174

I use the following PHP script as index for my website.

This script should include a specific page depending on the browser's language (automatically detected).

This script does not work well with all browsers, so it always includes index_en.php for any detected language (the cause of the problem is most probably an issue with some Accept-Language header not being considered).

Could you please suggest me a more robust solution?

<?php
// Open session var
session_start();
// views: 1 = first visit; >1 = second visit

// Detect language from user agent browser
function lixlpixel_get_env_var($Var)
{
     if(empty($GLOBALS[$Var]))
     {
         $GLOBALS[$Var]=(!empty($GLOBALS['_SERVER'][$Var]))?
         $GLOBALS['_SERVER'][$Var] : (!empty($GLOBALS['HTTP_SERVER_VARS'][$Var])) ? $GLOBALS['HTTP_SERVER_VARS'][$Var]:'';
     }
}

function lixlpixel_detect_lang()
{
     // Detect HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE & HTTP_USER_AGENT.
     lixlpixel_get_env_var('HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE');
     lixlpixel_get_env_var('HTTP_USER_AGENT');

     $_AL=strtolower($GLOBALS['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE']);
     $_UA=strtolower($GLOBALS['HTTP_USER_AGENT']);

     // Try to detect Primary language if several languages are accepted.
     foreach($GLOBALS['_LANG'] as $K)
     {
         if(strpos($_AL, $K)===0)
         return $K;
     }

     // Try to detect any language if not yet detected.
     foreach($GLOBALS['_LANG'] as $K)
     {
         if(strpos($_AL, $K)!==false)
         return $K;
     }
     foreach($GLOBALS['_LANG'] as $K)
     {
         //if(preg_match("/[[( ]{$K}[;,_-)]/",$_UA)) // matching other letters (create an error for seo spyder)
         return $K;
     }

     // Return default language if language is not yet detected.
     return $GLOBALS['_DLANG'];
}

// Define default language.
$GLOBALS['_DLANG']='en';

// Define all available languages.
// WARNING: uncomment all available languages

$GLOBALS['_LANG'] = array(
'af', // afrikaans.
'ar', // arabic.
'bg', // bulgarian.
'ca', // catalan.
'cs', // czech.
'da', // danish.
'de', // german.
'el', // greek.
'en', // english.
'es', // spanish.
'et', // estonian.
'fi', // finnish.
'fr', // french.
'gl', // galician.
'he', // hebrew.
'hi', // hindi.
'hr', // croatian.
'hu', // hungarian.
'id', // indonesian.
'it', // italian.
'ja', // japanese.
'ko', // korean.
'ka', // georgian.
'lt', // lithuanian.
'lv', // latvian.
'ms', // malay.
'nl', // dutch.
'no', // norwegian.
'pl', // polish.
'pt', // portuguese.
'ro', // romanian.
'ru', // russian.
'sk', // slovak.
'sl', // slovenian.
'sq', // albanian.
'sr', // serbian.
'sv', // swedish.
'th', // thai.
'tr', // turkish.
'uk', // ukrainian.
'zh' // chinese.
);

// Redirect to the correct location.
// Example Implementation aff var lang to name file
/*
echo 'The Language detected is: '.lixlpixel_detect_lang(); // For Demonstration
echo "<br />";    
*/
$lang_var = lixlpixel_detect_lang(); //insert lang var system in a new var for conditional statement
/*
echo "<br />";    

