107

Many times, when generating messages to show to the user, the message will contain a number of something that I want to inform the customer about.

I'll give an example: The customer has selected a number of items from 1 and up, and has clicked delete. Now I want to give a confirmation message to the customer, and I want to mention the number of items he has selected to minimize the chance of him making a mistake by selecting a bunch of items and clicking delete when he only wants to delete one of them.

One way is to make the generic message like this:

int noofitemsselected = SomeFunction();
string message = "You have selected " + noofitemsselected + " item(s). Are you sure you want to delete it/them?";

The "problem" here is the case where noofitemselected is 1, and we have to write item and it instead of items and them.

My normal solution will be something like this

int noofitemsselected = SomeFunction();
string message = "You have selected " + noofitemsselected + " " + (noofitemsselected==1?"item" : "items") + ". Are you sure you want to delete " + (noofitemsselected==1?"it" : "them") + "?";

This gets quite long and quite nasty really fast if there are many references to the numbers plurality inside the code, and the actual message gets hard to read.

So my questions is simply. Are there any better ways of generating messages like this?

EDIT

I see a lot of persons has got very hung up in the case that I mentioned that the message should be displayed inside a message box, and has simply given an answer of how to avoid using the message box at all, and that is all good.

But remember that the problem of pluralization also apply to texts other places in the program in addition to message boxes. For example, a label alongside a grid displaying the number of lines selected in the grid will have the same problem regarding pluralization.

So this basically apply to most text that is outputted in some way from programs, and then the solution is not as simple as to just change the program to not output text anymore :)

8
  • 6
    @0xA3: I don't really know if every language has a pluralization that is as easily expressed as "item(s)".
    – Jens
    Nov 23, 2010 at 9:02
  • 5
    You should probably be thinking about localisation, too. This issue can get a whole lot worse.
    – Alex Brown
    Nov 23, 2010 at 11:42
  • 4
    @Jens: They usually don't, in least convenient ways possible. Some languages have e.g. different pluralizations for 2-4 than for 5-infinity, all that depending on gender. "Natural Languages: Localization Madness! Coming soon to a computer near you!" Nov 23, 2010 at 12:59
  • 29
    IMO, nothing makes programmers look lazier to users than bad plurality.
    – Greg
    Nov 23, 2010 at 13:39
  • 4
    @Øyvind: +1 for your Edit. It seems many of the "answerers" here are more intent on proving that your question is wrong, rather than offering a solution that's right. Anti-solutions, if you will.
    – mwolfe02
    Nov 24, 2010 at 15:16

25 Answers 25

94

You can avoid all of this messy plurality by just deleting the items without any message and giving the user a really good Undo facility. Users never read anything. You should build a good Undo facility as part of your program anyway.

You actually get 2 benefits when you createe a comprehensive Undo facility. The first benefit makes the user's life easier by allowing him/her to reverse mistakes and minimise reading. The second benefit is that your app is reflecting real life by allowing the reversal of non-trivial workflow (not just mistakes).

I once wrote an app without using a single dialog or confirmation message. It took some serious thinking and was significantly harder to implement than using confirmation-type messages. But the end result was rather nice to use according to its end-users.

27
  • 12
    For some reason, I really feel like I agree with this and should upvote it. Nov 23, 2010 at 9:14
  • 4
    @Øyvind, Here's why: Messages asking the user for verification are expensive to the user, especially when they are presented in the form of a modal dialog box that stops everything until the user answers the dialog. This annoys many users, to the point where they begin just clicking any button to get past the dialog box (how many installers have you just clicked next, next, next?). Consequently, it is safer, and there is much less user friction, if you just do a soft delete, and provide an undo capability. Gmail uses this technique to great effect. Nov 23, 2010 at 17:43
  • 5
    Debateable, but in any case, the same issue will come up in cases other than a confirmation message on a delete, so this answer is really tangential to the question.
    – Jay
    Nov 23, 2010 at 22:24
  • 50
    i upvoted this without reading it. i can always undo it later Nov 23, 2010 at 22:28
  • 6
    @Robert Harvey: Probably apocryphal, but many years back I read that Lotus had shipped 40,000 units of Lotus Notes for the Mac and 60,000 were returned. The interface was so bad that even the people who had pirated it sent it back.
    – Duncan
    Nov 24, 2010 at 2:38
53

If there is ever any chance, no matter how small, that this app will need to be translated to other languages then both are wrong. The correct way of doing this is:

string message = ( noofitemsselected==1 ?
  "You have selected " + noofitemsselected + " item. Are you sure you want to delete it?":
  "You have selected " + noofitemsselected + " items. Are you sure you want to delete them?"
);

This is because different languages handle plurality differently. Some like Malay don't even have syntactic plurals so the strings would generally be identical. Separating the two strings makes it easier to support other languages later on.

