Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term or phrase:
navigate away (from this page)
English answer:
leave this page (by using your browser to go to another page)
Added to glossary by
Tony M
May 29, 2014 14:21
9 yrs ago
42 viewers *
English term
navigate away
English
Other
IT (Information Technology)
Do you want to navigate away and lose any changes made ?
Does it mean 'Quit' ?
Thanks
Does it mean 'Quit' ?
Thanks
Responses
4 +8 | leave this page | Tony M |
5 +3 | quir or exit | George Rabel |
Change log
Jun 5, 2014 23:06: Tony M Created KOG entry
Responses
+8
15 mins
Selected
leave this page
Yes, Gilles, it means to quite tha page you are currently on (or whatever it is) and go somewhere else — if you haven't saved them, any changes will be lost.
They couldn't say literally 'quit' or 'exit', as you are of course not going to actually completely close your browser application — but the idea is of course similar.
They couldn't say literally 'quit' or 'exit', as you are of course not going to actually completely close your browser application — but the idea is of course similar.
Note from asker:
thanks |
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Sheri P
: //But without your lucid explanation :-)
7 mins
|
Thanks, Sheri! As indeed I've jjust noticed you had already said in the discussion area... / Why thanks, Sheri! I have been accused of many things, but rarely lucidity :-))
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agree |
Adrian Liszewski
: The use of "navigate" strongly indicates that we are dealing with a website, and here opening a new website in the current tab/window occurs in my opinion much more often than "quitting" or closing the browser window/tab.
12 mins
|
Thanks, Adrian! My point exactly! On things like facebook, for example, if you haven't completed your post, it asks you if you wish to leave the page or not.
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agree |
Yvonne Gallagher
: BTW I agree with the lucidity as well:-)
27 mins
|
Thanks, Gallagy! Well, double thanks, then :-)
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agree |
Alicia Pallas
36 mins
|
Thanks, Alicia!
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agree |
Egil Presttun
43 mins
|
Thanks, Egil!
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agree |
Bethan Moore
1 hr
|
Thanks, Bethan!
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agree |
jccantrell
1 hr
|
Merci, J-C ! :-)
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agree |
Lincoln Hui
4 hrs
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Thanks, Lincoln!
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+3
4 mins
quir or exit
I would prefer "exit."
Note from asker:
Thanks for confirming |
Peer comment(s):
agree |
David Moore (X)
: I prefer "qui*T*"
1 min
|
Thanks
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agree |
R. Alex Jenkins
6 mins
|
Thanks
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agree |
acetran
20 mins
|
Thanks
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neutral |
Tony M
: Of course the idea is right — but this would be misleading, since they are clearly not going to actually quit / exit their entire browser.
23 mins
|
Thanks
|
Discussion