What is the proper way of ending an application on the iPhone when you are finished with it?
thanks,
anton
Jaanus is referring to this paragraph in the Apple iPhone Human Interface Guidelines
People quit an iPhone application by opening a different application. In particular, note that people don’t tap an application close button or choose Quit from a menu. In iOS 4.0 and later, and on certain devices, the quitting application moves to a suspended state in the background. All iPhone applications should:
Be prepared to quit at any time. Therefore, save user data as soon as possible and as often as reasonable. Save the current state when stopping, at the finest level of detail possible. For example, if your application displays scrolling data, save the current scroll position. iPhone applications should never quit programmatically because doing so looks like a crash to the user. There may be times, however, when external circumstances prevent your application from functioning as intended. The best way to handle this is to display an attractive screen that describes the problem and suggests how users can correct it. This helps users in two ways:
It provides feedback that reassures users that there’s nothing wrong with your application It puts users in control, letting them decide whether they want to take corrective action and continue using your application or press the Home button and open a different application If certain circumstances prevent only some of your application's features from working, you can display either a screen or an alert when users activate the feature. Although an alert doesn't allow much flexibility in design, it can be a good choice if you can:
Describe the situation very succinctly Supply a button that performs a corrective action Display the alert only when users try to access the feature that isn’t functioning As with all alerts, the less users see them, the more effective they are. For more information about creating alerts, see “Using Alerts.”