161

My error messages are displayed in French. How can I change my system language setting so the error messages will be displayed in English?

0

21 Answers 21

178

You can set this using the Sys.setenv() function. My R session defaults to English, so I'll set it to French and then back again:

> Sys.setenv(LANG = "fr")
> 2 + x
Erreur : objet 'x' introuvable
> Sys.setenv(LANG = "en")
> 2 + x
Error: object 'x' not found

A list of the abbreviations can be found here.

Sys.getenv() gives you a list of all the environment variables that are set.

3
  • 24
    This changes the Lang temporarily(during the R session). To change it once for all , you need to add the environment variable to your system, and relaunch RStudio so thistake effect.
    – agstudy
    Dec 1, 2012 at 15:51
  • This solution works well but when I reopen R it returns to my locale (which is Italian).
    – SabDeM
    May 14, 2015 at 23:26
  • 3
    @SabDeM - yes, indeed. Heed the note of agstudy above and set the environment variable: stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-devel/library/base/html/EnvVar.html
    – Chase
    May 15, 2015 at 4:22
48

In the case of RStudio for Windows I succeeded in changing the language following the instructions found in R for Windows FAQ, in particular I wrote:

language = EN

inside the file Rconsole (in my installation it is C:\Program Files\R\R-2.15.2\etc\Rconsole); this works also for the command Rscript.

For example you can locate the Rconsole file with this two commands from a command prompt:

cd \

dir Rconsole /s

The first one make the root as the current directory, the second one looks for the Rconsole file.

In the following screenshot you have that Rconsole file is in the folder C:\Program Files\R\R-3.4.1\etc.

You may have more than one location, in that case you may edit all the Rconsole files.

enter image description here

After that you can open the Rconsole file with your favorite editor and look for the line language = and then append EN at the end of that line.

In the following screenshot the interesting line is the number 70 and you have to append EN at the end of it. enter image description here

2
  • 1
    Does not work for me. Changing the file and setting the language to EN has no effect on the language of error messages. I can see that it would be logical for this to work, but I assume that in the meantime Windows has several other language configuration directives (maybe the system's language, the system's keyboard layout) that interact in complex and intransparent ways.
    – 0range
    Mar 31, 2020 at 13:27
  • @0range did you try cd \ and dir Rconsole /s in order to look for multiple files? Apr 1, 2020 at 6:50
26

For mac users, I found this on the R for Mac FAQ

If you use a non-standard setup (e.g. different language than formats), you can override the auto-detection performed by setting `force.LANG' defaults setting, such as for example

 defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG en_US.UTF-8 

when run in Terminal it will enforce US-english setting regardless of the system setting. If you don't know what Terminal is you can use this R command instead:

 system("defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG en_US.UTF-8") 

but do not forget to quit R and start R.app again afterwards. Please note that you must always use `.UTF-8' version of the locale, otherwise R.app will not work properly.

This helped me to change my console language from Chinese to English.

1
  • Confirmed as working for macOS High Sierra 10.13.4 and R3.2.3 today
    – R Yoda
    Jun 2, 2018 at 22:12
25

This works from command line :

$ export LANG=en_US.UTF-8

None of the other answers above worked for me

1
  • if one runs R directly from the command line, the answer above can be written inside the .bash_profile file (in Mac OS). Then, just type source .bash_profile to make the change effective in the window. obs: assuming pwd is ~, i.e. home directory. Jan 30, 2018 at 13:57
17

If you use Ubuntu you will set

LANGUAGE=en 

in /etc/R/Renviron.site.

3
  • 1
    This is true but not very helpful since you have to edit that file from the terminal. For noobs like me googling this here is how: type sudo nano /etc/R/Renviron.site into the terminal, followed by your password when the terminal asks you for it. Then you can edit that file right in the terminal. Add the line linellobocki mentions, then push ctrl + x to exit. Then type y to confirm that you want to save changes and hit enter to confirm the name and directory of the file.
    – Jakob
    Jun 15, 2018 at 2:52
  • How can I do this in anaconda environment? You must know when using a supercomputer it usual to install R and dependencies locally, and anaconda is good for that, but now I need to set the LANGUAGE to 'en' and IDK where it is this Renviron.site file
    – Sergio
    Jan 24, 2019 at 2:25
  • It works for me (terminal) but the file is '~/.Renviron.site`.
    – Shrek Tan
    Mar 28, 2020 at 9:59
8

You may also want to be aware of the difference between, for example, Sys.setenv(LANG = "ru") and Sys.setlocale(locale = "ru_RU.utf8").

> Sys.setlocale(locale = "ru_RU.utf8")
[1] "LC_CTYPE=ru_RU.utf8;LC_NUMERIC=C;LC_TIME=ru_RU.utf8;LC_COLLATE=ru_RU.utf8;LC_MONETARY=ru_RU.utf8;LC_MESSAGES=en_IE.utf8;LC_PAPER=en_IE.utf8;LC_NAME=en_IE.utf8;LC_ADDRESS=en_IE.utf8;LC_TELEPHONE=en_IE.utf8;LC_MEASUREMENT=en_IE.utf8;LC_IDENTIFICATION=en_IE.utf8"

If you are interested in changing the behaviour of functions that refer to one of these elements (e.g strptime to extract dates), you should use Sys.setlocale(). See ?Sys.setlocale for more details. In order to see all available languages on a linux system, you can run

system("locale -a", intern = TRUE)
8

To permanently make it works, in both R and Rstudio (with Win 10), one way to do this is to run the script every time automatically in the background initially.

No more changing the system language that influence the windows. No more R only but fail in Rstudio. No more run a script every time manually. No more admin right but fail. No more short-cut setting but fail.

