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Home/ Questions/Q 625795
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T19:20:55+00:00 2026-05-13T19:20:55+00:00

I have an application that displays a dialog when the user needs to enter

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I have an application that displays a dialog when the user needs to enter information. The reason for this, is to keep the main form readonly, and only when you need to add/edit data will a dialog appear.

The problem I’m wrestling with is what to display for the label names in the dialog. The application is a WPF desktop app and traditionally desktop apps are very short on label names (usually one or two words). I want to make the dialog user friendly and be more descriptive about the information that is required. Web developers seem to be catching on to this and are much more descriptive with their label names, but most of the forms I’ve looked at are forms that are only filled in once, whereas I will have data that can be edited.

An example: If I had a label that asked a user if an employee smoked, in most a destop apps the label would normally be something like ‘Smokes?’ with a checkbox, whereas I want something like ‘Does the employee smoke?’. My issue with this is, that the first time you come across this dialog and enter the data, then it seems OK, but what about when you are editing data that is already there. Does this label now make any sense. Past tense and present tense seem to be getting in my way and I was interested in what people think or ways they have approached this. The application I’m writing is a WPF app and I feel that traditional label names are a bit old in the tooth now.

Another example would be entering contact details for a person. Do I just have labels that say Phone, Fax, Email or something more descriptive. i.e. a label that appears before the textboxes stating ‘Enter the contact details below’ and then the single word labels?

Maybe I’m just being pedantic about all this, but I would like to take a step forward so that my application contains more than single word labels that are sometimes unclear to the user about what is required.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T19:20:55+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 7:20 pm

    Why not make use of the concise labels and use Tool tips for a longer explanation.

    The longer explanation is only required when a user is unfamiliar with the application anyway.

    Also, you could re-word a label to make it sound more like a question such as “Is a Smoker?”

    Since you are using Stack Overflow, take note of their use of tooltips, I think Jeff Attwood has a blog post or comments in a podcast about the use of tooltips in SO. I can’t remember where I heard / read it.

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