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feat($locale): Include original locale ID in $locale #13390
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Most systems use *IETF language tag* codes which are typically a combination of the ISO 639 language code and ISO 3166-1 country code with an underscore or hyphen delimiter. For example `en_US`, `en_AU`, etc. Whilst the `$locale.id` comes close, the lowercase format makes it impossible to transform to an IETF tag reliably. For example, it would be impossible to deduce `en_Dsrt_US` from `en-dsrt-us`. It would be very handy for communicating with external systems to be able to pass the IETF tag format, at least with the character casing intact.
@philBrown this doesn't actually work, since if you look further down the file the |
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Most systems use *IETF language tag* codes which are typically a combination of the ISO 639 language code and ISO 3166-1 country code with an underscore or hyphen delimiter. For example `en_US`, `en_AU`, etc. Whilst the `$locale.id` comes close, the lowercase format makes it impossible to transform to an IETF tag reliably. For example, it would be impossible to deduce `en_Dsrt_US` from `en-dsrt-us`. Closes angular#13390
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@gkalpak points out that your fix does indeed work, but since the code itself is weird, it will be better to fix it in the way I have done in the PR. |
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Most systems use *IETF language tag* codes which are typically a combination of the ISO 639 language code and ISO 3166-1 country code with an underscore or hyphen delimiter. For example `en_US`, `en_AU`, etc. Whilst the `$locale.id` comes close, the lowercase format makes it impossible to transform to an IETF tag reliably. For example, it would be impossible to deduce `en_Dsrt_US` from `en-dsrt-us`. Closes #13390
petebacondarwin
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petebacondarwin
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that referenced
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Jan 26, 2016
Most systems use *IETF language tag* codes which are typically a combination of the ISO 639 language code and ISO 3166-1 country code with an underscore or hyphen delimiter. For example `en_US`, `en_AU`, etc. Whilst the `$locale.id` comes close, the lowercase format makes it impossible to transform to an IETF tag reliably. For example, it would be impossible to deduce `en_Dsrt_US` from `en-dsrt-us`. Closes #13390
petebacondarwin
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Most systems use IETF language tag codes which are typically a combination of the ISO 639 language code and ISO 3166-1 country code with an underscore or hyphen delimiter. For example
en_US
,en_AU
, etc.Whilst the
$locale.id
comes close, the lowercase format makes it impossible to transform to an IETF tag reliably. For example, it would be impossible to deduceen_Dsrt_US
fromen-dsrt-us
.It would be very handy for communicating with external systems to be able to pass the IETF tag format, at least with the character casing intact.