209

I want get the language code of the device (en, es...) in my app written with Swift. How can get this?

I'm trying this:

var preferredLanguages : NSLocale!
let pre = preferredLanguages.displayNameForKey(NSLocaleIdentifier, value: preferredLanguages)

But this returns nil.

18 Answers 18

247

In Swift 3

let langStr = Locale.current.languageCode
5
  • 24
    should be : Locale.current.identifier but Locale.current.languageCode for Chinese, it always return 'zh' , but it have to be distinguish zh-HK, etc
    – iXcoder
    Jun 17, 2017 at 11:23
  • 3
    @User9527 Because of you most likely didn't enable localization for that language in your project settings.
    – Kirill
    Mar 11, 2019 at 23:56
  • 1
    Cannot assign value of type 'String' to type 'Locale?' Jul 4, 2019 at 7:40
  • 10
    As far as I notice, it will return actual language set in Settings -> General -> Language & Region -> iPhone Language ONLY IF localization for this language enabled in your project under Project -> Localizations. Otherwise it's development language.
    – Huralnyk
    Nov 19, 2019 at 15:30
  • How I make an executable binary that outputs this value, using only the commandline version of xcode?
    – HappyFace
    Oct 18, 2020 at 18:11
141

It's important to make the difference between the App language and the device locale language (The code below is in Swift 3)

Will return the Device language:

let locale = NSLocale.current.languageCode

Will return the App language:

let pre = Locale.preferredLanguages[0]
17
  • 9
    I don't understand the difference between Device Language or App Language. Do you have any documentation about the difference?
    – Jeremiah
    Apr 12, 2018 at 22:45
  • 3
    @Jeremiah locale will contain the device language, for example your device language is configured to French. Pre will contain the user (Or App) preferred language, example: your App support only Chinese, so you can install a Chinese app on a French device. Hope I clarified this 4 u
    – raed
    Apr 22, 2018 at 17:26
  • When you say the device is configured to french what do you mean? It seems that if I change the language in settings to something other than english it is represented in preferredLanguages but not in languageCode. How is languageCode changed?
    – Jeremiah
    Apr 23, 2018 at 22:38
  • 22
    Isn't it the other way around? When my app development language is EN and I run on a DE configured device, for which I have localized the app the result is: Locale.current.languageCode: de Locale.current.identifier: de_DE Locale.preferredLanguages[0]: de When my app development language is EN and I run on a FR configured device, for which I have not localized the app the result is: Locale.current.languageCode: en Locale.current.identifier: en_FR Locale.preferredLanguages[0]: fr Nov 12, 2018 at 13:08
  • 5
    This is wrong for 1 more reason: iOS 13.1 introduces per-app language setting, and Locale.preferredLanguages[0] doesn't take that into account, whereas Locale.current.languageCode does. Oct 3, 2019 at 15:29
73

Swift 4 & 5:

Locale.current.languageCode
3
  • Cannot assign value of type 'String' to type 'Locale?' Jul 4, 2019 at 7:39
  • 3
    Try Locale(identifier: Locale.current.identifier);
    – koen
    Oct 28, 2019 at 23:41
  • 2
    Locale.autoupdatingCurrent.languageCode is also available
    – C. Bess
    Feb 26, 2020 at 2:37
60

TL;DR:

Use Bundle.main.preferredLocalizations[0] to get the language your app's UI is currently displayed in. Don't use Locale.current because it describes the region format (time, currency, distance, etc) and has nothing to do with language.

Detailed Answer:

The definite answer about how to get the language(!) code for the language your app's UI is displayed in comes from Apple engineer Quinn "The Eskimo", and I quote/paraphrase for Swift:

Locale.current returns the current locale, that is, the value set by Settings > General > Language & Region > Region Formats. It has nothing to do with the language that your app is running in. It's perfectly reasonable, and in fact quite common, for users in the field to have their locale and language set to 'conflicting' values. For example, a native English speaker living in France would have the language set to English but might choose to set the locale to French (so they get metric weights and measures, 24 time, and so on).

