This guide explains how to produce localized, human-readable names for territories, languages, scripts, currencies, calendars, territory subdivisions, and whole locales — the CLDR display name data surfaced by the display_name/2 family of functions.
Overview
Every display-name function follows the same shape: pass the code, get {:ok, name} back, localized into the :locale option (default :en):
iex> Localize.Territory.display_name(:US)
{:ok, "United States"}
iex> Localize.Territory.display_name(:US, locale: :de)
{:ok, "Vereinigte Staaten"}
iex> Localize.Language.display_name("fr", locale: :de)
{:ok, "Französisch"}
iex> Localize.Script.display_name(:Cyrl, locale: :fr)
{:ok, "cyrillique"}
iex> Localize.Currency.display_name(:USD, locale: :de)
{:ok, "US-Dollar"}Each module also provides a display_name!/2 variant that raises on error, and per-locale data functions (the *_for family) that return the entire name inventory for a locale in one call.
Territories
Localize.Territory.display_name/2 names territory codes — ISO 3166 codes, CLDR containment codes like :EU, and the world code :"001":
iex> Localize.Territory.display_name(:GB)
{:ok, "United Kingdom"}
iex> Localize.Territory.display_name(:EU)
{:ok, "European Union"}
iex> Localize.Territory.display_name(:"001")
{:ok, "world"}
iex> Localize.Territory.display_name("US", locale: :fr)
{:ok, "États-Unis"}The :style option selects among the CLDR name alternatives — :standard (the default), :short, and :variant:
iex> Localize.Territory.display_name(:GB, style: :short)
{:ok, "UK"}
iex> Localize.Territory.display_name(:CZ)
{:ok, "Czechia"}
iex> Localize.Territory.display_name(:CZ, style: :variant)
{:ok, "Czech Republic"}Not every territory has every style — CLDR only records alternatives where they exist, and a missing style returns an error rather than silently falling back:
iex> {:error, error} = Localize.Territory.display_name(:US, style: :variant)
iex> error.__struct__
Localize.UnknownStyleErrorLocalize.Territory.known_styles/0 lists the style vocabulary and Localize.Territory.known_territories/0 the full territory universe.
Languages
Localize.Language.display_name/2 follows the TR35 display-name algorithm, which canonicalizes but does not maximize the input. A bare language keeps its own name — likely subtags are not added, so "en" does not become "American English" — while an explicitly supplied region or script resolves to the region-specific CLDR name:
iex> Localize.Language.display_name("en")
{:ok, "English"}
iex> Localize.Language.display_name("en-US")
{:ok, "American English"}
iex> Localize.Language.display_name("en-GB")
{:ok, "British English"}
iex> Localize.Language.display_name("pt-BR")
{:ok, "Brazilian Portuguese"}The :style option is one of :standard (default), :short, :long, :menu, or :variant; as with territories, alternatives exist only where CLDR records them:
iex> Localize.Language.display_name("en-GB", style: :short)
{:ok, "UK English"}Scripts
Localize.Script.display_name/2 names ISO 15924 script codes, with styles :standard (default), :short, :stand_alone, and :variant:
iex> Localize.Script.display_name(:Latn)
{:ok, "Latin"}
iex> Localize.Script.display_name(:Hant)
{:ok, "Traditional"}
iex> Localize.Script.display_name(:Hant, style: :stand_alone)
{:ok, "Traditional Han"}
iex> Localize.Script.display_name(:Arab, style: :variant)
{:ok, "Perso-Arabic"}The :stand_alone style exists because some script names are contextual: "Traditional" reads fine inside "Chinese (Traditional)" but needs "Traditional Han" when it stands on its own.
