NET Framework, Microsoft Windows Workflow Foundation, Microsoft ASP. NET, and SQL Server — some of which are localized into only a limited number of languages. If a user interface element is generated by any of the supporting technologies that are not localized into the language that the site owner specified for the site, the user interface element appears in English. For example, if a site owner creates a site in Hebrew, and the .
NET Framework component displays a notification message, the notification message will not display in Hebrew because the . NET Framework is not localized into Hebrew.
This situation can occur when sites are created in any language except the following: Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, and Spanish. Each language pack that you install creates a folder at %COMMONPROGRAMFILES%\Microsoft Shared\Web server extensions\1. LAYOUTS\Locale. In each locale.
Anytime a file cannot be found for any site in that language, this file will be used. You can specify the file to use by setting the File. Not. Found. Page for each web application. In some cases, some text might originate from the original installation language, which can create a mixed- language experience. This kind of mixed- language experience is typically seen only by content creators or site owners and is not seen by site users.