format it like a en-US culture ($1,000.00) or as an fr-FR culture but changing the Euro symbol to a US Dollar symbol (1 000,00 $). Perhaps something else ($1 000,00 or 1 000,00 USD)?

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There's no absolute rules here but a couple of guiding principles:

  1. Try and use the number format for that locale (eg 1,000.00 in the US would be displayed as 1'000,00 in Germany);
  2. Remember that different currencies can use the same symbol (eg $ is used by Australian and US Dollars) and that there are many currency symbols;
  3. If your site is "single" currency then just use the correct symbol for that currency. By this I mean sites like Amazon, travel sites, shopping sites and so on. These sites are single currency in the sense they are one currency at a time. They won't be displaying Malaysian Ringits and Singapore Dollars at the same time, for example; and
  4. If your site is multi-currency then don't use the symbol at all: use the international standard three letter currency code as defined by ISO 4217 currency names and code elements. Sites like xe.com fit into the category.
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Deleted my original answer as this is better +1 – da5id May 12 at 0:55
Very clear advice - For points #1 and #2 check here for how to do this in c# stackoverflow.com/questions/1071273/… – Ryan Jul 1 at 21:30

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