The language that your app runs in is determined by the language setting, that is, Settings > General > Language & Region > Preferred Language Order. When the system runs your app it takes this list of languages (the preferred list) and matches it against the list of languages that your app is localised into (the app list). The first language in the preferred list that exists in the app list is the language chosen for the app. This is what you'll find in the first entry of the main bundle's preferredLocalizations array.

Language Name from Code

To get the human-readable name of a language from its code, you can use this:

let langCode = Bundle.main.preferredLocalizations[0]
let usLocale = Locale(identifier: "en-US")
var langName = ""
if let languageName = usLocale.localizedString(forLanguageCode: langCode) {
    langName = languageName
}
        

This will give you the English name of the current UI language.

5
  • 1
    It could also be worthwhile considering using Locale.current instead of Locale(identifier: "en-US") so that the language name will be in the language itself. "Français" instead of "French" for instance
    – Moxy
    Jun 1, 2021 at 9:19
  • 5
    This should have way more upvotes. Although the question is about "device language", I think this answer (i.e. UI language) is what people (including me) actually needed.
    – laka
    Jul 16, 2022 at 14:44
  • 1
    Quinn is worth his weight in gold!
    – spartygw
    Dec 13, 2022 at 19:46
  • @spartgw So true! Dec 14, 2022 at 8:22
  • 1
    "Don't use Locale.current" should be in big red letters
    – Hogdotmac
    Feb 13, 2023 at 10:35
48

Swift 3 & 4 & 4.2 & 5

Locale.current.languageCode does not compile regularly. Because you did not implemented localization for your project.

You have two possible solutions

1) String(Locale.preferredLanguages[0].prefix(2)) It returns phone lang properly.

If you want to get the type en-En, you can use Locale.preferredLanguages[0]

2) Select Project(MyApp)->Project (not Target)-> press + button into Localizations, then add language which you want.

2
  • This is really interesting! Where did you read solution one? Cannot find this information in the apple documentation
    – kuzdu
    May 21, 2019 at 13:08
  • This solution is right. I had tried much with other codes but it was due to 2) reason.
    – Guru Dev
    Nov 6, 2021 at 16:44
40

In Swift 3:

NSLocale.current.languageCode
34

To get current language used in your app (different than preferred languages)

NSLocale.currentLocale().objectForKey(NSLocaleLanguageCode)!
0
22

swift 3

let preferredLanguage = Locale.preferredLanguages[0] as String
print (preferredLanguage) //en-US

let arr = preferredLanguage.components(separatedBy: "-")
let deviceLanguage = arr.first
print (deviceLanguage) //en
2
  • 2
    Separate language code and country code by "-" is buggy. Your code will break on some cases like 'zh-Hans-US'.
    – kakaiikaka
    Oct 29, 2019 at 7:05
  • let langStr = Locale.preferredLanguages.first!this is what I have done reviewing this post. It's working, and I compare with my languages with langStr.lowercased().contains("es") for all spanish language variations for example.
    – Ian Ortega
    Jan 9, 2020 at 23:05
14

Swift 5.4:

let languagePrefix = Locale.preferredLanguages[0]
print(languagePrefix)
0
13

Locale.current.languageCode returns me wrong code, so I use these extensions:

extension Locale {
    static var preferredLanguageCode: String {
        guard let preferredLanguage = preferredLanguages.first,
              let code = Locale(identifier: preferredLanguage).languageCode else {
            return "en"
        }
        return code
    }
    
    static var preferredLanguageCodes: [String] {
        return Locale.preferredLanguages.compactMap({Locale(identifier: $0).languageCode})
    }
}
1
  • This is the correct solution! Oct 25, 2021 at 8:17
10

you may use the below code it works fine with swift 3

var preferredLanguage : String = Bundle.main.preferredLocalizations.first!
1
  • 2
    This is the one that actually still works with Swift 4! Thanks!
    – Alex Wally
    Nov 17, 2017 at 7:25
6

I want to track the language chosen by the user in Settings app every time the user launches my app - that is not yet localized (my app is in English only). I adopted this logic:

