Do web browsers have an interface to access any of the locale settings as set in the operating system by the user?
I can detect what country the user is currently in from their IP address or using a the new geolocation API, but I'm writing a browser app for travellers so I expect their current location to often not be their home country.
Is there any way to determine what country/locale the browser/OS is set to?
If not is there any proposal to add proper locale support to JavaScript?
Also are there any clever workarounds? (For instance I know I can get the user's preferred browsing language but there are plenty of countries which use the same language and plenty of users who keep this set to the default rather than changing it to their usual language.)
EDIT only other way is geoLocation API of HTML5
http://html5demos.com/geo http://dev.w3.org/geo/api/spec-source.html
I'd have to defend or re-state the answers of SReject and CodeJack because the browser language does in general contain the country locale of the OS as in
"en-US"
or"de-CH"
.We've used this for years to pre-select the country in forms and it works in enough cases to be useful.
So with travelling Swiss users you would use
navigator.language.slice(-2)
and get"CH"
which is a valid answer to your question.The best you'll get is languages:
Due to either security concerns or just not implemented, what you have requested is not possible, natively. You can however use an ActiveX object for your Windows users
You could have a user select their perfered language, country, etc then use javascript to set a cookie, which will be sent to your server anytime a page is requested