This site will have limited functionality while we undergo maintenance to improve your experience. If an article doesn't solve your issue and you want to ask a question, we have our support community waiting to help you at @FirefoxSupport on Twitter and/r/firefox on Reddit.

Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

How to set Thunderbird Calendar to 24h format ?

  • 11 replies
  • 4 have this problem
  • 14 views
  • Last reply by Onno Ekker

more options

My system config is already in 24h format.

Already restart Thunderbird and my computer.

Also date format in Thunderbird is mm/dd/yyyy but my system format is dd/mm/yyyy.

Fedora 23, Thunderbird 45.4.0

My system config is already in 24h format. Already restart Thunderbird and my computer. Also date format in Thunderbird is mm/dd/yyyy but my system format is dd/mm/yyyy. Fedora 23, Thunderbird 45.4.0

Modified by Islandil

Chosen solution

Did you check the KB article, specifically Configuring the date/time system settings on your computer ? By starting Thunderbird with the variable LC_TIME set to fr it should use French date/time, as I understand it.

Try the following command to start TB: (export LC_TIME=fr; thunderbird)

Read this answer in context 👍 1

All Replies (11)

more options

check the TZ environment variable in your distribution. Thunderbird will use whatever that is set to. After it restarts to read the value that is.

more options

Timezone is set to CET Europe Paris. This timezone should use 24h format and dd/mm/yyyy I think.

This is a fresh install, so no sneaky configuration manipulation has been done.

more options

So obviously, Thunderbird is not fetching date format from my OS or the wrong one, or displaying the hardcoded default one. Reminder : this is a fresh install with no configuration done, it is stock Fedora 23.

more options

[islandil@localhost ~]$ timedatectl

     Local time: Wed 2017-01-25 14:49:16 CET
 Universal time: Wed 2017-01-25 13:49:16 UTC
       RTC time: Wed 2017-01-25 13:49:16
      Time zone: Europe/Paris (CET, +0100)
Network time on: yes

NTP synchronized: yes

RTC in local TZ: no
more options

There are some preferences that TB uses to choose the time and date format. Do you have a French TB? If that's the case, it should probably have set the prefs to the right value.

See this Mozillazine kb for more info about the settings.

I think that maybe the setting of your locale might also matter. Check the pref intl.locale.matchOS if it is set to true. If yes, TB follows the OS, if not, it checks general.useragent.locale.

more options

intl.locale.matchOS is set to true general.useragent.locale is set to en-US

If I understand correctly I cannot have a Thunderbird in English and date/time format following Paris time zone ?

My OS is set to have English language but French format for date and time : 24h and dd/mm/yyyy

more options

Thunderbird can do that, but I'm not sure about the Calendar…

Do you have the built-in Calendar that was shipped with Thunderbird, or did you install Lightning by yourself?

The built-in one only has English locale as it was shipped with English Thunderbird. It *might* help to de-install that and to install Lightning from the Add-ons manager.

more options

I have the built-in Calendar. I don't think it is a problem from Calendar/Lightning. Because emails are also showing mm/dd/yyyy and am/pm format.

more options

Chosen Solution

Did you check the KB article, specifically Configuring the date/time system settings on your computer ? By starting Thunderbird with the variable LC_TIME set to fr it should use French date/time, as I understand it.

Try the following command to start TB: (export LC_TIME=fr; thunderbird)

more options

Sorry I missed it. It solve my issue. Just need to launch Thunderbird from a script with this export beforehand. (used fr_FR for LC_TIME value) Thank you for your help

more options

Great, I'm glad your issue is solved!