uselocale(3) | Library Functions Manual | uselocale(3) |
uselocale - set/get the locale for the calling thread
Standard C library (libc, -lc)
#include <locale.h>
locale_t uselocale(locale_t newloc);
uselocale():
Since glibc 2.10: _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 700 Before glibc 2.10: _GNU_SOURCE
The uselocale() function sets the current locale for the calling thread, and returns the thread's previously current locale. After a successful call to uselocale(), any calls by this thread to functions that depend on the locale will operate as though the locale has been set to newloc.
The newloc argument can have one of the following values:
On success, uselocale() returns the locale handle that was set by the previous call to uselocale() in this thread, or LC_GLOBAL_LOCALE if there was no such previous call. On error, it returns (locale_t) 0, and sets errno to indicate the error.
POSIX.1-2008.
glibc 2.3. POSIX.1-2008.
Unlike setlocale(3), uselocale() does not allow selective replacement of individual locale categories. To employ a locale that differs in only a few categories from the current locale, use calls to duplocale(3) and newlocale(3) to obtain a locale object equivalent to the current locale and modify the desired categories in that object.
See newlocale(3) and duplocale(3).
locale(1), duplocale(3), freelocale(3), newlocale(3), setlocale(3), locale(5), locale(7)
2023-10-31 | Linux man-pages 6.7 |