Remove app via apt-get from menu

Oli Warner oli at thepcspy.com
Fri Mar 20 12:31:41 UTC 2009


On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 12:11 PM, Matthew Paul Thomas <mpt at canonical.com>wrote:

> It is true that some menu items in Ubuntu have context menus (another
> example is Firefox's Bookmarks menu), but that doesn't necessarily mean
> it's a good idea.
>
> Most menu items do the same thing when you right-click on them as when
> you right-click on them. There's no visible distinction between menu
> items that have a context menu and menu items that don't.


It's an implicit logical distinction.

When you click a menu like the file menu, you only have one task in mind:
selecting an item from that menu to perform its action. No context menus
make sense because there is only one context.

Firefox is a great example actually. When you open up the bookmarks menu,
the context you start in is the same as the File menu: you want to open a
menu item... But all too often, you can quickly find yourself diverted by
cruft that needs removing. If I had to load up the bookmark manager each
time I wanted to remove a bookmark, *I just wouldn't bother bookmarking at
all* because I'd just junk it up too often.

Letting users perform maintenance operations within another context helps
cut the size of these tasks down. It's a massive usability boon. It allows
them to use their system more and clean up after it less.

You could argue that it's these sorts of implicit intricacies that make
computing hard for beginners... But when the right click gesture means "show
alternative tasks for this item" in almost every other facet of the modern
desktop OS, not including it is more confusing.
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