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Is there a way to identify RTL (right-to-left) language, apart from testing language code against all RTL languages?

Since API 17+ allows several resources for RTL and LTR, I assume, there should be a way, at least from API 17.

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17 Answers 17

85

Get it from Configuration.getLayoutDirection():

Configuration config = getResources().getConfiguration(); if(config.getLayoutDirection() == View.LAYOUT_DIRECTION_RTL) { //in Right To Left layout } 
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5 Comments

Unfortunately "Added in API level 17" so it wont work on older versions.
This solution works when you use "Force RTL layout direction" in developer options as well!
That's how you can do it for API levels below 17: stackoverflow.com/a/28568974/170842.
In Oreo it do not change the layout direction automatically(maybe its a bug) So this will not work in Oreo.
@EvZ RTL isn't supported on 16 and below, so treat it as LTR
55

@cyanide's answer has the right approach but a critical bug.

Character.getDirectionality returns the Bi-directional (bidi) character type. Left-to-right text is a predictable type L and right-to-left is also predictably type R. BUT, Arabic text returns another type, type AL.

I added a check for both type R and type AL and then manually tested every RTL language Android comes with: Hebrew (Israel), Arabic (Egypt), and Arabic (Israel).

As you can see, this leaves out other right-to-left languages, so I was concerned that as Android adds these languages, there might have a similar issue and one might not notice right away.

So I tested manually each RTL language.

  • Arabic (العربية) = type AL
  • Kurdish (کوردی) = type AL
  • Farsi (فارسی) = type AL
  • Urdu (اردو) = type AL
  • Hebrew (עברית) = type R
  • Yiddish (ייִדיש) = type R

So it looks like this should work great:

public static boolean isRTL() { return isRTL(Locale.getDefault()); } public static boolean isRTL(Locale locale) { final int directionality = Character.getDirectionality(locale.getDisplayName().charAt(0)); return directionality == Character.DIRECTIONALITY_RIGHT_TO_LEFT || directionality == Character.DIRECTIONALITY_RIGHT_TO_LEFT_ARABIC; } 

Thanks @cyanide for sending me the right direction!

3 Comments

This causes a StringIndexOutOfBoundsException from locale.getDisplayName().charAt(0). It seems that this is a known issue with Java 7. My current solution around this is something like final String language = application.getResources().getConfiguration().locale.getLanguage(); return Strings.equals(language, "iw") || Strings.equals(language, "ar") || Strings.equals(language, "he");
@seato interesting…is that something that affects real Android devices or just testing environments like Genymotion?
I need to change layout according to their local. I able to change strings. but I unable to change image. suppose in english image is in left side when i change to Arabic it should be right.I need to change on button click. if i go settings>language . its woking fine. but in code it is not working . I create only one layout. please let me know.
24

If you're using the support library, you can do the following:

if (ViewCompat.getLayoutDirection(view) == ViewCompat.LAYOUT_DIRECTION_RTL) { // The view has RTL layout } else { // The view has LTR layout } 

4 Comments

I need to change layout according to their local. I able to change strings. but I unable to change image. suppose in english image is in left side when i change to Arabic it should be right.I need to change on button click. if i go settings>language . its woking fine. but in code it is not working . I create only one layout. please let me know.
Can we use this for pre API 17?
@DastakWall yes, but it will always return LTR
Just an FYI, this depends on the view being attached to a window, so if you do it in a constructor or onFinishInflate then it'll always treat it as LTR.
16

You can use TextUtilsCompat from the support library.

TextUtilsCompat.getLayoutDirectionFromLocale(locale)

3 Comments

Using the compat libraries is always a smart way to go but this is the one case where the Character.getDirectionality is available all the way to API 1. I would say both are acceptable.
Note that if your minSdk is at least 17, you can use the normal call instead: developer.android.com/reference/android/text/…
There is a difference between getLayoutDirectionFromLocale and Character.getDirectionality. getLayoutDirectionFromLocale does not consider Yiddish to be a RTL language, while Character.getDirectionality does.
9

There's a really simple way to check the layout direction of a view, but it falls back to LTR on pre API 17 devices:

ViewUtils.isLayoutRtl(View view); 

the ViewUtils class comes bundled with the support v7 library, so it should be available already if you're using the appcompat library.

