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Globalization and localization in ASP.NET Core

Note

This isn't the latest version of this article. For the current release, see the .NET 9 version of this article.

Warning

This version of ASP.NET Core is no longer supported. For more information, see the .NET and .NET Core Support Policy. For the current release, see the .NET 9 version of this article.

Important

This information relates to a pre-release product that may be substantially modified before it's commercially released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.

For the current release, see the .NET 9 version of this article.

By Rick Anderson, Damien Bowden, Bart Calixto, Nadeem Afana, and Hisham Bin Ateya

A multilingual website allows a website to reach a wider audience. ASP.NET Core provides services and middleware for localizing into different languages and cultures.

For Blazor localization guidance, which adds to or supersedes the guidance in this article, see ASP.NET Core Blazor globalization and localization.

Terms

  • Globalization (G11N): The process of making an app support different languages and regions. The abbreviation comes from the first and last letters and the number of letters between them.
  • Localization (L10N): The process of customizing a globalized app for specific languages and regions.
  • Internationalization (I18N): Both globalization and localization.
  • Culture: A language and, optionally, a region.
  • Neutral culture: A culture that has a specified language, but not a region (for example "en", "es").
  • Specific culture: A culture that has a specified language and region (for example, "en-US", "en-GB", "es-CL").
  • Parent culture: The neutral culture that contains a specific culture (for example, "en" is the parent culture of "en-US" and "en-GB").
  • Locale: A locale is the same as a culture.

Language and country/region codes

The RFC 4646 format for the culture name is <language code>-<country/region code>, where <language code> identifies the language and <country/region code> identifies the subculture. For example, es-CL for Spanish (Chile), en-US for English (United States), and en-AU for English (Australia). RFC 4646 is a combination of an ISO 639 two-letter lowercase culture code associated with a language and an ISO 3166 two-letter uppercase subculture code associated with a country or region. For more information, see System.Globalization.CultureInfo.

Tasks to localize an app

Globalizing and localizing an app involves the following tasks:

View or download sample code (how to download)

Additional resources

By Rick Anderson, Damien Bowden, Bart Calixto, Nadeem Afana, and Hisham Bin Ateya

A multilingual website allows a website to reach a wider audience. ASP.NET Core provides services and middleware for localizing into different languages and cultures.

Terms

  • Globalization (G11N): The process of making an app support different languages and regions. The abbreviation comes from the first and last letters and the number of letters between them.
  • Localization (L10N): The process of customizing a globalized app for specific languages and regions.
  • Internationalization (I18N): Both globalization and localization.
  • Culture: A language and, optionally, a region.
  • Neutral culture: A culture that has a specified language, but not a region (for example "en", "es").
  • Specific culture: A culture that has a specified language and region (for example, "en-US", "en-GB", "es-CL").
  • Parent culture: The neutral culture that contains a specific culture (for example, "en" is the parent culture of "en-US" and "en-GB").
  • Locale: A locale is the same as a culture.

Language and country/region codes

The RFC 4646 format for the culture name is <language code>-<country/region code>, where <language code> identifies the language and <country/region code> identifies the subculture. For example, es-CL for Spanish (Chile), en-US for English (United States), and en-AU for English (Australia). RFC 4646 is a combination of an ISO 639 two-letter lowercase culture code associated with a language and an ISO 3166 two-letter uppercase subculture code associated with a country or region. For more information, see System.Globalization.CultureInfo.

Tasks to localize an app

Globalizing and localizing an app involves the following tasks:

View or download sample code (how to download)

Additional resources

By Rick Anderson, Damien Bowden, Bart Calixto, Nadeem Afana, and Hisham Bin Ateya

A multilingual website allows the site to reach a wider audience. ASP.NET Core provides services and middleware for localizing into different languages and cultures.

Internationalization involves System.Globalization and Localization. Globalization is the process of designing apps that support different cultures. Globalization adds support for input, display, and output of a defined set of language scripts that relate to specific geographic areas.

Localization is the process of adapting a globalized app, which you have already processed for localizability, to a particular culture/locale. For more information see Globalization and localization terms near the end of this document.