echo $lang_var; // print var for trace

echo "<br />";    
*/
// Insert the right page iacoording with the language in the browser
switch ($lang_var){
    case "fr":
        //echo "PAGE DE";
        include("index_fr.php");//include check session DE
        break;
    case "it":
        //echo "PAGE IT";
        include("index_it.php");
        break;
    case "en":
        //echo "PAGE EN";
        include("index_en.php");
        break;        
    default:
        //echo "PAGE EN - Setting Default";
        include("index_en.php");//include EN in all other cases of different lang detection
        break;
}
?>
5
  • 6
    PHP 5.3.0+ comes with locale_accept_from_http() which gets the preferred language from the Accept-Language header. You should always prefer this method to a self-written method. Check the result against a list of regular expressions that you try and determine the page language that way. See PHP-I18N for an example.
    – caw
    Jul 4, 2014 at 20:41
  • 3
    The problem with locale_accept_from_http() is that you may not support the best result it returns so you still have the parse the header yourself to find the next-best.
    – Xeoncross
    Sep 9, 2014 at 16:39
  • The accepted answer to this should be changed to one of those that take multiple languages into account.
    – Pekka
    Jul 23, 2018 at 18:26
  • include and require's are happen at the compile time of php so basically you include all the index*.php and show only one - waste of ressources
    – Michael
    Jul 21, 2019 at 11:15
  • Besides from the real question and regarding the code above, I'd not recommend using different index pages for every language. An user would be happy to see same page layout and content in each language. You only have to load appropriate texts/pics inside one index.php page. The content can be organized e.g. in one XML file like [item]->[lang] sections - <div><?php echo $xml->item[0]->lang[0]; ?></div>, or in SQL, etc.
    – Hristo
    Apr 28, 2022 at 18:18

16 Answers 16

411

why dont you keep it simple and clean

<?php
    $lang = substr($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'], 0, 2);
    $acceptLang = ['fr', 'it', 'en']; 
    $lang = in_array($lang, $acceptLang) ? $lang : 'en';
    require_once "index_{$lang}.php"; 

?>
13
  • 11
    Dutch, Greek and Slovenian's language codes are one letter. It seems better to explode like this: php.net/manual/tr/reserved.variables.server.php#90293
    – trante
    May 20, 2012 at 10:19
  • 13
    @trante: Why do you say they are one letter? Dutch (nl), Greek (el) and Slovenian (sl) all appear to be two letter: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms533052(v=vs.85).aspx
    – Peter K.
    Nov 19, 2012 at 17:35
  • 25
    This code doesn't look at the whole list. What if pl is first priority and fr is second in my language list? I'd get English instead of French.
    – Kos
    Jan 19, 2013 at 13:26
  • 34
    This lacks of detecting priorities, and is'nt compatible with codes different from two letters Apr 3, 2013 at 16:17
  • 4
    There are no other lengths than two letters! Go in your favorite browser and change the language priority and you will see it.
    – Gigala
    Apr 10, 2013 at 11:41
83

Accept-Language is a list of weighted values (see q parameter). That means just looking at the first language does not mean it’s also the most preferred; in fact, a q value of 0 means not acceptable at all.

So instead of just looking at the first language, parse the list of accepted languages and available languages and find the best match:

// parse list of comma separated language tags and sort it by the quality value
function parseLanguageList($languageList) {
    if (is_null($languageList)) {
        if (!isset($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'])) {
            return array();
        }
        $languageList = $_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'];
    }
    $languages = array();
    $languageRanges = explode(',', trim($languageList));
    foreach ($languageRanges as $languageRange) {
        if (preg_match('/(\*|[a-zA-Z0-9]{1,8}(?:-[a-zA-Z0-9]{1,8})*)(?:\s*;\s*q\s*=\s*(0(?:\.\d{0,3})|1(?:\.0{0,3})))?/', trim($languageRange), $match)) {
            if (!isset($match[2])) {
                $match[2] = '1.0';
            } else {
                $match[2] = (string) floatval($match[2]);
            }
            if (!isset($languages[$match[2]])) {
                $languages[$match[2]] = array();
            }
            $languages[$match[2]][] = strtolower($match[1]);
        }
    }
    krsort($languages);
    return $languages;
}

