Set uiCulture automatically based on browser accept language

MuriloKunze picture MuriloKunze · Nov 25, 2012 · Viewed 11.7k times · Source

How I can set the culture of the ui automatically based on the users'browser? All I found about this is Globalize.culture("pt-BR"); But it sets pt-BR as default and I dont want set this by default! I want only set this if the user is pt-BR! How can I do this? And the validator methods, how can I set them for a specific culture?

Answer

Radim Köhler picture Radim Köhler · Nov 25, 2012

In a ASP.NET MVC the web.config is the right place. There is a quick summary, the first snippet shows, how could be e.g. pt-BR culture forced

<globalization 
    enableClientBasedCulture="false" 
    uiCulture="pt-BR" 
    culture="pt-BR" />

If application is ready to accept the culture from the client (browser), settings should be

<globalization 
    enableClientBasedCulture="true" 
    uiCulture="auto" 
    culture="auto" />

The above setting will take a Language selected in client browser (e.g. cs-CZ in my case). If none is defined then system settings will be used. Final snippet shows, how to allow client to set and send intended culture, but in case that no Language is pre-selected, override the system setting with some other default value pt-BR

<globalization 
    enableClientBasedCulture="true" 
    uiCulture="auto:pt-BR" 
    culture="auto:pt-BR" />

Extended: culture settings for jQuery validator and numeric input

Note: I am definitely not an expert in jQuery and globalization techniques. This is example how I do adjust validator to correctly process any numeric input

razor View part (X() is a shortcut for new HtmlString()):

var defaultThousandSeprator = "@X(culture.NumberFormat.NumberGroupSeparator)";
var defaultDecimalSeprator = "@X(culture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalSeparator)";

jQuery part (custom methods for min and max)

$.validator.addMethod("min", function (value, element, param)
{
  var num = value.replace(RegExp(" ", "g"), "") // remove spaces
          .replace(RegExp('\\' + defaultThousandSeprator, "g"), "") // thousand separator
          .replace(RegExp("\\" + defaultDecimalSeprator, "g"), "."); // fix decimals
  return this.optional(element) || num >= param;
});
$.validator.addMethod("max", function (value, element, param)
{
  var num = value.replace(RegExp(" ", "g"), "") // remove spaces
          .replace(RegExp('\\' + defaultThousandSeprator, "g"), "") // thousands
          .replace(RegExp("\\" + defaultDecimalSeprator, "g"), "."); // decimals
  return this.optional(element) || num <= param;
});

And then jQuery.validator evaluates input values for cs-CZ: 10 000,00 correctly as well as en-US: 10,000.00.