App localization involves the following:

  1. Make the app's content localizable
  2. Provide localized resources for the languages and cultures you support
  3. Implement a strategy to select the language/culture for each request

View or download sample code (how to download)

Make the app content localizable

IStringLocalizer and IStringLocalizer<T> were architected to improve productivity when developing localized apps. IStringLocalizer uses the ResourceManager and ResourceReader to provide culture-specific resources at run time. The interface has an indexer and an IEnumerable for returning localized strings. IStringLocalizer doesn't require storing the default language strings in a resource file. You can develop an app targeted for localization and not need to create resource files early in development. The code below shows how to wrap the string "About Title" for localization.

using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Localization;

namespace Localization.Controllers
{
    [Route("api/[controller]")]
    public class AboutController : Controller
    {
        private readonly IStringLocalizer<AboutController> _localizer;

        public AboutController(IStringLocalizer<AboutController> localizer)
        {
            _localizer = localizer;
        }

        [HttpGet]
        public string Get()
        {
            return _localizer["About Title"];
        }
    }
}

In the preceding code, the IStringLocalizer<T> implementation comes from Dependency Injection. If the localized value of "About Title" isn't found, then the indexer key is returned, that is, the string "About Title". You can leave the default language literal strings in the app and wrap them in the localizer, so that you can focus on developing the app. You develop your app with your default language and prepare it for the localization step without first creating a default resource file. Alternatively, you can use the traditional approach and provide a key to retrieve the default language string. For many developers the new workflow of not having a default language .resx file and simply wrapping the string literals can reduce the overhead of localizing an app. Other developers will prefer the traditional work flow as it can make it easier to work with longer string literals and make it easier to update localized strings.

Use the IHtmlLocalizer<T> implementation for resources that contain HTML. IHtmlLocalizer HTML encodes arguments that are formatted in the resource string, but doesn't HTML encode the resource string itself. In the sample highlighted below, only the value of name parameter is HTML encoded.

using System;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Http;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Localization;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Localization;

namespace Localization.Controllers
{
    public class BookController : Controller
    {
        private readonly IHtmlLocalizer<BookController> _localizer;

        public BookController(IHtmlLocalizer<BookController> localizer)
        {
            _localizer = localizer;
        }

        public IActionResult Hello(string name)
        {
            ViewData["Message"] = _localizer["<b>Hello</b><i> {0}</i>", name];

            return View();
        }

Note

Generally, only localize text, not HTML.

At the lowest level, you can get IStringLocalizerFactory out of Dependency Injection:

{
    public class TestController : Controller
    {
        private readonly IStringLocalizer _localizer;
        private readonly IStringLocalizer _localizer2;

        public TestController(IStringLocalizerFactory factory)
        {
            var type = typeof(SharedResource);
            var assemblyName = new AssemblyName(type.GetTypeInfo().Assembly.FullName);
            _localizer = factory.Create(type);
            _localizer2 = factory.Create("SharedResource", assemblyName.Name);
        }       

        public IActionResult About()
        {
            ViewData["Message"] = _localizer["Your application description page."] 
                + " loc 2: " + _localizer2["Your application description page."];

The code above demonstrates each of the two factory create methods.

You can partition your localized strings by controller, area, or have just one container. In the sample app, a dummy class named SharedResource is used for shared resources.

// Dummy class to group shared resources

namespace Localization
{
    public class SharedResource
    {
    }
}

Some developers use the Startup class to contain global or shared strings. In the sample below, the InfoController and the SharedResource localizers are used:

public class InfoController : Controller
{
    private readonly IStringLocalizer<InfoController> _localizer;
    private readonly IStringLocalizer<SharedResource> _sharedLocalizer;

    public InfoController(IStringLocalizer<InfoController> localizer,
                   IStringLocalizer<SharedResource> sharedLocalizer)
    {
        _localizer = localizer;
        _sharedLocalizer = sharedLocalizer;
    }

    public string TestLoc()
    {
        string msg = "Shared resx: " + _sharedLocalizer["Hello!"] +
                     " Info resx " + _localizer["Hello!"];
        return msg;
    }