// compare two parsed arrays of language tags and find the matches
function findMatches($accepted, $available) {
    $matches = array();
    $any = false;
    foreach ($accepted as $acceptedQuality => $acceptedValues) {
        $acceptedQuality = floatval($acceptedQuality);
        if ($acceptedQuality === 0.0) continue;
        foreach ($available as $availableQuality => $availableValues) {
            $availableQuality = floatval($availableQuality);
            if ($availableQuality === 0.0) continue;
            foreach ($acceptedValues as $acceptedValue) {
                if ($acceptedValue === '*') {
                    $any = true;
                }
                foreach ($availableValues as $availableValue) {
                    $matchingGrade = matchLanguage($acceptedValue, $availableValue);
                    if ($matchingGrade > 0) {
                        $q = (string) ($acceptedQuality * $availableQuality * $matchingGrade);
                        if (!isset($matches[$q])) {
                            $matches[$q] = array();
                        }
                        if (!in_array($availableValue, $matches[$q])) {
                            $matches[$q][] = $availableValue;
                        }
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    }
    if (count($matches) === 0 && $any) {
        $matches = $available;
    }
    krsort($matches);
    return $matches;
}

// compare two language tags and distinguish the degree of matching
function matchLanguage($a, $b) {
    $a = explode('-', $a);
    $b = explode('-', $b);
    for ($i=0, $n=min(count($a), count($b)); $i<$n; $i++) {
        if ($a[$i] !== $b[$i]) break;
    }
    return $i === 0 ? 0 : (float) $i / count($a);
}

$accepted = parseLanguageList($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE']);
var_dump($accepted);
$available = parseLanguageList('en, fr, it');
var_dump($available);
$matches = findMatches($accepted, $available);
var_dump($matches);

If findMatches returns an empty array, no match was found and you can fall back on the default language.

6
  • Hi, script was working fine and now stop. could be possible that if SESSION on the server are turn off this script wont work?
    – GibboK
    Sep 22, 2010 at 16:36
  • @GIbboK: No, this is independent of sessions.
    – Gumbo
    Sep 22, 2010 at 17:02
  • Correct but I prefer @diggersworld solution ... better write less code
    – lrkwz
    Nov 22, 2012 at 11:39
  • Can someone please tell me who how is the value of q decided? Thanks
    – Phantom007
    Feb 23, 2016 at 8:26
  • @Phantom007 Depends of the preference : 0 = I don't want this language, 1 = I always want this language.
    – Skyost
    Oct 6, 2017 at 12:59
47

The existing answers are a little too verbose so I created this smaller, auto-matching version.

function prefered_language(array $available_languages, $http_accept_language) {

    $available_languages = array_flip($available_languages);

    $langs;
    preg_match_all('~([\w-]+)(?:[^,\d]+([\d.]+))?~', strtolower($http_accept_language), $matches, PREG_SET_ORDER);
    foreach($matches as $match) {

        list($a, $b) = explode('-', $match[1]) + array('', '');
        $value = isset($match[2]) ? (float) $match[2] : 1.0;

        if(isset($available_languages[$match[1]])) {
            $langs[$match[1]] = $value;
            continue;
        }

        if(isset($available_languages[$a])) {
            $langs[$a] = $value - 0.1;
        }

    }
    arsort($langs);

    return $langs;
}

And the sample usage:

//$_SERVER["HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE"] = 'en-us,en;q=0.8,es-cl;q=0.5,zh-cn;q=0.3';

// Languages we support
$available_languages = array("en", "zh-cn", "es");

$langs = prefered_language($available_languages, $_SERVER["HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE"]);