Otherwise if this app is meant to be consumed by the general public and is supposed to be user friendly then the second method is preferable. Sorry but I don't really know a shorter way of doing this.

If this app is meant to be consumed only internally by your company then do the shortcut "item(s)" thing. You don't really have to impress anybody when writing enterprisy code. But I'd advise against doing this for publicly consumed app because this gives the impression that the programmer is lazy and thus lower their opinion of the quality of the app. Trust me, small things like this matter.

14
  • 35
    While I agree with the premise, You are ignoring languages that have more than two degrees of plurality. (Take Russian for example. three different ways of saying depending on if its 1, <5, or >= 5 and even that depends on what exactly you are talking about). Basically I'm saying you need a stronger conditional statement and not just a ternary operator.
    – crasic
    Nov 23, 2010 at 9:20
  • 4
    You can even optimize away the noofitemsselected in this example for the first option; since you know it is 1.
    – default
    Nov 23, 2010 at 13:31
  • 16
    While we're at it, Hebrew can have different pluralities for 1, 2, 3-10, and 11+. Nov 23, 2010 at 14:38
  • 3
    @Joel, Hebrew can have that many different pluralities? לא ידעתי (I didn't know)! Modern Hebrew is like English as far as plurals go (though ancient Hebrew also had a dual form.)
    – Ken Bloom
    Nov 24, 2010 at 1:52
  • 3
    In English, zero gets treated like a plural (0 items, 2 items); what happens with zero in Hebrew, Russian, Romanian? Is there a simple way to identify the ranges? I'm guessing that the information has to be determined per language, so any systems based on message files has to deal with varying amounts of plurality in a set of messages. Ouch! Setting up the translations would be tricky too - different numbers of messages are needed for different languages. Nov 24, 2010 at 6:00
39

How about just:

string message = "Are you sure you want to delete " + noofitemsselected + " item(s)?"

That way, you eliminate the number agreement difficulties, and end up with an even shorter, more to-the-point error message for the user as a bonus. We all know users don't read error messages anyway. The shorter they are, the more likely they are to at least glance at the text.

Or, armed with this knowledge that users don't read error messages, you could approach this a different way. Skip the confirmation message altogether, and just provide an undo feature that Just Works, regardless of what was deleted. Most users are already accustomed to undoing an operation when they notice it was not what they wanted, and are likely to find this behavior more natural than having to deal with another annoying pop-up.

4
  • 1
    Good answer. However, it was requested by the customer in this case to provide error messages for many many cases because he felt it was the best approach. But changing the text can at least minimize the problem and make it less messy. Nov 23, 2010 at 9:44
  • @Øyvind: Fair enough. Since you have to follow the customer, I'd either take the first approach I proposed or use a Resources file with a handler function. I just thought it was worth pointing out an alternative because it's so easily forgotten. Heck, I didn't even think of it until after I submitted my first response. Nov 23, 2010 at 9:49
  • Alternatives are most welcome. That's why I gave it a +1 also :) Nov 23, 2010 at 9:53
  • 1
    +1 for not trying to solve an unsolvable problem. And remember Steve Krug's law: Remove half the words. Then do it again. I use: "Delete {x} item(s)?" Sep 7, 2011 at 7:52
20

What about what Java has had for years: java.text.MessageFormat and ChoiceFormat? See http://download.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/api/java/text/MessageFormat.html for more information.

MessageFormat form = new MessageFormat("The disk \"{1}\" contains {0}.");
form.applyPattern(
   "There {0,choice,0#are no files|1#is one file|1<are {0,number,integer} files}.");

Object[] testArgs = {new Long(12373), "MyDisk"};

System.out.println(form.format(testArgs));

// output, with different testArgs
output: The disk "MyDisk" are no files.
output: The disk "MyDisk" is one file.
output: The disk "MyDisk" are 1,273 files.