  1. create an enum to to make it easier to handle the languages in array

    enum Language: String {
    
    case none = ""
    case en = "English"
    case fr = "French"
    case it = "Italian"
    
    } // add as many languages you want
    
  2. create a couple of extension to Locale

    extension Locale {
    
        static var enLocale: Locale {
    
            return Locale(identifier: "en-EN")
        } // to use in **currentLanguage** to get the localizedString in English
    
        static var currentLanguage: Language? {
    
            guard let code = preferredLanguages.first?.components(separatedBy: "-").last else {
    
                print("could not detect language code")
    
                return nil
            }
    
            guard let rawValue = enLocale.localizedString(forLanguageCode: code) else {
    
                print("could not localize language code")
    
                return nil
            }
    
            guard let language = Language(rawValue: rawValue) else {
    
                print("could not init language from raw value")
    
                return nil
            }
            print("language: \(code)-\(rawValue)")
    
            return language
        }
    }
    
  3. When you need, you can simply use the extension

    if let currentLanguage = Locale.currentLanguage {
        print(currentLanguage.rawValue)
        // Your code here.
    }
    
1
  • Love the extension :). Wouldnt it makes more sense returning none if it's not able to read somehow. because that way that value can be used to make some value.
    – Alok C
    Aug 15, 2018 at 14:20
6

In Swift, You can get the locale using.

let locale = Locale.current.identifier
5

This is what I use in Swift 5 Xcode 11:

Inside the class variables:

let languagePrefix = Bundle.main.preferredLocalizations.first?.prefix(2)

This comes as a string. It returns 2 characters, i.e. "en", "es", "de"...

From this I can easily determine what language to display:

 if languagePrefix == "es" { self.flipCard.setTitle("última carta", for: .normal) }
 if languagePrefix == "en" { self.flipCard.setTitle("Last Card", for: .normal) }

If you want the full information of the language, then remove ?.prefex(2)

2

in most cases you want to get the language code of the current app UI, to send over an API to get localized response

extension Bundle {
    
    var currentLocalizedUILanguageCode: String {
        guard let code = Bundle.main.preferredLocalizations.first?.components(separatedBy: "-").first else {
            return Locale.current.languageCode ?? "en"
        }
        return code
    }
    
}

use like

headers["X-Language"] = Bundle.main.currentLocalizedUILanguageCode
0
var languageCode = ""
 if #available(iOS 16.0, *) {
   if let language = NSLocale.current.language.languageCode {
     languageCode = language.identifier
   }
 } else {
   if let language = NSLocale.current.languageCode {
     languageCode = language
   }
 }
0

Almost none of the answers are correct. This is a working Swift 5.7 solution. ""

extension Locale {
    // Gets the language of the device, had to remove the content of AppleLanguages since `preferredLanguages`
    // is combining the result from multiple APIs. AppleLanguage is then set to the old value
    static var preferredLanguageCode: String {
        let appleLanguages = UserDefaults.standard.stringArray(forKey: "AppleLanguages")
        UserDefaults.standard.removeObject(forKey: "AppleLanguages")

        guard let preferredLanguage = preferredLanguages.first,
              let code = Locale(identifier: preferredLanguage).languageCode else {
            UserDefaults.standard.set(appleLanguages, forKey: "AppleLanguages")
            return "en"
        }
        UserDefaults.standard.set(appleLanguages, forKey: "AppleLanguages")
        return code
    }
}
-1

use this function for get your system's current language code from iOS devices

    func getSystemLanguageCode() -> String {
    UserDefaults.standard.removeObject(forKey: "AppleLanguages")
    let pref_Language = NSLocale.preferredLanguages[0] as String //"fr-IN"
    let language = pref_Language.components(separatedBy: "-") //["fr","IN"]
    let lang_Code = language.first?.lowercased() ?? "" //"fr"
    UserDefaults.standard.set([lang_Code], forKey: "AppleLanguages")
    
    return lang_Code
}
1
  • This is not just getting, it is also setting. It is containing the correct answer but it is misleading. Jan 26, 2023 at 16:02

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