On Tuesday, Gnome announced that they are planning on retiring the app menus from its next release, which is GNOME 3.32. Application menus or app menus are the menus that you see in the GNOME 3 top bar, with the name and icon for the current app.
The following are the reasons GNOME is bidding adieu to the application menus:
All GNOME applications will have to move the items from its app menu to a menu inside the application window. Here are the guidelines that developers need to follow:
Primary menu is the menu you see in the header bar and has the icon with three stacked lines, also referred to as the hamburger menu.
2. Quit menu item is not required so it is recommended to remove it from all locations.
3. Move other app menu items to the bottom of the primary menu.
4. A typical arrangement of app menu items in a primary menu is a single group of items:
5. Applications that use a menu bar should remove their app menu and move any items to the menu bar menus.
If an application fails to remove the application menu by the release of GNOME 3.32, it will be shown in the app’s header bar, using the fallback UI that is already provided by GTK.
Read the full announcement on GNOME’s official website.
Fedora 29 beta brings Modularity, GNOME 3.30 support and other changes
GNOME 3.30 released with improved Desktop performance, Screen Sharing, and more
GIMP gets $100K of the $400K donation made to GNOME