/* Result
Array
(
    [en] => 0.8
    [es] => 0.4
    [zh-cn] => 0.3
)*/

Full gist source here

5
  • 8
    This is brilliant and exactly what I needed for a particular project today. The only addition I made is to allow the function to accept a default language and fall back to that if there's no match between available languages and HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGEs.
    – Scott
    Sep 28, 2015 at 16:11
  • 8
    Oh, a gist with my changes is here: gist.github.com/humantorch/d255e39a8ab4ea2e7005 (I also combined it into one file for simplicity)
    – Scott
    Sep 28, 2015 at 16:17
  • 2
    Very nice method! Maybe you should check if $langs already contains an entry for the language. happened to me that perferred language was en-US, 2nd de and 3rd en, your method always gave me de, cause the first value of en was overwritten by the 3rd entry
    – Peter Pint
    Feb 5, 2016 at 15:16
  • 1
    It also produces a PHP warning if no matches are found. Would be nice to handle this gracefully.
    – Simon E.
    Jan 15, 2018 at 3:36
  • not working as expected, my preferred language in the browser is ("en","ar","en-us") what is happening is that is shows ar is the preferred language :\
    – shamaseen
    Aug 8, 2020 at 15:28
31

The official way to handle this is using the PECL HTTP library. Unlike some answers here, this correctly handles the language priorities (q-values), partial language matches and will return the closest match, or when there are no matches it falls back to the first language in your array.

PECL HTTP:
http://pecl.php.net/package/pecl_http

How to use:
http://php.net/manual/fa/function.http-negotiate-language.php

$supportedLanguages = [
    'en-US', // first one is the default/fallback
    'fr',
    'fr-FR',
    'de',
    'de-DE',
    'de-AT',
    'de-CH',
];

// Returns the negotiated language 
// or the default language (i.e. first array entry) if none match.
$language = http_negotiate_language($supportedLanguages, $result);
2
  • 1
    I found a working link, so updated your answer to include it.
    – Simon E.
    Jan 15, 2018 at 5:12
  • 6
    All three of these links appear to be dead, and they don't seem to have any easily Googleable install instructions (also this function is deprecated according to their page for it) Mar 10, 2020 at 18:54
15

The problem with the selected answer above is that the user may have their first choice set as a language that's not in the case structure, but one of their other language choices are set. You should loop until you find a match.

This is a super simple solution that works better. Browsers return the languages in order of preference, so that simplifies the problem. While the language designator can be more than two characters (e.g. - "EN-US"), typically the first two are sufficient. In the following code example I'm looking for a match from a list of known languages my program is aware of.

$known_langs = array('en','fr','de','es');
$user_pref_langs = explode(',', $_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE']);

foreach($user_pref_langs as $idx => $lang) {
    $lang = substr($lang, 0, 2);
    if (in_array($lang, $known_langs)) {
        echo "Preferred language is $lang";
        break;
    }
}

I hope you find this a quick and simple solution that you can easily use in your code. I've been using this in production for quite a while.

1
  • 6
    "Browsers return the languages in order of preference" — They might do, but you should not depend on that. Use q values to determine preference, that's what the spec says you should do.
    – Quentin
    Oct 1, 2016 at 9:17
7

Try this one:

#########################################################
# Copyright © 2008 Darrin Yeager                        #
# https://www.dyeager.org/                               #
# Licensed under BSD license.                           #
#   https://www.dyeager.org/downloads/license-bsd.txt    #
#########################################################

function getDefaultLanguage() {
   if (isset($_SERVER["HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE"]))
      return parseDefaultLanguage($_SERVER["HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE"]);
   else
      return parseDefaultLanguage(NULL);
   }

function parseDefaultLanguage($http_accept, $deflang = "en") {
   if(isset($http_accept) && strlen($http_accept) > 1)  {
      # Split possible languages into array
      $x = explode(",",$http_accept);
      foreach ($x as $val) {
         #check for q-value and create associative array. No q-value means 1 by rule
         if(preg_match("/(.*);q=([0-1]{0,1}.\d{0,4})/i",$val,$matches))
            $lang[$matches[1]] = (float)$matches[2];
         else
            $lang[$val] = 1.0;
      }

