13

On my Windows development machine, I have set the locale to ita:

setlocale(LC_TIME, 'ita');
echo strftime('%b'); // dic

While (I suppose, can't test right now) on a *nix system, I should use it:

setlocale(LC_TIME, 'it');

If I try to set it on my Windows it doesn't work, printing Dec.

It seems I can't rely on setlocale(), so I should use IntlDateFormatter as suggested by @hakre. However, I can find the constant that gives me the month name and the short one:

IntlDateFormatter::NONE (integer)
Do not include this element

IntlDateFormatter::FULL (integer)
Completely specified style (Tuesday, April 12, 1952 AD or 3:30:42pm PST)

IntlDateFormatter::LONG (integer)
Long style (January 12, 1952 or 3:30:32pm)

IntlDateFormatter::MEDIUM (integer)
Medium style (Jan 12, 1952)

IntlDateFormatter::SHORT (integer)
Most abbreviated style, only essential data (12/13/52 or 3:30pm)
3
  • We already had this today. Please use the search.
    – hakre
    Dec 21, 2012 at 14:59
  • 1
    @hakre sorry, can't find. If you point me to the right question I'll delete this...
    – gremo
    Dec 21, 2012 at 15:04
  • 1
    @hakre I forgot to say that i need only month names and abbreviated ones, not a full date format. Can't find this options in IntlDateFormatter.
    – gremo
    Dec 21, 2012 at 15:17

2 Answers 2

34

From the reference, some month formatting codes:

Symbol     Meaning             Example:            

M          month in year       M or MM    09       
                               MMM        Sept     
                               MMMM       September
                               MMMMM      S        

The PHP function to set the format is: IntlDateFormatter::setPattern, some examples:

class LocaleDateFormat
{
    private $locale;
    private $pattern;

    public function __construct($pattern, $locale = 'en_US') {
        $this->setLocale($locale);
        $this->setPattern($pattern);
    }

    public function setLocale($locale) {
        $this->locale = $locale;
    }

    public function setPattern($pattern) {
        $this->pattern = $pattern;
    }

    public function localeFormat($locale, $date) {
        $this->setLocale($locale);
        return $this->format($date);
    }

    public function format($date) {
        $formatter = new IntlDateFormatter($this->locale, IntlDateFormatter::FULL, IntlDateFormatter::FULL);
        $formatter->setPattern($this->pattern);
        return $formatter->format($date);
    }
}

$dateFormat = new LocaleDateFormat('MMMM'); # Long Month Names

$date = new DateTime(); # Now

$locales = ["en_US", "de_DE", "sv_SE", "ru_RU"];
foreach ($locales as $i => $locale) {
    $month = $dateFormat->localeFormat($locale, $date);
    printf("%d. %s - %s\n", $i+1, $locale, $month);
}

Output:

1. en_US - December
2. de_DE - Dezember
3. sv_SE - december
4. ru_RU - декабря

For a list of locales see here:


The actual example for the short monthnames across different locales:

$locales    = ["en_US", "de_DE", "sv_SE", "ru_RU", 'it', 'it_IT', 'it_CH'];
$dateFormat = new LocaleDateFormat('MMM'); # Short Month Names

$date = new DateTime(); # Now

foreach (range(1, 12) as $monthNumber)
{
    $date->setDate(2012, $monthNumber, 1);

    printf("%02d:    ", $monthNumber);

    foreach ($locales as $locale)
    {
        $monthLabel = $dateFormat->localeFormat($locale, $date);
        $pad = str_repeat(' ', max(0, 8 - mb_strlen($monthLabel, 'UTF-8')));
        printf("%s: %s%s  ", $locale, $monthLabel, $pad);
    }

    echo "\n";
}

Exemplary output:

01:    en_US: Jan       de_DE: Jan       sv_SE: jan       ru_RU: янв.      it: gen       it_IT: gen       it_CH: gen       
02:    en_US: Feb       de_DE: Feb       sv_SE: feb       ru_RU: февр.     it: feb       it_IT: feb       it_CH: feb       
03:    en_US: Mar       de_DE: Mär       sv_SE: mar       ru_RU: марта     it: mar       it_IT: mar       it_CH: mar       
04:    en_US: Apr       de_DE: Apr       sv_SE: apr       ru_RU: апр.      it: apr       it_IT: apr       it_CH: apr       
05:    en_US: May       de_DE: Mai       sv_SE: maj       ru_RU: мая       it: mag       it_IT: mag       it_CH: mag       
06:    en_US: Jun       de_DE: Jun       sv_SE: jun       ru_RU: июня      it: giu       it_IT: giu       it_CH: giu       
07:    en_US: Jul       de_DE: Jul       sv_SE: jul       ru_RU: июля      it: lug       it_IT: lug       it_CH: lug       
08:    en_US: Aug       de_DE: Aug       sv_SE: aug       ru_RU: авг.      it: ago       it_IT: ago       it_CH: ago       
09:    en_US: Sep       de_DE: Sep       sv_SE: sep       ru_RU: сент.     it: set       it_IT: set       it_CH: set       
10:    en_US: Oct       de_DE: Okt       sv_SE: okt       ru_RU: окт.      it: ott       it_IT: ott       it_CH: ott       
11:    en_US: Nov       de_DE: Nov       sv_SE: nov       ru_RU: нояб.     it: nov       it_IT: nov       it_CH: nov       
12:    en_US: Dec       de_DE: Dez       sv_SE: dec       ru_RU: дек.      it: dic       it_IT: dic       it_CH: dic      
4
  • Quite the same answer at the same time :) i was looking for all month names, not for a given date by the way :)
    – gremo
    Dec 21, 2012 at 15:54
  • @Gremo: I extended the answer. If you're missing translations, you need to look upstream in the ICU project or the Unicode CLDR Project if they exist. Another alternative is that you keep translations for your own for the monthnames, but I'd say it's worth to get data into CLDR if missing. Edit: Here is the current list of short monthnames translations, Gregorian calendar: unicode.org/cldr/charts/by_type/…
    – hakre
    Dec 21, 2012 at 16:14
  • I wish all answer on the Network would be so clear and detailed ;) Aug 13, 2014 at 14:50
  • 1
    The formatting guide has moved here: unicode-org.github.io/icu/userguide/format_parse/datetime
    – Blaise
    Jan 5, 2022 at 8:09
3

Quite ugly, but it works:

$formatter = \IntlDateFormatter::create(
    'it',
    \IntlDateFormatter::LONG,
    \IntlDateFormatter::NONE,
    \DateTimeZone::UTC, // Doesn't matter
    \IntlDateFormatter::GREGORIAN,
    'MMM'
);

$months = array_map(
    function($m) use($formatter){
        return $formatter->format(mktime(0, 0, 0, $m, 2, 1970));
    },
    range(1, 12)
);

var_dump($months);

Strange thing is with it month names are lower case, with en they have the right case. I'll leave the question unanswered looking for a better solution!

1
  • 2
    Month names in Spanish are not capitalized. Perhaps Italian works the same way.
    – Danita
    Aug 5, 2014 at 15:19

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