View localization

The IViewLocalizer service provides localized strings for a view. The ViewLocalizer class implements this interface and finds the resource location from the view file path. The following code shows how to use the default implementation of IViewLocalizer:

@using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Localization

@inject IViewLocalizer Localizer

@{
    ViewData["Title"] = Localizer["About"];
}
<h2>@ViewData["Title"].</h2>
<h3>@ViewData["Message"]</h3>

<p>@Localizer["Use this area to provide additional information."]</p>

The default implementation of IViewLocalizer finds the resource file based on the view's file name. There's no option to use a global shared resource file. ViewLocalizer implements the localizer using IHtmlLocalizer, so Razor doesn't HTML encode the localized string. You can parameterize resource strings and IViewLocalizer will HTML encode the parameters, but not the resource string. Consider the following Razor markup:

@Localizer["<i>Hello</i> <b>{0}!</b>", UserManager.GetUserName(User)]

A French resource file could contain the following:

Key Value
<i>Hello</i> <b>{0}!</b> <i>Bonjour</i> <b>{0} !</b>

The rendered view would contain the HTML markup from the resource file.

Note

Generally, only localize text, not HTML.

To use a shared resource file in a view, inject IHtmlLocalizer<T>:

@using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Localization
@using Localization.Services

@inject IViewLocalizer Localizer
@inject IHtmlLocalizer<SharedResource> SharedLocalizer

@{
    ViewData["Title"] = Localizer["About"];
}
<h2>@ViewData["Title"].</h2>

<h1>@SharedLocalizer["Hello!"]</h1>

DataAnnotations localization

DataAnnotations error messages are localized with IStringLocalizer<T>. Using the option ResourcesPath = "Resources", the error messages in RegisterViewModel can be stored in either of the following paths:

  • Resources/ViewModels.Account.RegisterViewModel.fr.resx
  • Resources/ViewModels/Account/RegisterViewModel.fr.resx
public class RegisterViewModel
{
    [Required(ErrorMessage = "The Email field is required.")]
    [EmailAddress(ErrorMessage = "The Email field is not a valid email address.")]
    [Display(Name = "Email")]
    public string Email { get; set; }

    [Required(ErrorMessage = "The Password field is required.")]
    [StringLength(8, ErrorMessage = "The {0} must be at least {2} characters long.", MinimumLength = 6)]
    [DataType(DataType.Password)]
    [Display(Name = "Password")]
    public string Password { get; set; }

    [DataType(DataType.Password)]
    [Display(Name = "Confirm password")]
    [Compare("Password", ErrorMessage = "The password and confirmation password do not match.")]
    public string ConfirmPassword { get; set; }
}

Non-validation attributes are localized.

Using one resource string for multiple classes

The following code shows how to use one resource string for validation attributes with multiple classes:

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
    services.AddMvc()
        .AddDataAnnotationsLocalization(options => {
            options.DataAnnotationLocalizerProvider = (type, factory) =>
                factory.Create(typeof(SharedResource));
        });
}

In the preceding code, SharedResource is the class corresponding to the resx where your validation messages are stored. With this approach, DataAnnotations will only use SharedResource, rather than the resource for each class.

Provide localized resources for the languages and cultures you support

SupportedCultures and SupportedUICultures

ASP.NET Core allows you to specify two culture values, SupportedCultures and SupportedUICultures. The CultureInfo object for SupportedCultures determines the results of culture-dependent functions, such as date, time, number, and currency formatting. SupportedCultures also determines the sorting order of text, casing conventions, and string comparisons. For more information on how the server obtains the culture, see CultureInfo.CurrentCulture and CultureInfo.CurrentUICulture. The SupportedUICultures determines which translated strings (from .resx files) are looked up by the ResourceManager. The ResourceManager looks up culture-specific strings that are determined by CurrentUICulture. Every thread in .NET has CurrentCulture and CurrentUICulture objects. The framework inspects these values when rendering culture-dependent functions. If the current thread's culture is set to en-US (English, United States), DateTime.Now.ToLongDateString() displays Thursday, February 18, 2016; but if CurrentCulture is set to es-ES (Spanish, Spain), the output is jueves, 18 de febrero de 2016.