      #return default language (highest q-value)
      $qval = 0.0;
      foreach ($lang as $key => $value) {
         if ($value > $qval) {
            $qval = (float)$value;
            $deflang = $key;
         }
      }
   }
   return strtolower($deflang);
}
3
  • Hey could you explain the regex that should catch the q value with [0-1]{0,1}.\d{0,4} ? First I guess you mean \. instead of . right? And isn't q always of the form 0.1324 or something? Wouldn't it be then sufficient to write 0\.?\d{0,4}? If you have q=1.0 then you can go in the else part.
    – Adam
    Sep 22, 2017 at 9:35
  • Would be great to see a usage example here.
    – Simon E.
    Jan 12, 2018 at 6:19
  • 2
    @SimonEast var_dump( getDefaultLanguage());
    – jirarium
    Jul 9, 2019 at 5:44
7

Unfortunately, none of the answers to this question takes into account some valid HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE such as:

  • q=0.8,en-US;q=0.5,en;q=0.3: having the q priority value at first place.
  • ZH-CN: old browsers that capitalise (wrongly) the whole langcode.
  • *: that basically say "serve whatever language you have".

After a comprehensive test with thousands of different Accept-Languages that reached my server, this is my language detection method:

define('SUPPORTED_LANGUAGES', ['en', 'es']);

function detect_language($fallback='en') {
    foreach (preg_split('/[;,]/', $_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE']) as $sub) {
        if (substr($sub, 0, 2) == 'q=') continue;
        if (strpos($sub, '-') !== false) $sub = explode('-', $sub)[0];
        if (in_array(strtolower($sub), SUPPORTED_LANGUAGES)) return $sub;
    }
    return $fallback;
}
4

The following script is a modified version of Xeoncross's code (thank you for that Xeoncross) that falls-back to a default language setting if no languages match the supported ones, or if a match is found it replaces the default language setting with a new one according to the language priority.

In this scenario the user's browser is set in order of priority to Spanish, Dutch, US English and English and the application supports English and Dutch only with no regional variations and English is the default language. The order of the values in the "HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE" string is not important if for some reason the browser does not order the values correctly.

$supported_languages = array("en","nl");
$supported_languages = array_flip($supported_languages);
var_dump($supported_languages); // array(2) { ["en"]=> int(0) ["nl"]=> int(1) }

$http_accept_language = $_SERVER["HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE"]; // es,nl;q=0.8,en-us;q=0.5,en;q=0.3

preg_match_all('~([\w-]+)(?:[^,\d]+([\d.]+))?~', strtolower($http_accept_language), $matches, PREG_SET_ORDER);

$available_languages = array();

foreach ($matches as $match)
{
    list($language_code,$language_region) = explode('-', $match[1]) + array('', '');

    $priority = isset($match[2]) ? (float) $match[2] : 1.0;

    $available_languages[][$language_code] = $priority;
}

var_dump($available_languages);

/*
array(4) {
    [0]=>
    array(1) {
        ["es"]=>
        float(1)
    }
    [1]=>
    array(1) {
        ["nl"]=>
        float(0.8)
    }
    [2]=>
    array(1) {
        ["en"]=>
        float(0.5)
    }
    [3]=>
    array(1) {
        ["en"]=>
        float(0.3)
    }
}
*/

$default_priority = (float) 0;
$default_language_code = 'en';

foreach ($available_languages as $key => $value)
{
    $language_code = key($value);
    $priority = $value[$language_code];

    if ($priority > $default_priority && array_key_exists($language_code,$supported_languages))
    {
        $default_priority = $priority;
        $default_language_code = $language_code;

        var_dump($default_priority); // float(0.8)
        var_dump($default_language_code); // string(2) "nl"
    }
}

var_dump($default_language_code); // string(2) "nl" 
4

Quick and simple:

$language = trim(substr( strtok(strtok($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'], ','), ';'), 0, 5));

NOTE: The first language code is what is being used by the browser, the rest are other languages the user has setup in the browser.

