Countries is a collection of all sorts of useful information for every country in the ISO 3166 standard. It contains info for the following standards ISO3166-1 (countries), ISO3166-2 (states/subdivisions), ISO4217 (currency) and E.164 (phone numbers). I will add any country based data I can get access to. I hope this to be a repository for all country based information.
gem install countries
Or you can install via Bundler if you are using Rails. Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'countries'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Simply load a new country object using Country.new(alpha2) or the shortcut Country[alpha2]. An example works best.
c = ISO3166::Country.new('US')
Some apps might not want to constantly call ISO3166::Country
this gem has a
helper that can provide a Country
class
# With global Country Helper
c = Country['US']
This will conflict with any existing Country
constant
To Use
gem 'countries', require: 'countries/global'
In release 4.2 the #name
attribute was deprecated in favour of #iso_short_name
and we added the #iso_long_name
attribute, to make it clear that these attributes use the ISO3166 names, and are not the "common names" most people might expect, eg: The ISO name for "United Kingdom" is "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland", but if you're building a dropdown box to select a country, you're likely expecting to see "United Kingdom" instead.
"Common names" in English have been available in the translation data, via #translation('en')
. As of release 4.2, a shortcut method has been added for simplicity, #common_name
, which delegates to #translation('en')
.
For additional clarity, the #names
method, which was an alias to #unofficial_names
has also been deprecated, together with the finder methods that use name
or names
attributes.
The #name
and #names
attributes, and corresponding finder methods will be removed in 5.0.
For translated country names, we use data from pkg-isocodes, via the i18n_data gem, and these generally correspond to the expected "common names". These names and the corresponding methods have not been changed.
As of 2.0 you can selectively load locales to reduce memory usage in production.
By default we load I18n.available_locales if I18n is present, otherwise only [:en]. This means almost any rails environment will only bring in its supported translations.
You can add all the locales like this.
ISO3166.configure do |config|
config.locales = [:af, :am, :ar, :as, :az, :be, :bg, :bn, :br, :bs, :ca, :cs, :cy, :da, :de, :dz, :el, :en, :eo, :es, :et, :eu, :fa, :fi, :fo, :fr, :ga, :gl, :gu, :he, :hi, :hr, :hu, :hy, :ia, :id, :is, :it, :ja, :ka, :kk, :km, :kn, :ko, :ku, :lt, :lv, :mi, :mk, :ml, :mn, :mr, :ms, :mt, :nb, :ne, :nl, :nn, :oc, :or, :pa, :pl, :ps, :pt, :ro, :ru, :rw, :si, :sk, :sl, :so, :sq, :sr, :sv, :sw, :ta, :te, :th, :ti, :tk, :tl, :tr, :tt, :ug, :uk, :ve, :vi, :wa, :wo, :xh, :zh, :zu]
end
or something a bit more simple
ISO3166.configure do |config|
config.locales = [:en, :de, :fr, :es]
end
You can lookup a country or an array of countries using any of the data attributes via the find_country_by_attribute dynamic methods:
c = ISO3166::Country.find_country_by_iso_short_name('united states')
h = ISO3166::Country.find_all_by(:translated_names, 'França')
list = ISO3166::Country.find_all_countries_by_region('Americas')
c = ISO3166::Country.find_country_by_alpha3('can')
For a list of available attributes please see ISO3166::DEFAULT_COUNTRY_HASH. Note: searches are case insensitive and ignore accents.
Please note that find_by_name
, find_by_names
, find_*_by_name
and find_*_by_names
methods are deprecated and will be removed in 5.0. See Upgrading to 4.2 and 5.x above
c.number # => "840"
c.alpha2 # => "US"
c.alpha3 # => "USA"
c.gec # => "US"
c.iso_long_name # => "The United States of America"
c.iso_short_name # => "United States of America"
c.common_name # => "United States" (This is a shortcut for c.translations('en'))
c.unofficial_names # => ["United States of America", "Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika", "États-Unis", "Estados Unidos"]
# Get the names for a country translated to its local languages
c = Country[:BE]
c.local_names # => ["België", "Belgique", "Belgien"]
c.local_name # => "België"
# Get a specific translation
c.translation('de') # => 'Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika'
c.translations['fr'] # => "États-Unis"
ISO3166::Country.translations # {"DE"=>"Germany",...}
ISO3166::Country.translations('DE') # {"DE"=>"Deutschland",...}
ISO3166::Country.all_translated # ['Germany', ...]
ISO3166::Country.all_translated('DE') # ['Deutschland', ...]
