This page presents information about Localization and Units. Localization allows the creation of translated texts so you can run your application in multiple languages. Units allows the the dynamic change of metric system when running the client displays.
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You can localize the text in your application in as many languages as needed. To do this, create a dictionary for each language.
To localize the user interface text, be sure to select the Localizable option (Dynamics Configuration window, TextOutput options) for each display component that you need to localize. |
To create a localization dictionary:
Go to Displays→ Localization.
Click New.
The Create New Localization Dictionary window will display.
Enter a name for the dictionary.
Click OK.
Click Load Strings to populate the table with all the controls that have strings that are set to Localizable. In the TranslatedText column, enter the text in the dictionary language.
Create controls in a display or write a script to use the object called Client.Dictionary to configure the dictionary or dictionary options for the user. When the dictionary changes, the language changes throughout the application.
The alarm messages can also be included in the localization if the related check-box is set.
On Project Settings → General, you can define the default Culture Information that the application is using. The runtime property Client.CultureInfo allows you to change it during runtime. Some display controls may get the Culture Info directly from the Operating System. In this situation, the correct procedure is for both the Operating System settings and the project settings to have the application's target culture.
Find Detailed Docs Here: Themes |
This particular example is a special case of language switching because it involves language change linked with reference tags.
To add to the Dictionary the properties of all tags that can be associated with the reference tag that is being used in the display, follow the practical example.
If the reference tag is not automatically loaded in the Dictionary when clicking on the Locatable option and is not being translated from one language to another on the screen, follow the steps below:
On the En_US dictionary, create one row for each TextBox you want to translate, containing the original text(in Spanish) and the Translated Text(in English).
This procedure should work for every reference tag you have in your project.
To translate the column title of the DataGridWindow component, it's noticed that this field does not have the locatable option and does not recognize Client.Locale() as a function.
To translate column titles in a DataGrid, a script must be created.
The method below iterates for each column in the data grid and applies the @Client.Locale function to them. After the loop, the DataGrid is updated.
public void gridcolumntitle(){ TDataGridWindow grid=this.CurrentDisplay.GetDataGrid("grid") as TDataGridWindow; foreach (GridColumn col in grid.Columns) { col.Title=@Client.Locale(col.Title); } grid.DoRefresh(); } |
To avoid overloading the client and maintain efficiency, the gridcolumntitle() method should only be called if the @Client.Localization has changed:
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