Resource files

A resource file is a useful mechanism for separating localizable strings from code. Translated strings for the non-default language are isolated in .resx resource files. For example, you might want to create Spanish resource file named Welcome.es.resx containing translated strings. "es" is the language code for Spanish. To create this resource file in Visual Studio:

  1. In Solution Explorer, right click on the folder which will contain the resource file > Add > New Item.

    Nested contextual menu: In Solution Explorer, a contextual menu is open for Resources. A second contextual menu is open for Add showing the New Item command highlighted.

  2. In the Search installed templates box, enter "resource" and name the file.

    Add New Item dialog

  3. Enter the key value (native string) in the Name column and the translated string in the Value column.

    Welcome.es.resx file (the Welcome resource file for Spanish) with the word Hello in the Name column and the word Hola (Hello in Spanish) in the Value column

    Visual Studio shows the Welcome.es.resx file.

    Solution Explorer showing the Welcome Spanish (es) resource file

Resource file naming

Resources are named for the full type name of their class minus the assembly name. For example, a French resource in a project whose main assembly is LocalizationWebsite.Web.dll for the class LocalizationWebsite.Web.Startup would be named Startup.fr.resx. A resource for the class LocalizationWebsite.Web.Controllers.HomeController would be named Controllers.HomeController.fr.resx. If your targeted class's namespace isn't the same as the assembly name you will need the full type name. For example, in the sample project a resource for the type ExtraNamespace.Tools would be named ExtraNamespace.Tools.fr.resx.

In the sample project, the ConfigureServices method sets the ResourcesPath to "Resources", so the project relative path for the home controller's French resource file is Resources/Controllers.HomeController.fr.resx. Alternatively, you can use folders to organize resource files. For the home controller, the path would be Resources/Controllers/HomeController.fr.resx. If you don't use the ResourcesPath option, the .resx file would go in the project base directory. The resource file for HomeController would be named Controllers.HomeController.fr.resx. The choice of using the dot or path naming convention depends on how you want to organize your resource files.

Resource name Dot or path naming
Resources/Controllers.HomeController.fr.resx Dot
Resources/Controllers/HomeController.fr.resx Path

Resource files using @inject IViewLocalizer in Razor views follow a similar pattern. The resource file for a view can be named using either dot naming or path naming. Razor view resource files mimic the path of their associated view file. Assuming we set the ResourcesPath to "Resources", the French resource file associated with the Views/Home/About.cshtml view could be either of the following:

  • Resources/Views/Home/About.fr.resx

  • Resources/Views.Home.About.fr.resx

If you don't use the ResourcesPath option, the .resx file for a view would be located in the same folder as the view.

RootNamespaceAttribute

The RootNamespaceAttribute attribute provides the root namespace of an assembly when the root namespace of an assembly is different than the assembly name.

Warning

This can occur when a project's name is not a valid .NET identifier. For instance my-project-name.csproj will use the root namespace my_project_name and the assembly name my-project-name leading to this error.

If the root namespace of an assembly is different than the assembly name:

  • Localization does not work by default.
  • Localization fails due to the way resources are searched for within the assembly. RootNamespace is a build-time value which is not available to the executing process.

If the RootNamespace is different from the AssemblyName, include the following in AssemblyInfo.cs (with parameter values replaced with the actual values):

using System.Reflection;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Localization;

[assembly: ResourceLocation("Resource Folder Name")]
[assembly: RootNamespace("App Root Namespace")]

The preceding code enables the successful resolution of resx files.

Culture fallback behavior

When searching for a resource, localization engages in "culture fallback". Starting from the requested culture, if not found, it reverts to the parent culture of that culture. As an aside, the CultureInfo.Parent property represents the parent culture. This usually (but not always) means removing the national signifier from the ISO. For example, the dialect of Spanish spoken in Mexico is "es-MX". It has the parent "es"—Spanish non-specific to any country.

