The same applies for non-hang misbehavior: the method of force-closing
an app should be exactly the same regardless of whether a trust prompt
is open or not.
However, I’m sorry I should have read the report more closely and
noticed the phrase “content picking in a trust prompt”. To me, trust
prompts and the content picker are very different things, so I don’t
understand this phrase. I designed trust prompts, but I have never come
across any design document from anyone covering the content picker
(there are none on the design site).
So, what do you mean by “app B does not give you a way to go back”? Why
is the ability to exit the content picker under the control of app B at
all? For example, the macOS Open file dialog lets you browse the
libraries of iTunes, iPhoto, and Photos, but you aren’t “in” those apps
and they don’t get to control the dialog’s Cancel button.
** Changed in: ubuntu-ux
Status: Invalid => Incomplete
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1650022
Title:
We need a "close" action for killing an app in a trust prompt
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