11

In an android app, I have the following string resources:

<plurals name="test">
   <item quantity="zero">"I have 0 item"</item>
   <item quantity="one">"I have 1 item"</item>
   <item quantity="other">"I have several items"</item>
</plurals>

And the following line of code:

String text = getResources().getQuantityString(R.plurals.test, 0)

which I would expect to return

I have 0 item

But it actually returns

I have 1 item

Why ?

5

2 Answers 2

8

Quantity Strings are broken on some Plattforms and phones as the issue Tracker and this discussion "Should Plurals and Quantity Strings be used" points out. It depends on many factors which you cannot control (i.e. localization on the phone).

One solution can be to take an external library like this one, which mimes the same functionallity.

Another solution is stated in the documentation of plurals in android. Avoid using it and use "quantity-neutral" formulations like "Books: 1"

3
  • I thinkg that for now I'll just declare 2 string resources and pick the right one programatically
    – sdabet
    Nov 22, 2012 at 10:46
  • 1
    It's inconvenient, but as the Google Engineer pointed out in the Issue Tracker thread, this is the intended behavior. In English, you only need "one" and "other". The reason is that in English, you have "0 books", "1 book", and "2+ books". The conjugation for "zero" is the same as for "other". The reason the support exists, is that in some languages (the documentation lists Arabic as an example), "zero" is actually conjugated differently than plurals.
    – karl
    Jun 20, 2014 at 19:37
  • I believe it works as expected. Tor Norbye about Quantity Strings
    – Sufian
    Aug 4, 2015 at 11:18
-5

Change the code like this

String text = getResources().getQuantityString(R.plurals.test, 0,0);
1
  • 2
    he doesn't have any % inside his quantity-strings, so for what reason he should insert FORMAT arguments? My guess is that this feature is still broken on many android phones
    – Rafael T
    Nov 21, 2012 at 12:33

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