locale (5)





NAME

       locale - Describes a locale definition file


DESCRIPTION

       The  locale  definition  files  contains  all  the information that the
       localedef(1) command  needs  to  convert  it  into  the  binary  locale
       database.

       The  definition  files consist of sections which each describe a locale
       category in detail.


SYNTAX

       The locale definition file starts with a header that may consist of the
       following keywords:

       <escape_char>
              is  followed  by  a character that should be used as the escape-
              character for the rest of  the  file  to  mark  characters  that
              should be interpreted in a special way. It defaults to the back-
              slash ( \ ).

       <comment_char>
              is followed by a character that will be  used  as  the  comment-
              character  for  the  rest of the file. It defaults to the number
              sign (#).

       The locale definition has one part for each locale category.  Each part
       can  be  copied  from  another  existing  locale or can be defined from
       scratch. If the category should be copied, the only  valid  keyword  in
       the  definition is copy followed by the name of the locale which should
       be copied.

   LC_CTYPE
       LC_CTYPE category starts with the string LC_CTYPE in the first  column.

       There are the following keywords allowed:

       upper  followed  by a list of uppercase letters. The letters A trough Z
              are included automatically. Characters also specified as  cntrl,
              digit, punct, or space are not allowed.

       lower  followed  by a list of lowercase letters. The letters a trough z
              are included automatically. Characters also specified as  cntrl,
              digit, punct, or space are not allowed.

       alpha  followed by a list of letters. All character specified as either
              upper or lower are automatically included. Characters also spec-
              ified as cntrl, digit, punct, or space are not allowed.

              are automatically included.

       cntrl  followed by a list of control characters.  Characters also spec-
              ified as upper, lower, alpha, digit,  punct,  graph,  print,  or
              xdigit are not allowed.

       punct  followed  by  a  list of punctuation characters. Characters also
              specified as upper, lower, alpha, digit, cntrl, xdigit,  or  the
              <space> character are not allowed.

       graph  followed  by  a  list of printable characters, not including the
              <space> character.  The  characters  defined  as  upper,  lower,
              alpha,  digit,  xdigit,  and  punct  are automatically included.
              Characters also specified as cntrl are not allowed.

       print  followed by  a  list  of  printable  characters,  including  the
              <space>  character.  The  characters  defined  as  upper, lower,
              alpha, digit, xdigit, punct, and the <space> character are auto-
              matically  included.  Characters also specified as cntrl are not
              allowed.

       xdigit followed by a list of characters classified as hexadecimal  dig-
              its. The decimal digits must be included followed by one or more
              set of six characters in ascending order. The following  charac-
              ters  are  included by default: 0 trough 9, a trough f, A trough
              F.

       blank  followed by a list of characters classified as blank.  The char-
              acters <space> and <tab> are automatically included.

       toupper
              followed  by a list of mappings from lowercase to uppercase let-
              ters. Each mapping is a pair of a  lowercase  and  an  uppercase
              letter  separated with a , and enclosed in parentheses. The mem-
              bers of the list are separated with semicolons.

       tolower
              followed by a list of mappings from uppercase to lowercase  let-
              ters.  If the keyword tolower is not present, the reverse of the
              toupper list is used.

       The LC_CTYPE definition ends with the string END LC_CYTPE.

   LC_COLLATE
       The LC_COLLATE category defines the rules for collating characters. Due
       to limitations of libc not all POSIX-options are implemented.

       The definition starts with the string LC_COLLATE in the first column.

       The order-definition starts with a line:

       order_start

       followed  by  a list of keywords out of forward, backward, or position.
       The order definition consists of lines that describe the order  and  is
       terminated with the keyword

       order_end.

       For  more details see the sources in /usr/lib/nls/src notably the exam-
       ples POSIX, Example and Example2

       The LC_COLLATE definition ends with the string END LC_COLLATE.

   LC_MONETARY
       The definition starts with the string LC_MONETARY in the first  column.