Some languages have a region code, eg. en-GB, others just have the language code, eg. sk.

If you just want the language and not the region (eg. en, fr, es, etc.), you can use:

$language =substr($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'], 0, 2);
3

There is a method in php-intl extension:

 locale_accept_from_http($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'])
3
  • It's not present by default in my PHP 7.4 installation. How do I enable it? Feb 10 at 16:30
  • Yes, you need to install php-intl extension on your computer Feb 15 at 4:48
  • In particular, since 7.4 is not the latest PHP, I need to install "php7.4-intl". Feb 15 at 17:13
2

I think the cleanest way is this!

 <?php
  $lang = substr($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'], 0, 2);
  $supportedLanguages=['en','fr','gr'];
  if(!in_array($lang,$supportedLanguages)){
     $lang='en';
  }
    require("index_".$lang.".php");
1
  • 1
    This doesn't account for language priorities within the header.
    – Simon E.
    Jan 12, 2018 at 6:20
1

FOR LARAVEL USERS, here's a single line of code that returns a very clean collection (or array) of preferred languages:

$langs = Str::of($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'])
        ->explode(',')
        ->transform(fn($lang) => Str::substr($lang, 0, 2))
        ->unique();
1

Since PHP 5.3.0 there is a Locale class bundled with the php-intl extension which has a method for this:

echo Locale::acceptFromHttp($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE']);

or procedural style:

locale_accept_from_http($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE']);

https://www.php.net/manual/en/locale.acceptfromhttp.php

0

All of the above with fallback to 'en':

$lang = substr(explode(',',$_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'])[0],0,2)?:'en';

...or with default language fallback and known language array:

function lang( $l = ['en'], $u ){
    return $l[
        array_keys(
            $l,
            substr(
                explode(
                    ',',
                    $u ?: $_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE']
                )[0],
                0,
                2
            )
        )[0]
    ] ?: $l[0];
}

One Line:

function lang($l=['en'],$u){return $l[array_keys($l,substr(explode(',',$u?:$_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'])[0],0,2))[0]]?:$l[0];}

Examples:

// first known lang is always default
$_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'] = 'en-us';
lang(['de']); // 'de'
lang(['de','en']); // 'en'

// manual set accept-language
lang(['de'],'en-us'); // 'de'
lang(['de'],'de-de, en-us'); // 'de'
lang(['en','fr'],'de-de, en-us'); // 'en'
lang(['en','fr'],'fr-fr, en-us'); // 'fr'
lang(['de','en'],'fr-fr, en-us'); // 'de'
0
0

Try,

$lang = substr($_SERVER['HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE'], 0,2);

if ($lang == 'tr') {
include_once('include/language/tr.php');
}elseif ($lang == 'en') {
include_once('include/language/en.php');
}elseif ($lang == 'de') {
include_once('include/language/de.php');
}elseif ($lang == 'fr') {
include_once('include/language/fr.php');
}else{
include_once('include/language/tr.php');
}

Thanks to

-1

I've got this one, which sets a cookie. And as you can see, it first checks if the language is posted by the user. Because browser language not always tells about the user.

<?php   
    $lang = getenv("HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE");
    $set_lang = explode(',', $lang);
    if (isset($_POST['lang'])) 
        {
            $taal = $_POST['lang'];
            setcookie("lang", $taal);
            header('Location: /p/');
        }
    else 
        {
            setcookie("lang", $set_lang[0]);
            echo $set_lang[0];
            echo '<br>';
            echo $set_lang[1];
            header('Location: /p/');
        } 
?>
2
  • 11
    I guess you can't send headers when you already echoed stuff?
    – user1539061
    Jul 19, 2012 at 20:31
  • 2
    I think the indention behind this post makes sense, which is to provide the user with a way to switch the language, and remembering this decision. Language detection should only be done once to best guess the first selection.
    – danijar
    Nov 4, 2013 at 19:24

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