Imagine your site receives a request for a "Welcome" resource using culture "fr-CA". The localization system looks for the following resources, in order, and selects the first match:

  • Welcome.fr-CA.resx
  • Welcome.fr.resx
  • Welcome.resx (if the NeutralResourcesLanguage is "fr-CA")

As an example, if you remove the ".fr" culture designator and you have the culture set to French, the default resource file is read and strings are localized. The Resource manager designates a default or fallback resource for when nothing meets your requested culture. If you want to just return the key when missing a resource for the requested culture you must not have a default resource file.

Generate resource files with Visual Studio

If you create a resource file in Visual Studio without a culture in the file name (for example, Welcome.resx), Visual Studio will create a C# class with a property for each string. That's usually not what you want with ASP.NET Core. You typically don't have a default .resx resource file (a .resx file without the culture name). We suggest you create the .resx file with a culture name (for example Welcome.fr.resx). When you create a .resx file with a culture name, Visual Studio won't generate the class file.

Add other cultures

Each language and culture combination (other than the default language) requires a unique resource file. You create resource files for different cultures and locales by creating new resource files in which the ISO language codes are part of the file name (for example, en-us, fr-ca, and en-gb). These ISO codes are placed between the file name and the .resx file extension, as in Welcome.es-MX.resx (Spanish/Mexico).

Implement a strategy to select the language/culture for each request

Configure localization

Localization is configured in the Startup.ConfigureServices method:

services.AddLocalization(options => options.ResourcesPath = "Resources");

services.AddMvc()
    .AddViewLocalization(LanguageViewLocationExpanderFormat.Suffix)
    .AddDataAnnotationsLocalization();
  • AddLocalization adds the localization services to the services container. The code above also sets the resources path to "Resources".

  • AddViewLocalization adds support for localized view files. In this sample view localization is based on the view file suffix. For example "fr" in the Index.fr.cshtml file.

  • AddDataAnnotationsLocalization adds support for localized DataAnnotations validation messages through IStringLocalizer abstractions.

Localization middleware

The current culture on a request is set in the localization Middleware. The localization middleware is enabled in the Startup.Configure method. The localization middleware must be configured before any middleware that might check the request culture (for example, app.UseMvcWithDefaultRoute()). Localization Middleware must appear after Routing Middleware if using RouteDataRequestCultureProvider. For more information on middleware order, see ASP.NET Core Middleware.

var supportedCultures = new[] { "en-US", "fr" };
var localizationOptions = new RequestLocalizationOptions().SetDefaultCulture(supportedCultures[0])
    .AddSupportedCultures(supportedCultures)
    .AddSupportedUICultures(supportedCultures);

app.UseRequestLocalization(localizationOptions);

If you would like to see code comments translated to languages other than English, let us know in this GitHub discussion issue.

UseRequestLocalization initializes a RequestLocalizationOptions object. On every request the list of RequestCultureProvider in the RequestLocalizationOptions is enumerated and the first provider that can successfully determine the request culture is used. The default providers come from the RequestLocalizationOptions class:

  1. QueryStringRequestCultureProvider
  2. CookieRequestCultureProvider
  3. AcceptLanguageHeaderRequestCultureProvider

The default list goes from most specific to least specific. Later in the article we'll see how you can change the order and even add a custom culture provider. If none of the providers can determine the request culture, the DefaultRequestCulture is used.

QueryStringRequestCultureProvider

Some apps will use a query string to set the CultureInfo. For apps that use the cookie or Accept-Language header approach, adding a query string to the URL is useful for debugging and testing code. By default, the QueryStringRequestCultureProvider is registered as the first localization provider in the RequestCultureProvider list. You pass the query string parameters culture and ui-culture. The following example sets the specific culture (language and region) to Spanish/Mexico:

http://localhost:5000/?culture=es-MX&ui-culture=es-MX

If you only pass in one of the two (culture or ui-culture), the query string provider will set both values using the one you passed in. For example, setting just the culture will set both the Culture and the UICulture:

http://localhost:5000/?culture=es-MX

CookieRequestCultureProvider

Production apps will often provide a mechanism to set the culture with the ASP.NET Core culture cookie. Use the MakeCookieValue method to create a cookie.

