Description: UX Rationale : Currently there is the top-level menu entry "Help" that contains 10-12 menu items, and six of them are not about help - this is confusing and user-unfriendly, and help is a critical menu for LibreOffice to succeed. TASKS: 1. Add a top-level "About" menu item to the right of the new "Bugs" menu item. 2. In the new top-level "About" item put the following four submenu items from the current "Help" menu: 2.a > "About LibreOffice" 2.b > "License Information" 2.c > "Donate to LibreOffice" 2.d > "Get Involved" Steps to Reproduce: ... Actual Results: ... Expected Results: ... Reproducible: Always User Profile Reset: No Additional Info: ...
-1
-1 It is common practice to have "About" in the Help menu. Examine e.g.: Paint.net, VCL Media Player, TeamViewer, Google Chrome, SeaMonkey, Coral PaintShopPro.
See proposed, closely related UI/UX improvements: Develop a new bug-reporting functionality and a new top-level "Bugs" menu item in the menu bar https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=142831 Split the current "Help" menu into three separate top-level menus (instead of one) to separate help content, bug-reporting content, and 'about' content. https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=142830 Make a new menu out of the globe icon ("Check for Updates") https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=142828
-1 (to all four closely related UI/UX improvements)
(In reply to Regina Henschel from comment #2) > -1 > It is common practice to have "About" in the Help menu. Examine e.g.: > Paint.net, VCL Media Player, TeamViewer, Google Chrome, SeaMonkey, Coral > PaintShopPro. 1. This isn't about the "About" menu, this is about cleaning up the "Help" menu. 2. You mentioned Google Chrome - Chrome's Help menu only has 3 submenu items, whereas LibreOffice has 12 - exactly the reason why some submenu items should be moved elsewhere. 2. Google Chrome is a browser and VLC Media Player is a media player - those applications have significantly lower everyday use of features compared to LibreOffice, which has a lot of features in its menus, and whose success relies on its users knowing how to use many of those features to produce work-level content.
*** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of bug 142830 ***