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INTRODUCTION AND RELEVANT INFORMATION:

I have a desktop application with a window that needs to display large amount of entry fields. Please take a look at below image:

enter image description here

As indicated on the image, controls in the red rectangle should be in main window, other ones can be shown when needed, using progressive disclosure/tabs/etc. I have used purple line to mark related groups of data.

I am using WPF and XAML to create GUI.

MY EFFORTS TO SOLVE THE PROBLEM:

I have tried to break that content into tabs, in order not to clutter the GUI.

I have placed controls from red rectangle into main window, docked them left and then added tab control next to the map. Everything else was placed into appropriate tabs ( groups marked with purple line on the above image ).

PROBLEM:

My problem is that layout can not be fully seen on small laptops despite "breaking" the window into tabs. Since the screen is divided into 3 columns map can not fit properly, it is just a thin vertical line.

I would like to ask here for help, in view of GUI redesign so it can fit into small laptop screens. I am not targeting tablets/phones.

QUESTION:

Is this type of question on topic for this site?

IMPORTANT: I can provide detailed description of every field from the above mockup. I have mockups of the tabs as well (my own effort to solve the problem).

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  • 1
    Side note: titles already have a rather strong emphasis. Please don't also make them ALL CAPS on top of that.
    – Mat
    Dec 10, 2015 at 7:20
  • @Mat: OK thank you for your constructive criticism. I usually post questions in above format, and that proved so efficient. I will try it with your advice in the future posts. Regards. Dec 10, 2015 at 7:53

1 Answer 1

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Is this type of question on topic for this site?

No, probably not. Your question is more about UI/UX as opposed to programming.

UX.SE would be a better place for you because you are asking for help, in view of GUI redesign so it can fit into small laptop screens.

User Experience Stack Exchange is for User Experience Designers, Information Architects, and Human Computer Interaction researchers. If you have a question about...

  • Specific UX design problems
  • UX issues that can be solved with expert advice or existing research
  • Questions about HCI and user research
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