User preferences
Summarize
Summary of User Preferences
User preferences in ServiceNow allow users to customize their UI experiences, such as adjusting the number of rows displayed in lists or choosing whether to show response times on forms. These preferences are stored as records in the User preferences [sysuserpreference] table and are updated with each change made by the user.
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Key Features
- User Customization: Each user can hide or display specific UI elements, and preferences are saved for future sessions.
- User Preference Management: Administrators can view, modify, or delete user preferences through User Administration > User Preferences.
- Maximum Preferences: A user can have a maximum of 10,000 preferences to avoid system performance issues.
- Global User Preferences: Administrators can create system-wide preferences by checking the System box and leaving the User field empty.
- Update Sets: Global user preferences are included in update sets, while individual user customizations are retained upon import.
Key Outcomes
By effectively managing user preferences, ServiceNow customers can enhance user experience and streamline UI interactions across their organization. Users benefit from personalized settings that persist across sessions, while administrators can ensure consistent experiences by setting global defaults and troubleshooting any inconsistencies in user interfaces. For example, administrators can easily disable the Next Experience welcome screen or configure keyboard shortcuts to optimize usability.
Users can configure many UI features, such as the number of rows per page in a list or whether the response time displays at the bottom of a list or form. Administrators can modify or delete these preferences as needed.
User customizations are stored as records in the User preferences [sys_user_preference] table, and are updated each time the user changes the setting. The UI displays according to each user's preferences.
For example, the response time may appear at the bottom of lists and forms by default. If a user hides the response time, a user preference record is created for them showing that the response time indicator as hidden. During the user's future sessions, the response time indicator is hidden. If the user later decides to display the response time, the user preference record is updated appropriately, and future sessions open with the response time indicator visible.
For more information about the preferences available to users, see User preference settings and Next Experience user preferences.
Viewing and troubleshooting user preferences
Navigate to for a list of user preference records. Select a preference name to display that preference in the form view. If troubleshooting for a user, search for their user name to find all of their customizations, and then select a preference name to view.
| Field | Description |
|---|---|
| Name | The name of the feature or functionality. |
| Description | An optional short description of the feature or functionality. |
| System | Shows whether this record indicates the system-wide default (TRUE), or not (FALSE). |
| Type | Shows the data type of entry accepted for the Value. For example, you can select string or integer. |
| User | Shows the name of the user for whom the setting is customized. If User is empty, the record is for a system-wide default. |
| Value | The current setting for this record. Compare this value to the User field and System field to determine whether the value shown is a system-wide default or a specific user’s preference. |
- System=TRUE
- User=blank
- System=FALSE
- User=<username>
If a user encounters an unexplained behavior in the user interface, you can check their user preferences by searching the User preferences list for their user name. Then, delete or update the user preference record that affects the behavior in question.
Global user preferences
User preferences and update sets
User preference records for system-wide values, also called the default or global values, are stored in update sets. Any changes are implemented when you import the update set and affect all users who have not customized the feature. User preference records for specific users aren’t stored in update sets, so user customizations are retained when you import an update set. For more information, see System update sets.