XLocale man page on Ultrix

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XLocale(3X11)			     X11R5			 XLocale(3X11)

NAME
       XLocale - all functions to access locale database

SYNOPSIS
       #include "Xlocaleint.h"

       int
       _Xmbtype(xlocale)
       XLocale xlocale;

       The  _Xmbtype()	returns the codeset type of the locale. Two types will
       be returned:

	      CDS_STATELESS -- state-independent codeset
	      CDS_STATEFUL  -- state-dependent codeset

       If application never calls the setting locale, the function returns -1,
       no  locale  has	been set.  With the _Xmbtype you can check if there is
       locale.

       int
       _Xmbcsnum(xlocale)
       XLocale xlocale;

       The _Xmbcsnum returns the number of charsets of the locale.

       _CSID
       _Xmbcsid(xlocale, mbstr)
       Xlocale xlocale;
       unsigned char *mbstr;

       The function returns the charset id "CSi" of  the  multibyte  character
       encoded	in  the	 current locale.  The multibyte character is stored in
       the null-terminated string "mbstr".  The charset	 id  is	 ordered  from
       positive	 number	 0.  The CSi is defined to a constant "i", e.g, CS1 is
       constant 1.

       The _Xmbcsid returns constant ND for any error of the multibyte charac‐
       ter which maybe wrong code, or maybe terminated unexpectly.

       For  state-dependent  codeset,  _Xmbcsid keeps the track of the current
       locking shift-state. In other word only this  function  _Xmbcsid	 would
       change the current state.   When the mbstr is passed as a NULL pointer,
       the _Xmbcsid sets the initial state.

	      _Xmbcsid(xlocale, NULL)

       int
       _Xmblen(xlocale)
       XLocale xlocale;

       The _Xmblen returns the number of bytes of the current charset  in  the
       xlocale.	 The returned value is zero for wrong charset id.

       char *
       _Xmbdsg(xlocale)
       XLocale xlocale;

       This function is for state-dependent codeset only.  The _Xmbdsg returns
       the designation of this charset. The NULL returned is for  wrong	 csid.
       The returned string is owned by the locale, do not change or free it.

       int
       _Xmbdlen(xlocale, mbstr)
       Xlocale xlocale;
       unsigned char *mbstr;

       This  function  is for state-dependent codeset only.  If the mbstr con‐
       tains a complete designation sequence, the _Xmbdsg returns  the	length
       of  the sequence; otherwise returns zero.  The mbstr is null-terminated
       string.

       int
       _Xmbfsnum(xlocale)
       XLocale xlocale;

       The _Xmbfsnum returns the  number  of  font  charsets  of  the  current
       locale.	This number is different from _Xmbcsnum().

       char *
       _Xmbfsname(xlocale)
       XLocale xlocale;

       The  _Xmbfsname returns the charset name with the current charset.  The
       name is form of CharsetRegistry-CharsetEncoding registered by X in  the
       definition  of  XLFD.  The NULL returned is for the wrong charset.  The
       returned string is owned by the current locale, so do  not  change  and
       free this data.

       int
       _Xmbfslen(xlocale)
       XLocale xlocale;

       The  _Xmbfslen  returns	the  number of bytes of the current charset of
       font encoding. The zero returned is for wrong charset.

       wchar
       _Xmbfswf(xlocale, csid) XLocale xlocale;
       int csid;

       The _Xmbfswf returns the woffset of the font charset id.	 This  woffset
       is  for	the  4-byte wchar encoding.  The negative value -1 returned is
       for wrong csid.

       char *
       _Xmbfsdsg(xlocale)
       XLocale xlocale;

       The _Xmbfsdsg returns the designation sequence, i.e.,  escape  sequence
       of  font	 charset which is registered by X in the "Compound Text Encod‐
       ing, Version 1.1".  The returned value is owned by the locale,  do  not
       free or change it.  The NULL returned is for wrong charset.

       int
       _Xmbctocsc(xlocale, mbstr, cscode)
       XLocale xlocale;
       unsigned char *mbstr;
       unsigned int *cscode;

       The  _Xmbctocsc	converts codepoint of multibyte character to codepoint
       of charset.  The csid is it's charset id.  The converted code is stored
       in  the cscode.	If wrong codepoint, use the first codepoint of csid as
       default, and return negative value. if correct, return 0	 meaning  Suc‐
       cess.   The _Xmbctocsc always supposes that the mbstr points to a code‐
       point, not shift-state sequence	if  codeset  is	 state-dependent.  The
       caller  should  note  this, otherwise the _Xmbctocsc treats it as wrong
       codepoint.

       int
       _Xcsctombc(xlocale, cscode, code)
       XLocale xlocale;
       unsigned int cscode;
       unsigned int *code;

       The _Xcsctombc does the reverse conversion of _Xmbctocsc.

       char *
       _Xsetlocale(locale_category, locale_name)
       int locale_category;
       char *locale_name;

       The _Xsetlocale sets the current locale for the specified category.  If
       the operation was successful, _Xsetlocale returns a pointer to the cur‐
       rent locale name for the category If the category  is  invalid  or  the
       locale  is  not	supported  in  the  system, _Xsetlocale returns a NULL
       pointer.	 The returned locale name is owned by the  system  locale,  do
       not change or free it.

       The category is defined to one of the following:

	      LC_CTYPE
	      LC_ALL

       The locale name is allowed to the form:

	      NULL
	      ""
	      string

       The  value NULL means to query the current locale name, and _Xsetlocale
       returns the locale name string.

       The empty string sets the implementation-dependent locale. It  examines
       the  environment	 $LANG.	  If ${LANG} is set and contains the name of a
       valid locale, that value is used to set category. If the value is still
       not   obtained,	_Xsetlocale  sets  the	category to C-language "C" and
       return the locale name. The C locale is ASCII codeset.

       The locale name is accepted to the following form:

	      language[_territory[.codeset]]

       The language and territory are country codes defined in ISO 639 and ISO
       3166.

SEE ALSO
       X/Open Portability Guide, Volume 3, XSI Internationalization.
       IS0 639, ISO 3166.

								 XLocale(3X11)
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