2 Comments

I need to change layout according to their local. I able to change strings. but I unable to change image. suppose in english image is in left side when i change to Arabic it should be right.I need to change on button click. if i go settings>language . its woking fine. but in code it is not working . I create only one layout. please let me know.
This just calls to ViewCompat.getLayoutDirection(view) == ViewCompat.LAYOUT_DIRECTION_RTL; , and this function isn't available for us to use (IDE shows error using it).
9

You can check like this if you want to check for API lower than 17

boolean isRightToLeft = TextUtilsCompat.getLayoutDirectionFromLocale(Locale .getDefault()) == ViewCompat.LAYOUT_DIRECTION_RTL; 

OR for API 17 or above

boolean isRightToLeft = TextUtils.getLayoutDirectionFromLocale(Locale .getDefault()) == ViewCompat.LAYOUT_DIRECTION_RTL; 

Comments

8

I gathered many information and finally made my own, hopefully complete, RTLUtils class.

It allows to know if a given Locale or View is 'RTL' :-)

package com.elementique.shared.lang; import java.util.Collections; import java.util.HashSet; import java.util.Locale; import java.util.Set; import android.support.v4.view.ViewCompat; import android.view.View; public class RTLUtils { private static final Set<String> RTL; static { Set<String> lang = new HashSet<String>(); lang.add("ar"); // Arabic lang.add("dv"); // Divehi lang.add("fa"); // Persian (Farsi) lang.add("ha"); // Hausa lang.add("he"); // Hebrew lang.add("iw"); // Hebrew (old code) lang.add("ji"); // Yiddish (old code) lang.add("ps"); // Pashto, Pushto lang.add("ur"); // Urdu lang.add("yi"); // Yiddish RTL = Collections.unmodifiableSet(lang); } public static boolean isRTL(Locale locale) { if(locale == null) return false; // Character.getDirectionality(locale.getDisplayName().charAt(0)) // can lead to NPE (Java 7 bug) // https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-6992272?page=com.atlassian.streams.streams-jira-plugin:activity-stream-issue-tab // using hard coded list of locale instead return RTL.contains(locale.getLanguage()); } public static boolean isRTL(View view) { if(view == null) return false; // config.getLayoutDirection() only available since 4.2 // -> using ViewCompat instead (from Android support library) if (ViewCompat.getLayoutDirection(view) == View.LAYOUT_DIRECTION_RTL) { return true; } return false; } } 

4 Comments

I need to change layout according to their local. I able to change strings. but I unable to change image. suppose in english image is in left side when i change to Arabic it should be right.I need to change on button click. if i go settings>language . its woking fine. but in code it is not working . I create only one layout. please let me know.
@Pascal How can I convert RTL string to double? eg: "‏‪41.12 ‬‏"
Sorry, I don't know how it's supposed to be done (I speak french and don't any of these RTL languages) maybe @ali-khaki can help?
6

You can detect if a string is RTL/LTR with Bidi. Example:

import java.text.Bidi; Bidi bidi = new Bidi( title, Bidi.DIRECTION_DEFAULT_LEFT_TO_RIGHT ); if( bidi.isLeftToRight() ) { // it's LTR } else { // it's RTL } 

Comments

4

Just use this code:

 public static boolean isRTL() { return isRTL(Locale.getDefault()); } public static boolean isRTL(Locale locale) { final int directionality = Character.getDirectionality(locale.getDisplayName().charAt(0)); return directionality == Character.DIRECTIONALITY_RIGHT_TO_LEFT || directionality == Character.DIRECTIONALITY_RIGHT_TO_LEFT_ARABIC; } if (isRTL()) { // The view has RTL layout } else { // The view has LTR layout } 

This will work for all Android API lavels.

