Hi Marco,

Can you provide a little more context? I think the whole idea is that you 
generate the xlf files, and hand those over to your translator. Then the 
translator hands your back the language files you would actually use in 
your production/tests.
So the xlf is just an intermediate file. There are tools your translators 
can use to do the diffing and update the existing translations, but that's 
outside of angular's scope. 

If you are the 'translator' yourself, you might be interested in this 
article 
<https://medium.com/@t_tsonev/making-sense-of-angular-internationalization-i18n-e7b26fb9c587>.
 
(be aware some details might differ due to the updates to I18N in angular 
5!), but most of it still applies.

Setting at runtime isn't really supported yet, what you can do is reload 
your app in a different locale by redirecting to the starting point of your 
locale. 
If I may ask, because I think this is highly interesting, what is the 
reason you want to do this during runtime? 

Regards
Sander

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