** Changed in: qtmir (Ubuntu)
Assignee: Daniel d'Andrada (dandrader) => Lukáš Tinkl (lukas-kde)
** Changed in: unity8 (Ubuntu)
Assignee: Daniel d'Andrada (dandrader) => Lukáš Tinkl (lukas-kde)
** Changed in: canonical-devices-system-image
Milestone: u8c-z => u8c-2
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** Changed in: canonical-devices-system-image
Milestone: u8c-1 => u8c-z
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1671424
Title:
qtmir destroys windows after
** Changed in: canonical-devices-system-image
Status: Triaged => In Progress
** Changed in: canonical-devices-system-image
Assignee: (unassigned) => Michał Sawicz (saviq)
** Changed in: canonical-devices-system-image
Milestone: None => u8c-1
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You received this bug
** Changed in: qtmir (Ubuntu)
Assignee: Lukáš Tinkl (lukas-kde) => Daniel d'Andrada (dandrader)
** Changed in: unity8 (Ubuntu)
Assignee: Lukáš Tinkl (lukas-kde) => Daniel d'Andrada (dandrader)
** Changed in: qtmir (Ubuntu)
Status: Triaged => In Progress
** Changed in: unity8
Indeed the close button and Alt+F4 should never ever destroy a window.
They should just send the window an event: mir_event_type_close_window
Then it's up to the app how to proceed.
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qtmir always destroys a window if it doesn't do so itself after being
requested to close.
Specially on desktop, requesting a window to close doesn't necessarily
mean it should destroy itself. It's a common idiom for an application to
just hide it instead, so it can be reused next time it's needed
** Summary changed:
- Applications fail to interrupt closing them
+ qtmir destroys windows after requesting them to close
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