I think i agree with this. But should not "force" an application to close, like the kill command. Example Gedit (or other text editor), if i have some unsaved text, forcing or ending process, will not give me the "do you want to save your work" dialogue and just closes everything.
Windows7 on the other hand, uses a more descriptive text for closing one or multiple windows (pic): http://www.tech4law.co.za/images/stories/close_all.jpg It gives you all the save dialogues for your work. It does exactly what it says. Close the app windows. Apps that dont quit, because they usually are meant to stay working in the background just minimize to the windows tray (some give you a notification bubble to make the user more aware of this functionality.). dockbarx also has similar close dialogues: one window: https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/_1QSDkzYY2vc/TU6yaR70QRI/AAAAAAAAC28/tOGGsx_znwc/dockbarx_helper_pidgin.png multiple windows: https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-1V3x4BuubeE/TfDOwoL6ssI/AAAAAAAAE1k/kFwQvQZQ_7s/dockx2.png So if quit is to be implemented correctly, will need some testing. Else, the "close" seems to be a more traditional approach that is also crossplatform. > Date: Sat, 25 Feb 2012 09:56:42 +0000 > From: m...@ubuntu.com > To: unity-design@lists.launchpad.net > Subject: [Unity-design] Settled: Re: Quit vs Close - Quicklists > > > We can settle this straightforwardly: > > * closing windows is done with the window controls > * there should be only one menu in the quicklist, Quit > => that should completely stop the application and free up its memory > > Mark > > -- > Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~unity-design > Post to : unity-design@lists.launchpad.net > Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~unity-design > More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp
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