6

I'm currently building a multi platform desktop app. Should the app open by default in fullscreen mode?

4
  • Do you mean maximized (still showing task bar for example) or completely full screen? Mar 7, 2012 at 13:05
  • 1
    Note that Mac OS X Lion and onwards have changed what "full screen" means, so that could influence your design decisions for that platform.
    – Rahul
    Mar 7, 2012 at 13:24
  • 3
    The most critical piece is that, on each platform, your application adheres to the style- and user-interface guidelines of that platform. Using apps that just don't feel right is jarring and less enjoyable that using something that feels like an extension of the platform I'm on, rather than something bolted on.
    – cdeszaq
    Mar 7, 2012 at 14:32
  • What reason do you have to make the app fullscreen by default? Full screen by default is very rare unless the application is a game, so I would always expect any given app to not start up in full screen. It's rare for most apps to even have a full screen mode so I'm not sure why you'd think to do this (unless you mean "maximized" which is a totally different thing)
    – Ben Brocka
    Mar 7, 2012 at 15:40

4 Answers 4

11

No, a desktop app should remember the way it was set last time it was used - size, position and mode (minimized, maximized, normal) - and open in exactly the same way.

Please note that minimizing and maximizing a window changes its size and possibly its position settings, so to achieve this a desktop app should remember the size and position values when it gets minimized or maximized. Otherwise the "normal" size and position values will be overwritten with the minimized/maximized values.

4
  • 1
    What are you basing this argument on? Do you have a reference point?
    – Rahul
    Mar 7, 2012 at 13:24
  • 1
    @Rahul: Yes, my personal experience with apps that idiosyncratically refuse to remember how I "set them up". And that pertains not just to the initial size and position, but to column widths, sort settings, etc. as well. For an app it is a small effort to "remember and re-apply". For a user it is a hindrance to have to set it up each and bl.. every time you use the app. Mar 7, 2012 at 14:12
  • +1 I agree with every word. The window size I prefer varies from app to app and also depends on screen size(s), primary usage of machine and distance from screen (e.g. desk vs living room). Mar 7, 2012 at 14:39
  • An additional problem I often run into when installing new programs, using two monitors sometimes the "full screen" mode doesn't work so well, especially when the new program gets confused by my screen real estate and tries to open in an impossible configuration.
    – aslum
    Mar 7, 2012 at 19:06
2

You mention that the app is going to be "multi-platform," so here's the relevant guidance from Apple's Human Interface Guidelines on sizing an app when it opens:

Your application determines the initial size and position of a window, which is called the standard state. If the user changes a window’s size or location by at least 7 points, the new size and location is the called the user state. The user can toggle between the standard state and the user state by clicking the zoom button in the title bar. Follow the guidelines in this section so that users can have the zoom experience they expect.

Choose a standard state that is best suited for the tasks your app enables. A document window, for example, should show as much as possible of the document’s content. Don’t assume that the standard state should be as large as the current display permits; instead, determine a size that makes it convenient for users to use your app. If appropriate, you can allow users to take some app windows full screen if they want more space.

The important bit in there is "determine a size that makes it convenient for users to use your app." That probably holds true for an app on any platform.

1

I don't think there is any one correct answer to this because it depends 100% on what the application does.

For example, an app that is it's own "environment" with lots of little inner windows and has a "workspace" paradigm to it should remember what it was set to last time by default and probably allow the user to have different configurations saved.

Other applications, like Instant Messaging clients, are likely to be much more focused and hence simply don't need all that screen space. In those cases, it would make sense for the application to remember where it was on the screen, but definitely not take up the whole thing.

So, in the end, it ultimately depends on what the application is meant to do. A full-screen application is much more immersive than a non-full-screen application, but I tend to follow "the user knows best" approach when it comes to these sorts of things. Letting the user control things like this (perhaps by having a "remember my settings" configuration option in the preferences) allows users with "non-standard" setups use your application in the way that works best for them. Personally, I have 4 wide-screen monitors all running vertically and use a number of different window control applications to bend other apps to my will and put them where I want them. If something doesn't behave well or do what I want, I will quickly find something else and will never think about the problematic application again.

0

Ideally it should remember either the last settings or the most often used settings (it depends on the case that would be most convenient for the user if remembered in the context of the app)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.