| =================== |
| Format localization |
| =================== |
|
|
| Overview |
| ======== |
|
|
| Django's formatting system is capable of displaying dates, times and numbers in |
| templates using the format specified for the current |
| :term:`locale <locale name>`. It also handles localized input in forms. |
|
|
| Two users accessing the same content may see dates, times and numbers formatted |
| in different ways, depending on the formats for their current locale. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| To enable number formatting with thousand separators, it is necessary to |
| set :setting:`USE_THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = True <USE_THOUSAND_SEPARATOR>` in |
| your settings file. Alternatively, you could use :tfilter:`intcomma` to |
| format numbers in your template. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| There is a related :setting:`USE_I18N` setting that controls if Django |
| should activate translation. See :doc:`/topics/i18n/translation` for more |
| details. |
|
|
| Locale aware input in forms |
| =========================== |
|
|
| When formatting is enabled, Django can use localized formats when parsing dates, |
| times and numbers in forms. That means it tries different formats for different |
| locales when guessing the format used by the user when inputting data on forms. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| Django uses different formats for displaying data to those it uses for |
| parsing data. Most notably, the formats for parsing dates can't use the |
| ``%a`` (abbreviated weekday name), ``%A`` (full weekday name), |
| ``%b`` (abbreviated month name), ``%B`` (full month name), |
| or ``%p`` (AM/PM). |
|
|
| To enable a form field to localize input and output data use its ``localize`` |
| argument:: |
|
|
| class CashRegisterForm(forms.Form): |
| product = forms.CharField() |
| revenue = forms.DecimalField(max_digits=4, decimal_places=2, localize=True) |
|
|
| .. _topic-l10n-templates: |
|
|
| Controlling localization in templates |
| ===================================== |
|
|
| Django tries to use a locale specific format whenever it outputs a value in a |
| template. |
|
|
| However, it may not always be appropriate to use localized values -- |
| for example, if you're outputting JavaScript or XML that is designed |
| to be machine-readable, you will always want unlocalized values. You |
| may also want to use localization in selected templates, rather than |
| using localization everywhere. |
|
|
| To allow for fine control over the use of localization, Django |
| provides the ``l10n`` template library that contains the following |
| tags and filters. |
|
|
| Template tags |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. templatetag:: localize |
|
|
| ``localize`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Enables or disables localization of template variables in the |
| contained block. |
|
|
| To activate or deactivate localization for a template block, use: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {% load l10n %} |
|
|
| {% localize on %} |
| {{ value }} |
| {% endlocalize %} |
|
|
| {% localize off %} |
| {{ value }} |
| {% endlocalize %} |
|
|
| See :tfilter:`localize` and :tfilter:`unlocalize` for template filters that will |
| do the same job on a per-variable basis. |
|
|
| Template filters |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| .. templatefilter:: localize |
|
|
| ``localize`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Forces localization of a single value. |
|
|
| For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {% load l10n %} |
|
|
| {{ value|localize }} |
|
|
| To disable localization on a single value, use :tfilter:`unlocalize`. To control |
| localization over a large section of a template, use the :ttag:`localize` template |
| tag. |
|
|
| .. templatefilter:: unlocalize |
|
|
| ``unlocalize`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Forces a single value to be printed without localization. |
|
|
| For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {% load l10n %} |
|
|
| {{ value|unlocalize }} |
|
|
| To force localization of a single value, use :tfilter:`localize`. To |
| control localization over a large section of a template, use the |
| :ttag:`localize` template tag. |
|
|
| Returns a string representation for unlocalized numbers (``int``, ``float``, |
| or ``Decimal``). |
|
|
| .. _custom-format-files: |
|
|
| Creating custom format files |
| ============================ |
|
|
| Django provides format definitions for many locales, but sometimes you might |
| want to create your own, because a format file doesn't exist for your locale, |
| or because you want to overwrite some of the values. |
|
|
| To use custom formats, specify the path where you'll place format files |
| first. To do that, set your :setting:`FORMAT_MODULE_PATH` setting to the |
| package where format files will exist, for instance:: |
|
|
| FORMAT_MODULE_PATH = [ |
| "mysite.formats", |
| "some_app.formats", |
| ] |
|
|
| Files are not placed directly in this directory, but in a directory named as |
| the locale, and must be named ``formats.py``. Be careful not to put sensitive |
| information in these files as values inside can be exposed if you pass the |
| string to ``django.utils.formats.get_format()`` (used by the :tfilter:`date` |
| template filter). |
|
|
| To customize the English formats, a structure like this would be needed: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| mysite/ |
| formats/ |
| __init__.py |
| en/ |
| __init__.py |
| formats.py |
|
|
| where :file:`formats.py` contains custom format definitions. For example:: |
|
|
| THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "\xa0" |
|
|
| to use a non-breaking space (Unicode ``00A0``) as a thousand separator, |
| instead of the default for English, a comma. |
|
|
| Limitations of the provided locale formats |
| ========================================== |
|
|
| Some locales use context-sensitive formats for numbers, which Django's |
| localization system cannot handle automatically. |
|
|
| Switzerland (German) |
| -------------------- |
|
|
| The Swiss number formatting depends on the type of number that is being |
| formatted. For monetary values, a comma is used as the thousand separator and |
| a decimal point for the decimal separator. For all other numbers, a comma is |
| used as decimal separator and a space as thousand separator. The locale format |
| provided by Django uses the generic separators, a comma for decimal and a space |
| for thousand separators. |
|
|