The developers just copied the shortcuts from Mac OS X, replacing
Command with Control.

In Mac OS X Command + Q quits an application and Command W closes a
window. In Mac OS X this is logical, because clicking the red dot (the
close button) only closes the window while the application itself stays
active.

So, closing Firefox by clicking the close button only closes the window.
The application itself keeps running. Clicking the close button is the
same as using the keyboard combination Command + W.

To completely quit Firefox, you need to go to the menu bar, click on
"Firefox" and then choose "Quit" or you can use Command + Q.

Ubuntu works completely different. Closing Firefox by clicking the close
button completely quits firefox (unless you've got more than one open
window). After clicking the close button the Firefox process is
completely terminated and there's no sign of any activity of Firefox in
the window switcher. In Mac OS X it's completely different. After
clicking the close button, you can see the Firefox process is still
running, as there's a little dot underneath the Firefox icon in the
Dock.

If the user closes Nautilus by clicking the close button, there's no
sign of any activity in the window switcher. For the user it doesn't
matter if the process is still running. The user looks at the window
switcher at the botom of the screen and sees no activity of Nautilus.
So, for the user clicking the close button is the same as quiting the
application. It's just like in Windows. The process explorer.exe is
always running, but for the user there's no sign of this process being
active (except when looking in the Task Manager). In Mac OS X this is
completely different. In Mac OS X there's always a little dot underneath
the Finder icon in the Dock. It's clear to the user this application is
always running. When clicking on "Finder" in the menu bar, there's no
option to Quit the Finder. It's logical for Finder not to use the
keyboard shortcut Command + Q.

Ubuntu isn't Mac OS X. In Ubuntu the default is to completely terminate
an application, while in Mac OS X the default is to keep the application
active. In Ubuntu there's ni sign for the user of Nautilus still being
active, while on Mac OS X the Finder icon is ALWAYS in the Dock and
ALWAYS has a little dot underneath the icon.

That's why Nautilus shouldn't copy the shortcuts from Mac OS X. Nautilus
should close using Control + Q, just like Firefox.

-- 
Nautilus Ctrl+Q to close all windows instead of Ctrl+Shift+W
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/563226
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to