The CookieRequestCultureProvider DefaultCookieName returns the default cookie name used to track the user's preferred culture information. The default cookie name is .AspNetCore.Culture.

The cookie format is c=%LANGCODE%|uic=%LANGCODE%, where c is Culture and uic is UICulture, for example:

c=en-UK|uic=en-US

If you only specify one of culture info and UI culture, the specified culture will be used for both culture info and UI culture.

The Accept-Language HTTP header

The Accept-Language header is settable in most browsers and was originally intended to specify the user's language. This setting indicates what the browser has been set to send or has inherited from the underlying operating system. The Accept-Language HTTP header from a browser request isn't an infallible way to detect the user's preferred language (see Setting language preferences in a browser). A production app should include a way for a user to customize their choice of culture.

Set the Accept-Language HTTP header in IE

  1. From the gear icon, tap Internet Options.

  2. Tap Languages.

    Internet Options

  3. Tap Set Language Preferences.

  4. Tap Add a language.

  5. Add the language.

  6. Tap the language, then tap Move Up.

Use a custom provider

Suppose you want to let your customers store their language and culture in your databases. You could write a provider to look up these values for the user. The following code shows how to add a custom provider:

private const string enUSCulture = "en-US";

services.Configure<RequestLocalizationOptions>(options =>
{
    var supportedCultures = new[]
    {
        new CultureInfo(enUSCulture),
        new CultureInfo("fr")
    };

    options.DefaultRequestCulture = new RequestCulture(culture: enUSCulture, uiCulture: enUSCulture);
    options.SupportedCultures = supportedCultures;
    options.SupportedUICultures = supportedCultures;

    options.AddInitialRequestCultureProvider(new CustomRequestCultureProvider(async context =>
    {
        // My custom request culture logic
        return await Task.FromResult(new ProviderCultureResult("en"));
    }));
});

Use RequestLocalizationOptions to add or remove localization providers.

Change request culture providers order

RequestLocalizationOptions has three default request culture providers: QueryStringRequestCultureProvider, CookieRequestCultureProvider, and AcceptLanguageHeaderRequestCultureProvider. Use [RequestLocalizationOptions.RequestCultureProviders]](xref:Microsoft.AspNetCore.Builder.RequestLocalizationOptions.RequestCultureProviders) property to change the order of these providers as shown in the following below:

    app.UseRequestLocalization(options =>
    {
        var questStringCultureProvider = options.RequestCultureProviders[0];    
        options.RequestCultureProviders.RemoveAt(0);
        options.RequestCultureProviders.Insert(1, questStringCultureProvider);
    });

In the preceding example, the order of QueryStringRequestCultureProvider and CookieRequestCultureProvider is switched, so the RequestLocalizationMiddleware looks for the cultures from the cookies first, then query string.

As previously mentioned, add a custom provider via AddInitialRequestCultureProvider which sets the order to 0, so this provider takes the precedence over the others.

Set the culture programmatically

This sample Localization.StarterWeb project on GitHub contains UI to set the Culture. The Views/Shared/_SelectLanguagePartial.cshtml file allows you to select the culture from the list of supported cultures:

@using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Builder
@using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Http.Features
@using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Localization
@using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Localization
@using Microsoft.Extensions.Options

@inject IViewLocalizer Localizer
@inject IOptions<RequestLocalizationOptions> LocOptions

@{
    var requestCulture = Context.Features.Get<IRequestCultureFeature>();
    var cultureItems = LocOptions.Value.SupportedUICultures
        .Select(c => new SelectListItem { Value = c.Name, Text = c.DisplayName })
        .ToList();
    var returnUrl = string.IsNullOrEmpty(Context.Request.Path) ? "~/" : $"~{Context.Request.Path.Value}";
}

