CultureInfo.Name Property
Gets the culture name in the format languagecode2-country/regioncode2.
Namespace: System.Globalization
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Property Value
Type: System.StringThe culture name in the format languagecode2-country/regioncode2. languagecode2 is a lowercase two-letter code derived from ISO 639-1. country/regioncode2 is derived from ISO 3166 and usually consists of two uppercase letters.
For a list of predefined culture names and identifiers that the Name property can return, see the National Language Support (NLS) API Reference at the Go Global Developer Center. Note that culture names are subject to change, and that they also can reflect the names of custom cultures.
The CultureInfo.Name property follows the naming standards provided in the CultureInfo class topic. It returns the short form of the culture name that excludes any indication of an alternate sort order. For example, if you instantiate a CultureInfo object by using the string "de-DE_phoneb" to reflect an alternate sort order, the Name property returns "de-DE".
To get the full name of the culture, you should use the DisplayName, EnglishName, or NativeName property.
The following code example displays several properties of the neutral cultures.
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The example displays the older zh-CHS and zh-CHT culture names with the 0x0004 and 0x7C04 culture identifiers, respectively. However, your Windows Vista applications should use the zh-Hans name instead of zh-CHS and the zh-Hant name instead of zh-CHT. The zh-Hans and zh-Hant names represent the current standard, and should be used unless you have a reason for using the older names. |
using System; using System.Globalization; public class SamplesCultureInfo { public static void Main() { // Displays several properties of the neutral cultures. Console.WriteLine("CULTURE ISO ISO WIN DISPLAYNAME ENGLISHNAME"); foreach (CultureInfo ci in CultureInfo.GetCultures(CultureTypes.NeutralCultures)) { Console.Write("{0,-7}", ci.Name); Console.Write(" {0,-3}", ci.TwoLetterISOLanguageName); Console.Write(" {0,-3}", ci.ThreeLetterISOLanguageName); Console.Write(" {0,-3}", ci.ThreeLetterWindowsLanguageName); Console.Write(" {0,-40}", ci.DisplayName); Console.WriteLine(" {0,-40}", ci.EnglishName); } } } /* This code produces the following output. This output has been cropped for brevity. CULTURE ISO ISO WIN DISPLAYNAME ENGLISHNAME ar ar ara ARA Arabic Arabic bg bg bul BGR Bulgarian Bulgarian ca ca cat CAT Catalan Catalan zh-Hans zh zho CHS Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Simplified) cs cs ces CSY Czech Czech da da dan DAN Danish Danish de de deu DEU German German el el ell ELL Greek Greek en en eng ENU English English es es spa ESP Spanish Spanish fi fi fin FIN Finnish Finnish zh zh zho CHS Chinese Chinese zh-Hant zh zho CHT Chinese (Traditional) Chinese (Traditional) zh-CHS zh zho CHS Chinese (Simplified) Legacy Chinese (Simplified) Legacy zh-CHT zh zho CHT Chinese (Traditional) Legacy Chinese (Traditional) Legacy */
Windows 8, Windows Server 2012, Windows 7, Windows Vista SP2, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core Role not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core Role supported with SP1 or later; Itanium not supported)
The .NET Framework does not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see .NET Framework System Requirements.
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