Unfortunately, ⌘⇧Q is the system-wide shortcut for logging out the current 
user, which trumps QS every time.

⌘⇧U would do the trick if 'Quit' were to appear for 'U'.

Dragging 'Quit' higher than 'Open' is a good idea and makes a good toggle. 
QS could be trained to launch or quit App Store by holding down 'a' on each 
activation.

One issue with this is you'd no longer be able to activate non-frontmost 
apps simply by finding the app in pane 1. When you've got a lot of apps 
open, it's far easier to activate Chrome by holding down 'c' in QS than 
cycling through the apps with ⌘⇥. With 'Quit' above 'Open', Chrome would 
just quit instead. :)



On Saturday, 12 July 2014 03:26:00 UTC+9, Rob McBroom wrote:
>
> On 11 Jul 2014, at 13:43, Garrett Denney wrote: 
>
> > Just as the title says. Would love the ability to open an app with one 
> > instance of QS, and close it with a second QS command while it is 
> > still 
> > open. 
>
> You can tab to the second pane and choose the Quit action. (I’m not 
> sure if that’s enabled by default, but it’s built-in.) If you use 
> that enough that it becomes the default when searching for ‘q’, you 
> could then run it immediately without switching panes by hitting 
> ⇧⌘Q. (See the manual for more on that.) 
>
> The Quit action doesn’t appear unless an application is running, so 
> you could go to Preferences → Actions and drag Quit up higher than 
> Open. I think that will do what you’re asking. 
>
> -- 
> Rob McBroom 
> http://www.skurfer.com/ 
>

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