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An internationalized program can display information differently throughout the world. For example, the program will display different messages in Paris, Tokyo, and New York. If the localization process has been fine-tuned, the program will display different messages in New York and London to account for the differences between American and British English. How does an internationalized program identify the appropriate language and region of its end users? Easy. It references aLocale
object.A
Locale
object is an identifier for a particular combination of language and region. If a class varies its behavior according toLocale
, it is said to be locale-sensitive. For example, theNumberFormat
class is locale-sensitive; the format of the number it returns depends on theLocale
. ThusNumberFormat
may return a number as 902 300 (France), or 902.300 (Germany), or 902,300 (United States).Locale
objects are only identifiers. The real work, such as formatting and detecting word boundaries, is performed by the methods of the locale-sensitive classes.The following sections explain how to work with
Locale
objects:Creating a Locale
When creating aLocale
object, you usually specify a language code and a country code. A third parameter, the variant, is optional.Identifying Available Locales
Locale-sensitive classes support only certainLocale
definitions. This section shows you how to determine whichLocale
definitions are supported.The Scope of a Locale
On the Java platform you do not specify a globalLocale
by setting an environment variable before running the application. Instead you either rely on the default Locale or assign aLocale
to each locale-sensitive object.
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