Currencies
Localize.Currency.display_name/2 returns the localized currency name, and Localize.Currency.pluralize/3 selects the plural-category-appropriate form for a count:
iex> Localize.Currency.display_name(:USD)
{:ok, "US Dollar"}
iex> Localize.Currency.display_name(:EUR, locale: :ja)
{:ok, "ユーロ"}
iex> Localize.Currency.pluralize(1, :USD)
{:ok, "US dollar"}
iex> Localize.Currency.pluralize(3, :USD)
{:ok, "US dollars"}Calendars and calendar fields
Localize.Calendar.display_name/3 takes a type and a value, covering both calendar systems and the date/time field and element names:
iex> Localize.Calendar.display_name(:calendar, :gregorian)
{:ok, "Gregorian Calendar"}
iex> Localize.Calendar.display_name(:calendar, :japanese, locale: :de)
{:ok, "Japanischer Kalender"}
iex> Localize.Calendar.display_name(:month, 7)
{:ok, "July"}
iex> Localize.Calendar.display_name(:month, 7, locale: :fr)
{:ok, "juillet"}
iex> Localize.Calendar.display_name(:day, 1)
{:ok, "Monday"}
iex> Localize.Calendar.display_name(:quarter, 2)
{:ok, "2nd quarter"}
iex> Localize.Calendar.display_name(:era, 1)
{:ok, "Anno Domini"}
iex> Localize.Calendar.display_name(:date_time_field, :year, locale: :fr)
{:ok, "année"}Territory subdivisions
Localize.Territory.Subdivision.display_name/2 names ISO 3166-2 subdivisions using their CLDR subdivision ids:
iex> Localize.Territory.Subdivision.display_name("usca")
{:ok, "California"}
iex> Localize.Territory.Subdivision.display_name("usca", locale: :fr)
{:ok, "Californie"}
iex> Localize.Territory.Subdivision.display_name("gbeng")
{:ok, "England"}Locale display names
Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay.display_name/2 (also reachable as Localize.Locale.display_name/2) implements the full TR35 locale display name algorithm, composing the language name with parenthesized qualifiers for script, territory, variants, and -u- extensions:
iex> Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay.display_name("en-US")
{:ok, "English (United States)"}
iex> Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay.display_name("zh-Hant")
{:ok, "Chinese (Traditional)"}
iex> Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay.display_name("en-US", locale: :fr)
{:ok, "anglais (États-Unis)"}
iex> Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay.display_name("en-US-u-ca-buddhist")
{:ok, "English (United States, Buddhist Calendar)"}The :language_display option chooses between the two TR35 modes. :standard (the default) composes language plus qualifiers; :dialect prefers the fused regional name where CLDR has one:
iex> Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay.display_name("en-US", language_display: :dialect)
{:ok, "American English"}
iex> Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay.display_name("nl-BE", language_display: :dialect)
{:ok, "Flemish"}Canonical, not maximized
Like Localize.Language.display_name/2, the locale display algorithm works from the canonical form of the request, not the maximized one. Validation resolves "en" to the full tag en-Latn-US internally, but the display name reflects only what the caller wrote:
iex> Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay.display_name("en")
{:ok, "English"}
iex> Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay.display_name("en-US")
{:ok, "English (United States)"}This is the TR35-specified behavior: display names answer "what did the user ask for?", so likely subtags never leak into the output. A string and an equivalent validated Localize.LanguageTag render identically.
Per-locale name inventories
Each domain module pairs display_name/2 with *_for functions that return the whole localized inventory at once — useful for building pickers and select lists. The naming rule is uniform across Localize: known_* is the locale-independent CLDR universe, supported_* reflects your configuration, and *_for is data localized into a display locale.
iex> {:ok, names} = Localize.Language.language_names_for(locale: :fr)
iex> names["en"]
%{standard: "anglais"}
iex> {:ok, names} = Localize.Script.script_names_for(locale: :en)
iex> names[:Hant]
%{stand_alone: "Traditional Han", standard: "Traditional"}
iex> {:ok, names} = Localize.Territory.Subdivision.subdivision_names_for(locale: :en)
iex> names[:usca]
"California"The name maps carry all recorded style alternatives for each code, which is why the values are style-keyed maps. The companion functions Localize.Language.languages_for/1, Localize.Script.scripts_for/1, and Localize.Territory.Subdivision.subdivisions_for/1 return just the codes that have names in the given locale.
Style option summary
| Module | :style values | Default |
|---|---|---|
Localize.Territory | :standard, :short, :variant | :standard |
Localize.Language | :standard, :short, :long, :menu, :variant | :standard |
Localize.Script | :standard, :short, :stand_alone, :variant | :standard |
Localize.Locale.LocaleDisplay | :language_display option: :standard, :dialect | :standard |
Styles are name alternatives recorded by CLDR, not widths that always exist — requesting a style with no data for the given code returns an error.