Comments

3

For more precise control over your app UI in both LTR and RTL mode, Android 4.2 includes the following new APIs to help manage View components:

android:layoutDirection — attribute for setting the direction of a component's layout. android:textDirection — attribute for setting the direction of a component's text. android:textAlignment — attribute for setting the alignment of a component's text. getLayoutDirectionFromLocale() — method for getting the Locale-specified direction 

Thus getLayoutDirectionFromLocale() should help you out. Refer the sample code here : https://android.googlesource.com/platform/frameworks/base.git/+/3fb824bae3322252a68c1cf8537280a5d2bd356d/core/tests/coretests/src/android/util/LocaleUtilTest.java

1 Comment

Is it possible to set layoutDirection to the value corresponding to the system locale? So, it can be either rtl or ltr.
2

Thanks to all.

If you look at the code of LayoutUtil.getLayoutDirectionFromLocale() (and, I assume Confuiguration.getLayoutDirection() as well), it ends up with analysing the starting letter of locale display name, using Character.getDirectionality.

Since Character.getDirectionality was around from Android 1, the following code will be compatible with all Android releases (even those, not supporting RTL correctly :)):

public static boolean isRTL() { return isRTL(Locale.getDefault()); } public static boolean isRTL(Locale locale) { return Character.getDirectionality(locale.getDisplayName().charAt(0)) == Character.DIRECTIONALITY_RIGHT_TO_LEFT; } 

Comments

2

When building library you also always need to check if application is supporting RTL by using

(getApplicationInfo().flags &= ApplicationInfo.FLAG_SUPPORTS_RTL) != 0 

When application is running on RTL locale, but it isn't declared in manifest android:supportsRtl="true" then it is running in LTR mode.

1 Comment

Good point for a library! However, in the main app I know that supportsRtl is set, so checking seems to be redundant.
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Native RTL support in Android 4.2

 public static ComponentOrientation getOrientation(Locale locale) { // A more flexible implementation would consult a ResourceBundle // to find the appropriate orientation. Until pluggable locales // are introduced however, the flexiblity isn't really needed. // So we choose efficiency instead. String lang = locale.getLanguage(); if( "iw".equals(lang) || "ar".equals(lang) || "fa".equals(lang) || "ur".equals(lang) ) { return RIGHT_TO_LEFT; } else { return LEFT_TO_RIGHT; } } 

1 Comment

Good! More complete answer here: stackoverflow.com/questions/20814564/… would you update yours?
1

This will work in all SDKS:

private boolean isRTL() { Locale defLocale = Locale.getDefault(); return Character.getDirectionality(defLocale.getDisplayName(defLocale).charAt(0)) == Character.DIRECTIONALITY_RIGHT_TO_LEFT; } 

Comments

0

Easily you can use this :

 if (getWindow().getDecorView().getLayoutDirection()== View.LAYOUT_DIRECTION_RTL) { // The view has RTL layout } else { // The view has LTR layout } 

Comments

0

You might have a specific requirement to test RTL explicitly but usually in android you don't need to.

All resources can be configured to any language by creating locale directories and resource files and together with using 'Start' and 'End' instead of 'Left' and 'Right' you can support RTL seamlessly.

e.g. android:layout_alignParentStart="true" instead of android:layout_alignParentLeft="true"

See here: https://developer.android.com/training/basics/supporting-devices/languages

Android makes it so easy, it's usually a waste of effort to code separate RTL/LTR logic.

Comments

-1

Because English language devices are supporting RTL, you can use this code in your MainActivity to change device language to english and you don't need to "supportRTL" code.

String languageToLoad = "en"; // your language Locale locale = new Locale(languageToLoad); Locale.setDefault(locale); Configuration config = new Configuration(); config.locale = locale; getBaseContext().getResources().updateConfiguration(config, getBaseContext().getResources().getDisplayMetrics()); 

2 Comments

Your code has a syntax error in the second last line.
The question was about identifying RTL and not about seting the locale.

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