12

I am an Angular beginner, I read the documentation of Angular, and it's hard for such an elementary thing... I want that the dates and other things in my application have the French locale, and not the default 'en-US'...

I started to read this Angular documentation, that seems a little bit incomplete, cause, I did the doc states, and failed:

>...\ClientApp>ng serve --configuration=fr
Configuration 'fr' could not be found in project 'ClientApp'.

OK, now I look on another documentation page on the Date pipe. It states:

{{ value_expression | date [ : format [ : timezone [ : locale ] ] ] }}

but ANY example on how to use the locale, so, I tried to do it in a test application link, like this {{myDate | date: 'medium': undefined : 'fr'}} but it displays nothing... I have in the console:

ERROR
Error: InvalidPipeArgument: 'Missing locale data for the locale "fr".' for pipe 'DatePipe'

what else should I do or install to display in Angular a date in the French format?

Angular CLI: 6.1.5
Node: 8.11.1
OS: win32 x64
Angular: 6.1.8

5 Answers 5

26

Try adding to your app module the following code

import { registerLocaleData } from '@angular/common';
import localeFr from '@angular/common/locales/fr';

// the second parameter 'fr' is optional
registerLocaleData(localeFr, 'fr');

https://angular.io/guide/i18n#i18n-pipes

EDIT: Then if you want to sets this locale as default you need to set the LOCALE_ID injection token as 'fr' like that :

{provide: LOCALE_ID, useValue: 'fr' }

In your app module

Hope it helps

20
  • Does not find the fr module, I tried here stackblitz.com/edit/angular-gitter-vjjuas
    – serge
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:02
  • I saw, but in local, how about the ng serve, what is wrong with it? should I serve it in "fr" or serve as usually ng serve -o?
    – serge
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:12
  • and, just, have a look on the component html I put {{myDate | date: 'medium'}} and it turns back to English, I want all my application to be in French without explicit set on every parameter
    – serge
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:15
  • It depends on how you want to internationalize you app. if you use the github.com/ngx-translate/core library, you won't need to serve it in fr. If you keep the i18n process in the angular doc, you will need to serve it as fr
    – pierre
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:20
  • 1
    actually I don't want to internationalize the application. I just want my dates and numbers be in French format, it's all I need
    – serge
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:23
9

The answer depends on the version of angular that you are using. You have to provide for the LOCALE which you will be using.The default LOCALE is configured as en-US and for all others, you have to manually add the same as providers. Only the way of providing for the LOCALES differs in the angular versions. Check the below:

  1. Angular 5 and above:

    Add the following lines in your app.module.ts:

    import { registerLocaleData } from '@angular/common';
    import localeFr from '@angular/common/locales/fr';
    registerLocaleData(localeFr, 'fr');
    
  2. Below Angular 5:

    Add the following lines in your app.module.ts:

    import { LOCALE_ID } from '@angular/core';
    
    @NgModule({
        imports : [],
        providers: [ { provide: LOCALE_ID, useValue: "fr-FR" }]
        //Your code
    })
    
9
  • I have the 6th Angular, but I try to do in the sample from the OP(stackblitz.com/edit/angular-gitter-vjjuas), it says "Cannot find module @angular/common/locales/fr"
    – serge
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:01
  • how about the ng serve, what is wrong with it? should I serve it in "fr" or serve as usually ng serve -o?
    – serge
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:11
  • and how is supposed the date pipe to work with the locale? {myDate | date: 'short': 'fr'}?
    – serge
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:14
  • First of all, the given code works on stackblitz. If you still face a problem, try import { registerLocaleData, localeFr} from '@angular/common'; for the import. Sep 21, 2018 at 11:07
  • Secondly, you can use the locale parameter as fr will display dates, percentages, text etc all in the local format. Check - medium.com/frontend-fun/… Sep 21, 2018 at 11:11
4

Simply try this(french format: [Day name] [Day number] [Month name] [Year number])

{{myDate | date:'EEEE, d,MMMM, y'}}

if you dont want day name remove 'EEEE' from pipe

OR

  1. update your module.ts

    import { NgModule, LOCALE_ID } from '@angular/core';

    import { registerLocaleData } from '@angular/common';

    import localeFr from '@angular/common/locales/fr';

    registerLocaleData(localeFr);

    .....

    @NgModule({

    ..... providers: [ {provide: LOCALE_ID, useValue: "fr-CA" } ]

    })

will do the work

8
  • stackblitz.com/edit/angular-gitter-vjjuas, it does not find the fr module, and why should I use fr-CA? )
    – serge
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:05
  • 1
    simply using the format will not display me the month names in French
    – serge
    Sep 21, 2018 at 10:07
  • its Java Locale “French (Canada)” (fr-CA) Sep 21, 2018 at 10:42
  • I am getting a perfect response : vendredi 21 septembre 2018. @NgModule({ imports: [ providers: [ {provide: LOCALE_ID, useValue: "fr-CA" } }) Sep 21, 2018 at 10:54
  • problem may be with plunker try it in your local environment. working fine in my angular 6 Application Sep 21, 2018 at 10:57
2

The Internet seems to agree with Jahnavi Paliwal's answer on this point, however I believe we are now supposed to be setting it via angular.json file and FETCHING it (if we need to) via the LOCALE_ID provider. If you do the following then the Date Pipe and Angular Material DatePicker (etc.) will use the correct Locale out of the box without having to manually change LOCALE_ID in your Module definition.

"projects": {
  "myProject": {
    "projectType": "application",
    ...
    },
    "i18n": {
      "sourceLocale": "en-GB" // <-- specify your preferred default
    },
    "architect": {
      "build": {
        ...
        "options": {
          "localize": true, // <-- tell Angular to check
          ...
          "aot": true,
          "outputPath": "dist",
1
  • This should be the selected answer.
    – jlguenego
    Dec 9, 2023 at 17:05
1

Using Pipes and No other installations.

LocalizedDatePipe.ts

import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';
import { Locale } from 'src/app/contentful/interfaces/locale';

@Pipe({
  name: 'localizedDate',
})
export class LocalizedDatePipe implements PipeTransform {
  transform(value: any, locale: any): any {
    const date = new Date(value);
    const options: Intl.DateTimeFormatOptions = {
      month: 'short',
      day: 'numeric',
      year: 'numeric',
    };
    return date.toLocaleDateString(locale, options);
  }
}

Search-overlay.component.html

<span *ngIf="card.date" class="hero-cards-carousel__date">
 {{ card.date | localizedDate: vm.locale?.code }}
 </span>

Result

"20. Dez. 2012"

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