How can I localize bundle display name of an iPhone app? The name displayed in iPhone main screen under app icon. I wish a single binary bundle package which will be displayed multilingually.
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Currently the procedures are described in this official document: developer.apple.com/library/prerelease/ios/documentation/MacOSX/…– eonilJul 17, 2014 at 5:42
6 Answers
Here's some instructions:
- Create a new empty file called
InfoPlist.strings
- Open up the Navigator (
cmd-opt-0
) and select the first pane - Click the plus for a localization
- Xcode (4.3) goes a bit funny and deselects your file. It's placed it into a localization folder (probably called
en.lproj
in the item's original folder. Re-select it in the Project Navigator. - Your file now has (probably) English in the Localization list. Click the plus button to add another language.
It's generally good to start with all the items you want to localize in the same folder, that way when they get localized, Xcode doesn't create a whole bunch of en.lproj
and ja.lproj
files all over your project. Call it something like "Localized Resources".
You can localize the app name now by adding the localized name to each file like this (for the French localized file):
"CFBundleDisplayName" = "Bonjour";
Okay, even though this is a pretty old question, it came up high on my google searches for this topic. Hence I thought it might make sense to update the answers:
In Xcode 4.X, follow these steps to localize your bundle name:
- File->New->File...
- Choose Resource->Strings File
- Type in the Filename as InfoPlist.strings and save it in the correct location. EVEN If your plist is named App-Info.plist - the filename is ALWAYS InfoPlist.strings!
- Now the file should be open (otherwise, select it). In the left drawer, select "Localize"
and after confirming that the newly created file is moved to the English folder, check the other languages you want. For a language to show up here, it needs to be listed as your localization languages
Add these two lines to the InfoPlist.strings for the correct language:
"CFBundleDisplayName" = "Name";
"CFBundleName" = "Name";
- Add a new line to your App-Info.plist, "Localization native Development Region" - this set's the default development region
And after "only" 6 simple steps, you can set your localized app name!!11!1111
Xcode 9.4.1
Create a new file called InfoPlist.string (string file)
Add your languages to this file, in the Localization-menu on the right, after clicking once on the new file. Expand the InfoPlist.sting file and add CFBundleDisplayName in all files with your translations:
"CFBundleDisplayName" = "My i18n App Name";
In Info.plist add two new values(or make sure they are there):
Bundle display name = $(PRODUCT_NAME)
Application has localized display name = YES
Add InfoPlist.strings to your project and localize it. Put this in different languages:
"CFBundleDisplayName" = "App Name";
In Info.plist provide the localized (translated) name for the following keys:
Bundle Display Name
Bundle Name
This will show up your application translated name under the icon on iPhone desktop
Updated Xcode 13 2022
First add any localisations you need in the project info
Then similar to all the older answers,
- create a new strings file called InfoPlist
- Tick all the localisations you added in the right bar
- use the breadcrumb nav to update the CFBundleDisplayName prop per locale
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I don't understand step 1:
create a new strings file called InfoPlist
where do we do this? Where do we create it and in which folder?– mesqueebMar 28 at 9:56 -
Sorry for the late response @mesqueeb go to file > create new file> strings file May 19 at 14:08