In Mac OS X, the quit command is on a separate menu, which has the title of the program being used. For example, Internet Explorer v5.2 has a menu titled Explorer adn the menu items are: About IE, License Agreement, Preferences, Services (accesses OS-level functions like screen shots, etc.), Hide Explorer, Hide Others, Show All, and Quit Explorer.
In general, I like the idea of having a separate menu that issues commands to the OS and controls the behavior of the program in relation to other programs and the OS, rather than subsuming these behivors into other menus that are used to issue commands to the program.
In Mac OS X, the quit command is on a separate menu, which has the title of the program being used. For example, Internet Explorer v5.2 has a menu titled Explorer adn the menu items are: About IE, License Agreement, Preferences, Services (accesses OS-level functions like screen shots, etc.), Hide Explorer, Hide Others, Show All, and Quit Explorer. In general, I like the idea of having a separate menu that issues commands to the OS and controls the behavior of the program in relation to other programs and the OS, rather than subsuming these behivors into other menus that are used to issue commands to the program.
Of course, if all people enter their correct gender 50% of the time, then the gender statistics should by roughly accurate. :P