In your case you want something somewhat simpler:

MessageFormat form = new MessageFormat("Are you sure you want to delete {0,choice,1#one item,1<{0,number.integer} files}?");

The advantage of this approach is that it works well with the i18n bundles, and you can provide translations properly for languages (like Japanese) that have no concept of plural or singular words.

3
  • 1
    This approach works well for handling plurality but does not handle gender, sadly. You need a different string for each kind of thing that can be deleted. Nov 23, 2010 at 17:50
  • If you know the noun, you can fashion the sentences to work with the proper adjective. But yes, having studied classical Greek, you have a different form of the word based on masculine, feminine, or neuter nouns (adjective takes on the form of the noun it modifies), and the form differs based on its function in the sentence (subject, object, etc.). We can always come up with cases where one solution works and another doesn't. This is the way the Java folks attempted to solve the problem. You still have to be careful with the way you form the message formats. Nov 23, 2010 at 20:43
  • You can always feed the Java solution two integers, where the second one indicates gender. (But in reality, gender agreement is usually less of a concern simply because the use case of fitting different objects into a message is less frequent than fitting different numbers of the same object into a message)
    – Ken Bloom
    Nov 24, 2010 at 1:55
12

I'd go with not hardcoding the message, but providing two messages in an seperate Resource file. Like

string DELETE_SINGLE = "You have selected {0} item. Are you sure you want to delete it?";
string DELETE_MULTI = "You have selected {0} items. Are you sure you want to delete them?";

and then feeding them into String.Format like

if(noofitemsselected == 1)
    messageTemplate = MessageResources.DELETE_SINGLE;
else
    messageTemplate = MessageResources.DELETE_MULTI;

string message = String.Format(messageTemplate, noofitemsselected)

I think that this approach is easier to localize and maintain. All UI messages would be at a single locaion.

1
  • +1, I like this approach. Although, you would need to keep track of the resource name equivalents.
    – default
    Nov 23, 2010 at 13:36
11

You can sidestep the issue entirely by phrasing the message differently.

string message = "The number of selected items is " + noofitemsselected + ". Are you sure you want to delete everything in this selection?";
10

The first thing I'd suggest is: use string.Format. That allows you to do something like this:

int numOfItems = GetNumOfItems();
string msgTemplate;
msgTemplate = numOfItems == 1 ? "You selected only {0} item." : "Wow, you selected {0} items!";
string msg = string.Format(msgTemplate, numOfItems);

Further, in WPF apps, I've seen systems where a resource string would be pipe-delimited to have two messages: a singular and a plural message (or a zero/single/many message, even). A custom converter could then be used to parse this resource and use the relevant (formatted) string, so your Xaml is something like this:

<TextBlock Text="{Binding numOfItems, Converter={StaticResource c:NumericMessageFormatter}, ConverterParameter={StaticResource s:SuitableMessageTemplate}}" />
7

For English, plenty of answers above. For other languages it is more difficult, as plurals depend on the gender of the noun and the word ending. Some examples in French:

Regular masculine:

Vous avez choisi 1 compte. Voulez-vous vraiment le supprimer.
Vous avez choisi 2 comptes. Voulez-vous vraiment les supprimer.

Regular feminine

Vous avez choisi 1 table. Voulez-vous vraiment la supprimer.
Vous avez choisi 2 tables. Voulez-vous vraiment les supprimer.

Irregular masculine (finishes with 's')

Vous avez choisi 1 pays. Voulez-vous vraiment le supprimer.
Vous avez choisi 2 pays. Voulez-vous vraiment les supprimer?

The same problem exists in most Latin languages and gets worse in German or Russian, where there are 3 genders (maculine, feminine and neuter).

You'll need to take care if your objective is to handle more than just English.

2
  • At least in my case, this is not really a problem. For each text I want to insert the number, I will know what the noun is when generating the string. But to make a more general solution I agree with you, that to make it work for "all" languages might be a very hard, if not impossible task. Nov 23, 2010 at 12:50
  • 1
    Or take Polish, where the plural form of the noun used is different depending on the number! :/
    – UpTheCreek
    Jan 11, 2011 at 10:36
5

To be able to have pluralized messages which will be possible to localize properly, my opinion is that it would be wise to first create a layer of indirection between the number and a message.

