Programmatic way to get all the available languages (in satellite assemblies)
based on answer by @hans-holzbart but fixed to not return the InvariantCulture too and wrapped into a reusable method:
public static IEnumerable<CultureInfo> GetAvailableCultures()
{
List<CultureInfo> result = new List<CultureInfo>();
ResourceManager rm = new ResourceManager(typeof(Resources));
CultureInfo[] cultures = CultureInfo.GetCultures(CultureTypes.AllCultures);
foreach (CultureInfo culture in cultures)
{
try
{
if (culture.Equals(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture)) continue; //do not use "==", won't work
ResourceSet rs = rm.GetResourceSet(culture, true, false);
if (rs != null)
result.Add(culture);
}
catch (CultureNotFoundException)
{
//NOP
}
}
return result;
}
using that method, you can get a list of strings to add to some ComboBox with the following:
public static ObservableCollection<string> GetAvailableLanguages()
{
var languages = new ObservableCollection<string>();
var cultures = GetAvailableCultures();
foreach (CultureInfo culture in cultures)
languages.Add(culture.NativeName + " (" + culture.EnglishName + " [" + culture.TwoLetterISOLanguageName + "])");
return languages;
}
You can programatically list the cultures available in your application
// Pass the class name of your resources as a parameter e.g. MyResources for MyResources.resx
ResourceManager rm = new ResourceManager(typeof(MyResources));
CultureInfo[] cultures = CultureInfo.GetCultures(CultureTypes.AllCultures);
foreach (CultureInfo culture in cultures)
{
try
{
ResourceSet rs = rm.GetResourceSet(culture, true, false);
// or ResourceSet rs = rm.GetResourceSet(new CultureInfo(culture.TwoLetterISOLanguageName), true, false);
string isSupported = (rs == null) ? " is not supported" : " is supported";
Console.WriteLine(culture + isSupported);
}
catch (CultureNotFoundException exc)
{
Console.WriteLine(culture + " is not available on the machine or is an invalid culture identifier.");
}
}
This would be one of solution on basis of following statement:
Each satellite assembly for a specific language is named the same but lies in a sub-folder named after the specific culture e.g. fr or fr-CA.
public IEnumerable<CultureInfo> GetSupportedCulture()
{
//Get all culture
CultureInfo[] culture = CultureInfo.GetCultures(CultureTypes.AllCultures);
//Find the location where application installed.
string exeLocation = Path.GetDirectoryName(Uri.UnescapeDataString(new UriBuilder(Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly().CodeBase).Path));
//Return all culture for which satellite folder found with culture code.
return culture.Where(cultureInfo => Directory.Exists(Path.Combine(exeLocation, cultureInfo.Name)));
}
I'm not sure about getting the languages, maybe you can scan your installation folder for dll-files, but setting your language to an unsupported language should not be a problem.
.NET will fallback to the culture neutral resources if no culture specific files can be found so you can safely select unsupported languages.
As long as you control the application yourself you could just store the available languages in a application setting somewhere. Just a comma-separated string with the culture names should suffice: "en, es"