# Nationality
c.nationality # => "American"
c.subdivisions # => {"CO" => {"name" => "Colorado", "names" => "Colorado"}, ... }
c.states # => {"CO" => {"name" => "Colorado", "names" => "Colorado"}, ... }
c.latitude # => "37.09024"
c.longitude # => "-95.712891"
c.world_region # => "AMER"
c.region # => "Americas"
c.subregion # => "Northern America"
Please note that latitude_dec
and longitude_dec
will be deprecated on release 4.2 and deleted in 5.0. These attribues have been redundant for several years, since the latitude
and longitude
fields have been switched decimal coordinates.
Add tzinfo
to your Gemfile and ensure it's required, Countries will not do this for you.
gem 'tzinfo', '~> 1.2', '>= 1.2.2'
c.timezones.zone_identifiers # => ["America/New_York", "America/Detroit", "America/Kentucky/Louisville", ...]
c.timezones.zone_info # see [tzinfo docs]( http://www.rubydoc.info/gems/tzinfo/TZInfo/CountryInfo)
c.timezones # see [tzinfo docs]( http://www.rubydoc.info/gems/tzinfo/TZInfo/Country)
c.country_code # => "1"
c.national_destination_code_lengths # => 3
c.national_number_lengths # => 10
c.international_prefix # => "011"
c.national_prefix # => "1"
c.min_longitude # => '45'
c.min_latitude # => '22.166667'
c.max_longitude # => '58'
c.max_latitude # => '26.133333'
c.bounds #> {"northeast"=>{"lat"=>22.166667, "lng"=>58}, "southwest"=>{"lat"=>26.133333, "lng"=>45}}
c.in_eu? # => false
c.in_eea? # => false
c.in_esm? # => false
ISO3166::Country.pluck(:alpha2, :iso_short_name) # => [["AD", "Andorra"], ["AE", "United Arab Emirates"], ...
To enable currencies extension please add the following to countries initializer.
ISO3166.configuration.enable_currency_extension!
Please note that it requires you to add "money" dependency to your gemfile.
gem "money", "~> 6.9"
Countries now uses the Money gem. What this means is you now get back a Money::Currency
object that gives you access to all the currency information.
c = ISO3166::Country['us']
c.currency.iso_code # => 'USD'
c.currency.name # => 'United States Dollar'
c.currency.symbol # => '$'
A template for formatting addresses is available through the address_format method. These templates are compatible with the Liquid template system.
c.address_format # => "{{recipient}}\n{{street}}\n{{city}} {{region}} {{postalcode}}\n{{country}}"
As of 2.0 countries supports loading custom countries / overriding data in its data set, though if you choose to do this please contribute back to the upstream repo!
Any country registered this way will have its data available for searching etc... If you are overriding an existing country, for cultural reasons, our code uses a simple merge, not a deep merge so you will need to bring in all data you wish to be available. Bringing in an existing country will also remove it from the internal management of translations, all registered countries will remain in memory.
ISO3166::Data.register(
alpha2: 'LOL',
iso_short_name: 'Happy Country',
translations: {
'en' => 'Happy Country',
'de' => 'glückliches Land'
}
)
ISO3166::Country.new('LOL').iso_short_name == 'Happy Country'
Mongoid support has been added. It is required automatically if Mongoid is defined in your project.
Use native country fields in your model:
field :country, type: Country
Adds native support for searching/saving by a country object or alpha2 code.
Searching:
# By alpha2
spanish_things = Things.where(country: 'ES')
spanish_things.first.country.iso_short_name # => "Spain"
# By object
spanish_things = Things.where(country: Country.find_by_iso_short_name('Spain')[1])
spanish_things.first.country.iso_short_name # => "Spain"
Saving:
# By alpha2
spanish_things = Thing.new(country: 'ES')
spanish_things.save!
spanish_things.country.iso_short_name # => "Spain"
# By object
spanish_things = Thing.new(country: Country.find_by_iso_short_name('Spain')[1])
spanish_things.save!
spanish_things.country.iso_short_name # => "Spain"
Note that the database stores only the alpha2 code and rebuilds the object when queried. To return the country name by default you can override the reader method in your model:
def country
super.iso_short_name
end
c = Country['MY']
c.emoji_flag # => "🇲🇾"
Any additions should be directed upstream to pkg-isocodes
Localized country name data is sourced from https://github.com/grosser/i18n_data (which is based on https://salsa.debian.org/iso-codes-team/iso-codes/). Issues regarding localized country names can be reported to https://github.com/grosser/i18n_data/issues or https://salsa.debian.org/iso-codes-team/iso-codes/issues If you need to correct an upstream translation please add it to the lib/countries/data/translations_corrections.yaml
# Ex:
#
# locale:
# alpha2: localized_name
#
Any corrections can be applied in translations_corrections.yaml these will be injected during
the next rake update_cache
.
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
- Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
Copyright (c) 2016 hexorx. See LICENSE for details.