For example, use a constant of some sort to specify which message you want to display. Fetch the message using some function that will hide the implementation details.

get_message(DELETE_WARNING, quantity)

Next, create a dictionary that holds the possible messages and variations, and make variations know when they should be used.

DELETE_WARNING = {
   1: 'Are you sure you want to delete %s item',
   >1: 'Are you sure you want to delete %s items'
   >5: 'My language has special plural above five, do you wish to delete it?'
}

Now you could simply find the key that corresponds to the quantity and interpolate the value of the quantity with that message.

This oversimplified and naive example, but I don't really see any other sane way to do this and be able to provide good support for L10N and I18N.

5

You'll have to translate the function below from VBA to C#, but your usage would change to:

int noofitemsselected = SomeFunction();
string message = Pluralize("You have selected # item[s]. Are you sure you want to delete [it/them]?", noofitemsselected);

I have a VBA function that I use in MS Access to do exactly what you are talking about. I know I'll get hacked to pieces for posting VBA, but here goes anyway. The algorithm should be apparent from the comments:

'---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------'
' Procedure : Pluralize'
' Purpose   : Formats an English phrase to make verbs agree in number.'
' Usage     : Msg = "There [is/are] # record[s].  [It/They] consist[s/] of # part[y/ies] each."'
'             Pluralize(Msg, 1) --> "There is 1 record.  It consists of 1 party each."'
'             Pluralize(Msg, 6) --> "There are 6 records.  They consist of 6 parties each."'
'---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------'
''
Function Pluralize(Text As String, Num As Variant, Optional NumToken As String = "#")
Const OpeningBracket = "\["
Const ClosingBracket = "\]"
Const DividingSlash = "/"
Const CharGroup = "([^\]]*)"  'Group of 0 or more characters not equal to closing bracket'
Dim IsPlural As Boolean, Msg As String, Pattern As String

    On Error GoTo Err_Pluralize

    If IsNumeric(Num) Then
        IsPlural = (Num <> 1)
    End If

    Msg = Text

    'Replace the number token with the actual number'
    Msg = Replace(Msg, NumToken, Num)

    'Replace [y/ies] style references'
    Pattern = OpeningBracket & CharGroup & DividingSlash & CharGroup & ClosingBracket
    Msg = RegExReplace(Pattern, Msg, "$" & IIf(IsPlural, 2, 1))

    'Replace [s] style references'
    Pattern = OpeningBracket & CharGroup & ClosingBracket
    Msg = RegExReplace(Pattern, Msg, IIf(IsPlural, "$1", ""))

    'Return the modified message'    
    Pluralize = Msg
End Function

Function RegExReplace(SearchPattern As String, _
                      TextToSearch As String, _
                      ReplacePattern As String) As String
Dim RE As Object

    Set RE = CreateObject("vbscript.regexp")
    With RE
        .MultiLine = False
        .Global = True
        .IgnoreCase = False
        .Pattern = SearchPattern
    End With

    RegExReplace = RE.Replace(TextToSearch, ReplacePattern)
End Function

The usage got cut off a bit in the code comments above, so I'll repeat it here:

Msg = "There [is/are] # record[s]. [It/They] consist[s/] of # part[y/ies] each."

Pluralize(Msg, 1) --> "There is 1 record.  It consists of 1 party each."
Pluralize(Msg, 6) --> "There are 6 records.  They consist of 6 parties each."

Yes, this solution ignores languages that are not English. Whether that matters depends on your requirements.

4

You could generate the plural automatically, see eg. plural generator.

For plural generating rules see wikipedia

string msg = "Do you want to delete " + numItems + GetPlural(" item", numItems) + "?";
4
  • I like using this method if the application is not internationalised. Puralising results in a more polished application.
    – cspolton
    Nov 23, 2010 at 8:54
  • 1
    Its really hard to internationalise this, and it often fails in English e.g. "You have orders + numMice + GetPlural(" mouse",numMice)" Nov 23, 2010 at 9:08
  • @James Anderson: Now, that's not the best example grammatically is it ;-) Don't fall into the trap of thinking that of using a GetPural method is the only method that you're allowed to use.
    – cspolton
    Nov 23, 2010 at 10:21
  • coupled with a few more functions to handle a few more corner cases, I think this is a very good solution, not shorter though.
    – lalli
    Nov 23, 2010 at 11:26
4

How about a more generic way. Avoid pluralization in the second sentence:

Number of selected items to be deleted: noofitemsselected.
Are you sure?