Step 1. Use your system search, to find the file named "Rprofile"

My response is

C:\Program Files\R\R-4.0.5\library\base\R

C:\Program Files\R\R-4.0.5\etc

Step 2. Edit C:\Program Files\R\R-4.0.5\library\base\R\Rprofile

The content:

  • This is the system Rprofile file. It is always run on startup.
  • Additional commands can be placed in site or user Rprofile files
  • (see ?Rprofile) ... and so on.

Step 3. Add Sys.setenv(LANGUAGE="en") at the end of the scrip

local({
    Sys.setenv(LANGUAGE="en")
})

P.S. If you encounter the issue of authorization/saving, move this file to desktop and replace the original file after editing.

3
  • I am confused. Other answers propose setting "LANG", others "LANGUAGE". Why?
    – R Yoda
    Jul 9, 2021 at 14:27
  • Does not matter in fact. The only question is if this method(both "LANG"/"LANGUAGE") works for you. Have fun in the data science.
    – Ivan C.
    Jul 10, 2021 at 16:13
  • Thank you. This is also very handy whenn using renv
    – ava
    Nov 30, 2022 at 9:58
5

type this first: system("defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG en_US.UTF-8") then you will get a index number(in my case is 127)

then type: Sys.setenv(LANG = "en") then type the number and ENTER 127

1
  • this was only working for me during one R session
    – AN_
    Apr 24, 2021 at 13:34
5

For me worked:

Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", "en_US.utf8")

Testing:

> Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", "en_US.utf8")
[1] "en_US.utf8"
> x[3]
Error: object 'x' not found

Also working to get english messages:

Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", "C")

To reset to german messages I used

Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", "de_DE.utf8")

Here is the start of my sessionInfo:

> sessionInfo()
R version 3.4.1 (2017-06-30)
Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu (64-bit)
Running under: Ubuntu 16.04.2 LTS
1
  • Note: This does not work on Windows (see help for Sys.setlocale: "Some systems (not Windows) will also support LC_MESSAGES...")
    – R Yoda
    Aug 25, 2021 at 17:06
4

A simple solution would be setting export Lang=C in your bash script. I had a similar issue where the default language was german so it reverted back to english.

2
  • From R one can do system("export Lang=C")
    – jogo
    May 5, 2017 at 6:18
  • This is a good solution. I'm running R using anaconda and your solution worked for me.
    – Sergio
    Jan 24, 2019 at 2:33
3

If you want to change R's language in terminal to English forever, this works fine for me in macOS:

Open terminal.app, and say:

touch .bash_profile

Then say:

open -a TextEdit.app .bash_profile

These two commands will help you open ".bash_profile" file in TextEdit.

Add this to ".bash_profile" file:

export LANG=en_US.UTF-8

Then save the file, reopen terminal and type R, you will find it's language has changed to english.

If you want language come back to it's original, just simply add a # before export LANG=en_US.UTF-8.

2

The only thing that worked for me was uninstalling R entirely (make sure to remove it from the Programs files as well), and install it, but unselect Message Translations during the installation process. When I installed R, and subsequently RCmdr, it finally came up in English.

0
1

In Ubuntu 14.04 LTS I had to remove the # from the comment #LANGUAGE=EN.
All other options din not work for me.

0
1

Change your current regional format to a different regional format in region settings on time&language settings in Windows by clicking on your time/date in lower right corner > adjust time/date > Region > change regional format to UK or US

1

This worked for me with a windows 10 laptop in German, where I wanted i.e. lubridate to return dates in English:

Sys.setlocale("LC_TIME", "English")
0

Im using R Studio on a Mac and I couldn't find the Rconsole file. So I took a more brutal way and just deleted the unwanted language files from the R app. You just have to go to your Rapp in your application Folder, right click, show package content then /contents/Resources/. There are the language files e.g. English.lproj or in my case de.lproj wich I deleted. After restarting R, error messages appear in English.. Maybe thats helpful!

0

you simply have to change the basic language of microsoft on your computer!

press the windows button together with r, and tip the following code into the window that is opened

control.exe /name Microsoft.Language

load the language package you want to use and change the options. but take care, this will change also your keyboard layout!

0

on windows, when you have no admin right, just create a new program shortcut to Rgui.exe. Then in the properties of that shortcut, go to the 'Shortcut' tab and modify the target to include the system language of your choice, e.g. "C:\Program Files\R\R-3.5.3\bin\x64\Rgui.exe" LANGUAGE=en

0

I know a very simple solution to the problem of how to change the language of error messages and program descriptions in Rstudio, R, and R Commander.

The answer:

Go to C:\Program Files\R\R-4.3.1\library\translations and delete the folder with the language you are trying to avoid, for example, "ru", "fr", and so on. If you are not sure or afraid of something ... -)), you can move the folder to another location, for example, to D:. That’s it.

Of course, you should do the above things in your current version of R. The version I use now is R-4.3.1. This is the advice that Professor John Fox (the author of R Commander) gave me several years ago. Thank you, Professor!

0

There are two steps to change language in RStudio: 1: Go to directory C:\Program Files\R\R-4.3.2\library\base\R Add this code at the end of the RProfile

   local({
        Sys.setenv(LANGUAGE="en")
    }) 

2: Go to directory C:\Program Files\R\R-4.3.2\etc add en to RConsole file.

Language for messages

language = en // add en

0

On a Mac, you would have to edit the file /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Resources/etc/Renviron as administrator. Add the line LANGUAGE=en to the file. Tried with R version 4.3.2 under MacOS "Sonoma" 14.3.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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