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Home/ Questions/Q 7581123
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T18:07:23+00:00 2026-05-30T18:07:23+00:00

The default ErrorMessage for StringLength validation is a lot longer than I’d like: The

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The default ErrorMessage for StringLength validation is a lot longer than I’d like:

The field {Name} must be a string with a maximum length of {StringLength}.

I would like to change it universally to something like:

Maximum length is {StringLength}.

I’d like to avoid redundantly specifying the ErrorMessage for every string I declare:

    [StringLength(20, ErrorMessage="Maximum length is 20")]
    public string OfficePhone { get; set; }
    [StringLength(20, ErrorMessage="Maximum length is 20")]
    public string CellPhone { get; set; }

I’m pretty sure I remember there being a simple way to universally change the ErrorMessage but cannot recall it.

EDIT:

For the sake of clarification, I’m trying to universally change the default ErrorMessage so that I can input:

    [StringLength(20)]
    public string OfficePhone { get; set; }

and have the error message say:

Maximum length is 20.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T18:07:24+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 6:07 pm

    You can specify the StringLength attribute as follows on numerous properties

    [StringLength(20, ErrorMessageResourceName = "StringLengthMessage", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(Resource))]
    public string OfficePhone { get; set; }
    [StringLength(20, ErrorMessageResourceName = "StringLengthMessage", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(Resource))]
    public string CellPhone { get; set; }
    

    and add the string resource (named StringLengthMessage) in your resource file

    "Maximum length is {1}"
    

    Message is defined once and has a variable place holder should you change your mind regarding the length to test against.

    You can specify the following:

    1. {0} – Name
    2. {1} – Maximum Length
    3. {2} – Minimum Length

    Update

    To minimize duplication even further you can subclass StringLengthAttribute:

    public class MyStringLengthAttribute : StringLengthAttribute
    {
        public MyStringLengthAttribute() : this(20)
        {
        }
    
        public MyStringLengthAttribute(int maximumLength) : base(maximumLength)
        {
            base.ErrorMessageResourceName = "StringLengthMessage";
            base.ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof (Resource);
        }
    }
    

    Or you can override FormatErrorMessage if you want to add additional parameters. Now the properties look as follows:

    [MyStringLength]
    public string OfficePhone { get; set; }
    [MyStringLength]
    public string CellPhone { get; set; }
    
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