I find out that doing it this way puts the number at the end of the line which is really easy to spot. This solution would work with the same logic in any language.

2
  • "Selected items to be deleted:" doesn't sound right, the sentence indicates a list of names, but a number is printed. Even if changed to "Number of items to be deleted:", still "items" is awkward.
    – lalli
    Nov 23, 2010 at 11:22
  • @lalli: Yes, the wording is not perfect, and none of provided solutions sound perfect. I'm only suggesting to put it in a form like label and value. You are right about adding Number (i was answering while rocking my baby to sleep).
    – Danosaure
    Nov 23, 2010 at 16:02
4

My general approach is to write a "single/plural function", like this:

public static string noun(int n, string single, string plural)
{
  if (n==1)
    return single;
  else
    return plural;
}

Then in the body of the message I call this function:

string message="Congratulations! You have won "+n+" "+noun(n, "foobar", "foobars")+"!";

This isn't a whole lot better, but at least it, (a) puts the decision in a function and so unclutters the code a little, and (b) is flexible enough to handle irregular plurals. i.e. it's easy enough to say noun(n, "child", "children") and the like.

Of course this only works for English, but the concept is readily extensible to languages with more complex endings.

It occurs to me that you could make the last parameter optional for the easy case:

public static string noun(int n, string single, string plural=null)
{
  if (n==1)
    return single;
  else if (plural==null)
    return single+"s";
  else
    return plural;
}
1
  • 1
    I like your last part where you use a default value to "unclutterize" the code in case of the default operation of adding an s to pluralize the noun. Nov 23, 2010 at 23:21
4

Internationalization

I assume you want internationalization support, in which case different languages have different patterns for plurals (e.g. a special plural form for 2 of something, or more complicated languages like Polish), and you can't rely on applying some simple pattern to your string to fix it.

You can use GNU Gettext's ngettext function and provide two English messages in your source code. Gettext will provide the infrastructure to choose from other (potentially more) messages when translated into other languages. See http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/gettext/Plural-forms.html for a full description of GNU gettext's plural support.

GNU Gettext is under the LGPL. ngettext is named GettextResourceManager.GetPluralString in the C# port of Gettext.

(If you don't need localization support, and don't want to use Gettext right away, then write your own function that does this for English, and pass two full messages to it, that way if you need l10n later, you can add by rewriting a single function.)

3

How about to write function like

string GetOutputMessage(int count, string oneItemMsg, string multiItemMsg)
{
 return string.Format("{0} {1}", count, count > 1 ? multiItemMsg : oneItemMsg);
}

.. and use it whenever you need?

string message = "You have selected " + GetOutputMessage(noofitemsselected,"item","items") + ". Are you sure you want to delete it/them?";
3
  • 3
    you did not think about that did you lol, you have a function to sort out multiplies or not for the sentence then you go an put "it/them" on the end lol
    – Barkermn01
    Nov 23, 2010 at 10:45
  • You should just pass two messages for the whole sentence to this function.
    – Ken Bloom
    Nov 24, 2010 at 1:57
  • It was just an example. I realize that variant to send whole sentences is more correct. Nov 24, 2010 at 7:03
3

For the first problem , I mean Pluralize, you can use Inflector.

And for the second, you can use a string representation extension with a name such as ToPronounString.

3

I had this exact same question posed to me yesterday by a member of our team.

Since it came up again here on StackOverflow I figured the universe was telling me to have a bash at producing a decent solution.

I've quickly put something together and it's by no means perfect however it might be of use or spark some discussion/development.

This code is based on the idea that there can be 3 messages. One for zero items, one for one item and one for more than one item which follow the following structure:

singlePropertyName
singlePropertyName_Zero
singlePropertyName_Plural

I've created an internal class to test with in order to mimick the resource class. I haven't tested this using an actual resource file yet so I'm yet to see the full result.

