SetLocaleInfoA function (winnls.h)

Sets an item of information in the user override portion of the current locale. This function does not set the system defaults.

Caution  Because this function modifies values for all applications, it should only be called by the regional and language options functionality of Control Panel, or a similar utility. If making an international change to system parameters, the calling application must broadcast the WM_SETTINGCHANGE message to avoid causing instabilities in other applications.
 

Syntax

BOOL SetLocaleInfoA(
  [in] LCID   Locale,
  [in] LCTYPE LCType,
  [in] LPCSTR lpLCData
);

Parameters

[in] Locale

For the ANSI version of the function, the locale identifier of the locale with the code page used when interpreting the lpLCData information. For the Unicode version, this parameter is ignored.

You can use the MAKELCID macro to create a locale identifier or use one of the following predefined values.

The following custom locale identifiers are also supported.

[in] LCType

Type of locale information to set. For valid constants see "Constants Used in the LCType Parameter of GetLocaleInfo, GetLocaleInfoEx, and SetLocaleInfo" section of Locale Information Constants. The application can specify only one value per call, but it can use the binary OR operator to combine LOCALE_USE_CP_ACP with any other constant.

[in] lpLCData

Pointer to a null-terminated string containing the locale information to set. The information must be in the format specific to the specified constant. The application uses a Unicode string for the Unicode version of the function, and an ANSI string for the ANSI version.

Return value

Returns a nonzero value if successful, or 0 otherwise. To get extended error information, the application can call GetLastError, which can return one of the following error codes:

  • ERROR_ACCESS_DISABLED_BY_POLICY. The group policy of the computer or the user has forbidden this operation.
  • ERROR_INVALID_ACCESS. The access code was invalid.
  • ERROR_INVALID_FLAGS. The values supplied for flags were not valid.
  • ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER. Any of the parameter values was invalid.

Remarks

This function writes to the registry, where it sets values that are associated with a particular user instead of a particular application. These registry values affect the behavior of other applications run by the user. As a rule, an application should call this function only when the user has explicitly requested the changes. The registry settings should not be changed for the convenience of a single application.

For the LCType parameter, the application should set LOCALE_USE_CP_ACP to use the operating system ANSI code page instead of the locale code page for string translation.

When the ANSI version of this function is used with a Unicode-only locale identifier, the function can succeed because the operating system uses the system code page. However, characters that are undefined in the system code page appear in the string as a question mark (?).

As of Windows Vista, the LOCALE_SDATE and LOCALE_STIME constants are obsolete. Do not use these constants. Use LOCALE_SSHORTDATE and LOCALE_STIMEFORMAT instead. A custom locale might not have a single, uniform separator character within the date or time format: for example, a format such as "12/31, 2006" or "03:56'23" might be valid.

Note

The winnls.h header defines SetLocaleInfo as an alias that automatically selects the ANSI or Unicode version of this function based on the definition of the UNICODE preprocessor constant. Mixing usage of the encoding-neutral alias with code that is not encoding-neutral can lead to mismatches that result in compilation or runtime errors. For more information, see Conventions for Function Prototypes.

Requirements

Requirement Value
Minimum supported client Windows 2000 Professional [desktop apps only]
Minimum supported server Windows 2000 Server [desktop apps only]
Target Platform Windows
Header winnls.h (include Windows.h)
Library Kernel32.lib
DLL Kernel32.dll

See also

GetLocaleInfo

National Language Support

National Language Support Functions