<div title="@Localizer["Request culture provider:"] @requestCulture?.Provider?.GetType().Name">
    <form id="selectLanguage" asp-controller="Home" 
          asp-action="SetLanguage" asp-route-returnUrl="@returnUrl" 
          method="post" class="form-horizontal" role="form">
        <label asp-for="@requestCulture.RequestCulture.UICulture.Name">@Localizer["Language:"]</label> <select name="culture"
          onchange="this.form.submit();"
          asp-for="@requestCulture.RequestCulture.UICulture.Name" asp-items="cultureItems">
        </select>
    </form>
</div>

The Views/Shared/_SelectLanguagePartial.cshtml file is added to the footer section of the layout file so it will be available to all views:

<div class="container body-content" style="margin-top:60px">
    @RenderBody()
    <hr>
    <footer>
        <div class="row">
            <div class="col-md-6">
                <p>&copy; @System.DateTime.Now.Year - Localization</p>
            </div>
            <div class="col-md-6 text-right">
                @await Html.PartialAsync("_SelectLanguagePartial")
            </div>
        </div>
    </footer>
</div>

The SetLanguage method sets the culture cookie.

[HttpPost]
public IActionResult SetLanguage(string culture, string returnUrl)
{
    Response.Cookies.Append(
        CookieRequestCultureProvider.DefaultCookieName,
        CookieRequestCultureProvider.MakeCookieValue(new RequestCulture(culture)),
        new CookieOptions { Expires = DateTimeOffset.UtcNow.AddYears(1) }
    );

    return LocalRedirect(returnUrl);
}

You can't plug in the _SelectLanguagePartial.cshtml to sample code for this project. The Localization.StarterWeb project on GitHub has code to flow the RequestLocalizationOptions to a Razor partial through the Dependency Injection container.

Model binding route data and query strings

See Globalization behavior of model binding route data and query strings.

Globalization and localization terms

The process of localizing your app also requires a basic understanding of relevant character sets commonly used in modern software development and an understanding of the issues associated with them. Although all computers store text as numbers (codes), different systems store the same text using different numbers. The localization process refers to translating the app user interface (UI) for a specific culture/locale.

Localizability is an intermediate process for verifying that a globalized app is ready for localization.

The RFC 4646 format for the culture name is <languagecode2>-<country/regioncode2>, where <languagecode2> is the language code and <country/regioncode2> is the subculture code. For example, es-CL for Spanish (Chile), en-US for English (United States), and en-AU for English (Australia). RFC 4646 is a combination of an ISO 639 two-letter lowercase culture code associated with a language and an ISO 3166 two-letter uppercase subculture code associated with a country or region. For more information, see System.Globalization.CultureInfo.

Internationalization is often abbreviated to "I18N". The abbreviation takes the first and last letters and the number of letters between them, so 18 stands for the number of letters between the first "I" and the last "N". The same applies to Globalization (G11N), and Localization (L10N).

Terms:

  • Globalization (G11N): The process of making an app support different languages and regions.
  • Localization (L10N): The process of customizing an app for a given language and region.
  • Internationalization (I18N): Describes both globalization and localization.
  • Culture: It's a language and, optionally, a region.
  • Neutral culture: A culture that has a specified language, but not a region. (for example "en", "es")
  • Specific culture: A culture that has a specified language and region. (for example "en-US", "en-GB", "es-CL")
  • Parent culture: The neutral culture that contains a specific culture. (for example, "en" is the parent culture of "en-US" and "en-GB")
  • Locale: A locale is the same as a culture.

Note

You may not be able to enter decimal commas in decimal fields. To support jQuery validation for non-English locales that use a comma (",") for a decimal point, and non US-English date formats, you must take steps to globalize your app. See this GitHub comment 4076 for instructions on adding decimal comma.

Note

Prior to ASP.NET Core 3.0 web apps write one log of type LogLevel.Warning per request if the requested culture is unsupported. Logging one LogLevel.Warning per request can make large log files with redundant information. This behavior has been changed in ASP.NET 3.0. The RequestLocalizationMiddleware writes a log of type LogLevel.Debug, which reduces the size of production logs.

Additional resources