       There are the following keywords allowed:

       int_curr_symbol
              followed  by  the  international currency symbol. This must be a
              4-character string containing the international currency  symbol
              as  defined by the ISO 4217 standard (three characters) followed
              by a separator.

       currency_symbol
              followed by the local currency symbol.

       mon_decimal_point
              followed by the string that will be used as the  decimal  delim-
              iter when formatting monetary quantities.

       mon_thousands_sep
              followed  by  the  string that will be used as a group separator
              when formatting monetary quantities.

       mon_grouping
              followed by a string that describes the  formatting  of  numeric
              quantities.

       positive_sign
              followed  by  a  string that is used to indicate a positive sign
              for monetary quantities.

       negative_sign
              followed by a string that is used to indicate  a  negative  sign
              for monetary quantities.

       int_frac_digits
              followed  by the number of fractional digits that should be used
              when formatting with the int_curr_symbol.


       p_sep_by_space
              followed by an integer.

              0      means  that no space should be printed between the symbol
                     and the value.

              1      means that a space should be printed between  the  symbol
                     and the value.

              2      means  that  a space should be printed between the symbol
                     and the sign string, if adjacent.

       n_cs_precedes

              0      - the symbol succeeds the value.

              1      - the symbol precedes the value.

       n_sep_by_space
              An integer set to 0 if no space separates the currency_symbol or
              int_curr_symbol from the value for a negative monetary quantity,
              set to 1 if a space separates the symbol from the value and  set
              to  2  if  a  space separates the symbol and the sign string, if
              adjacent.

       p_sign_posn

              0      Parentheses enclose the quantity and the  currency_symbol
                     or int_curr_symbol.

              1      The  sign  string  precedes  the  quantity  and  the cur-
                     rency_symbol or the int_curr_symbol.

              2      The sign  string  succeeds  the  quantity  and  the  cur-
                     rency_symbol or the int_curr_symbol.

              3      The  sign  string  precedes  the  currency_symbol  or the
                     int_curr_symbol.

              4      The sign  string  succeeds  the  currency_symbol  or  the
                     int_curr_symbol.

       n_sign_posn

              0      Parentheses  enclose the quantity and the currency_symbol
                     or int_curr_symbol.

              1      The sign  string  precedes  the  quantity  and  the  cur-
                     rency_symbol or the int_curr_symbol.

              2      The  sign  string  succeeds  the  quantity  and  the cur-
                     rency_symbol or the int_curr_symbol.

              3      The sign  string  precedes  the  currency_symbol  or  the
                     int_curr_symbol.

       The following keywords are allowed:

       decimal_point
              followed by the string that will be used as the  decimal  delim-
              iter when formatting numeric quantities.

       thousands_sep
              followed  by  the  string that will be used as a group separator
              when formatting numeric quantities.

       grouping
              followed by a string that describes the  formatting  of  numeric
              quantities.

       The LC_NUMERIC definition ends with the string END LC_NUMERIC.

   LC_TIME
       The definition starts with the string LC_TIME in the first column.

       The following keywords are allowed:

       abday  followed by a list of abbreviated weekday names. The list starts
              with Sunday or its translation.

       day    followed by a list of weekday names. The list starts  with  Sun-
              day.

       abmon  followed by a list of abbreviated month names.

       mon    followed by a list of month names.

       am_pm  The appropriate representation of the am and pm strings.

       d_t_fmt
              The appropriate date and time format.

       d_fmt  The appropriate date format.

       t_fmt  The appropriate time format.

       t_fmt_ampm
              The appropriate time format when using 12h clock format.

       The LC_TIME definition ends with the string END LC_TIME.

   LC_MESSAGES
       The  definition starts with the string LC_MESSAGES in the first column.

       The following keywords are allowed:

       yesexpr
              followed by a regular expression that  describes  possible  yes-


FILES

       /usr/lib/locale/ - database for the current locale setting of that cat-
       egory
       /usr/lib/nls/charmap/* - charmap-files


BUGS

       The manpage isn't complete.


CONFORMING TO

       POSIX.2


SEE ALSO

       setlocale(3), localeconv(3), charmap(5), locale(1), localedef(1)

National Language Support         1994-11-09                         locale(5)