Languages and Localization
Users can set their own language for the user interface. Available languages are:
- English
- French
- Russian
- Spanish
- German
- Finnish
- Swedish
- Polish
Changing Language
User language can be changes as follows:
- Login to QPR ProcessAnalyzer.
- Click the Main menu (on top left) and click User Settings.
- Choose a language from the Language drop-down list.
- Click Save to close the dialog.
The language is remembered by the system when the user logs in the next time (also when using another computer).
Date Format Settings
In addition to the language, the following date formatting related settings can be set by each user in the User Settings dialog:
- Date format: Defines how date values appears are presented in the Web UI. The format can be e.g. MM/dd/yyyy or d.M.yyyy. Following parts that can be used in the date format: d (day of month as one or two digits), dd (day of month as two digits), M (month as one or two digits), MM (month as two digits), yy (year as two digits) and yyyy (year as four digits).
- First day of week: The first day of the week (that appears in calendars to pick dates).
- Use 12-hour clock: Whether the 24-hour or 12-hour clock is used to present hours.
All these settings are remembered by the system, so they are always used for the user, until changed.
Localization Support Details
Most textual items in the UI are translated with the following exceptions:
- Actual process mining data imported to QPR ProcessAnalyzer (e.g. case and event attribute names, event type names, case and event attribute values)
- Some tooltips that contain detailed instructions
- Some special error messages
There are system wide defaults for the following localization settings that can be set to the configuration table:
- DefaultUiLanguage
- DefaultDateFormat
- DefaultFirstDayOfWeek
- DefaultUse12HourClock
New user accounts use the default values until user changes her/his own settings.
The login page is translated using the default language, when QPR ProcessAnalyzer is for the first time accessed using a certain web browser. Localization settings are stored to the browser's local storage, and thus the browser remembers the last used language and in the next time shows the login page in that language.