Here's the code (currently i've included some generics where I know I could have specified the third param simply as a Type and also the second param is a string, I think there's a way to combine these two parameters into something better but I'll come back to that when I have a spare moment.

    public static string GetMessage<T>(int count, string resourceSingularName, T resourceType) where T : Type
{
    var resourcePluralName = resourceSingularName + "_Plural";
    var resourceZeroName = resourceSingularName + "_Zero";
    string resource = string.Empty;
    if(count == 0)
    {
        resource = resourceZeroName;
    }
    else{
        resource = (count <= 1)? resourceSingularName : resourcePluralName;
    }
    var x = resourceType.GetProperty(resource).GetValue(Activator.CreateInstance(resourceType),null);

    return x.ToString();
}

Test resource class:

internal class TestMessenger
{
    public string Tester{get{
    return "Hello World of one";}}
    public string Tester_Zero{get{
    return "Hello no world";}}
    public string Tester_Plural{get{
    return "Hello Worlds";}}
}

and my quick executing method

void Main()
{
    var message = GetMessage(56, "Tester",typeof(TestMessenger));
    message.Dump();
}
1
  • If you want this to really be complete, you should also add a message for singlePropertyName_All to make it even more obvious.
    – Danosaure
    Nov 23, 2010 at 16:05
2

From my point of view, your first solution is the most suited one. Why I say that is, in case you need the application to support multiple languages, the second option can be painstaking. With the fist approach it is easy to localize the text without much effort.

2

You could go for a more generic message like 'Are you sure you want to delete the selected item(s)'.

1
  • 3
    This certainly works, but I think the asker's idea of showing the number of items about to be deleted at a glance is a good one. More than once, I've tried to delete a file from my desktop and accidentally deleted more than that one file. Nov 23, 2010 at 8:51
2

I depends on how nice a message you want to have. From easiest to hardest:

  1. Re-write your error message to avoid pluralization. Not as nice for your user, but faster.

  2. Use more general language but still include the number(s).

  3. Use a "pluralization" and inflector system ala Rails, so you can say pluralize(5,'bunch') and get 5 bunches. Rails has a good pattern for this.

  4. For internationalization, you need to look at what Java provides. That will support a wide variety of languages, including those that have different forms of adjectives with 2 or 3 items. The "s" solution is very English centric.

Which option you go with depends on your product goals. - ndp

2

Why would you want to present a message the users can actually understand? It goes against 40 years of programing history. Nooooo, we have a good thing going on, don't spoil it with understandable messages.


(j/k)

2
  • +1: good to see some humour inside here also. But even if you are kidding I understand your underlying point. Many many programs created during the years have extremely bad messages. Usually because they get way to technical for a normal user to understand anyway. Nov 24, 2010 at 6:24
  • Good point. I always love it when I get a message like "Error 494-B on user input" -- it adds that extra little mystery about just what's wrong that makes life so much more interesting. I recently got an error trying to create a password that simply said, "Password does not meet security requirements". No hint just what requirement I wasn't meeting. My password included both upper and lower case letters and several digits. I tried adding a secial character. Still no. It finally passed when I DELETED a character. I think they had a rule that you can't have the same character twice in a row.
    – Jay
    Nov 24, 2010 at 14:26
2

Do it like it's done in World of Warcraft:

BILLING_NAG_WARNING = "Your play time expires in %d |4minute:minutes;";
0

It gets a little bit shorter with

string message = "Are you sure you want to delete " + noofitemsselected + " item" + (noofitemsselected>1 ? "s" : "") + "?";
0
0

One approach I haven't seen mentioned would be the use of a substitution/select tag (e.g. something like "You are about to squash {0} [?i({0}=1):/cactus/cacti/]". (in other words, have a format-like expression specify the substitution based upon whether argument zero, taken as an integer, equals 1). I've seen such tags used in the days before .net; I'm not aware of any standard for them in .net, nor do I know the best way to format them.

0

I would think out of the box for a minute, all of the suggestions here are either do the pluralization (and worry about more than 1 level of pluralization, gender, etc) or not use it at all and provide a nice undo.

I would go the non lingual way and use visual queues for that. e.g. imagine an Iphone app you select items by wiping your finger. before deleting them using the master delete button, it will "shake" the selected items and show you a question mark titled box with a V (ok) or X (cancel) buttons...

Or, in the 3D world of Kinekt / Move / Wii - imagine selecting the files, moving your hand to the delete button and be told to move your hand above your head to confirm (using the same visual symbols as I mentioned before. e.g. instead of asking you delete 3 files? it will show you 3 files with a hovering half transparent red X on and tell you to do something to confirm.

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