Yes.
ANSWER
In Microsoft Office v2007: When you quit excel by choosing the option 'close' in the menu bar or by clicking x on the upper right of the browser and you have more than one excel files opened and there are some corrections made, it will individually prompt you to save each of those you have corrections.
You will close all windows related to that particular copy of Excel. You can open several instances of Excel. When you quit one, you do not affect the other sessions that are open.
Close Button
Close button
All the Safari windows close and memory that was used by Safari is returned to availability. Closing a window does not quit Safari. Command Q or Menu item "Quit Safari" will actually quit the application.
Press and hold Alt and then F4.
On a Mac, you can close all open windows of the current application by pressing Command (⌘) + Option (⌥) + W. However, to close all applications and their windows, you can use Command (⌘) + Q to quit each application individually. Alternatively, you can use Command (⌘) + H to hide applications, leaving them open but minimizing their windows.
By clicking on the X Button on the top right corner of the Excel Window.
ctrl
[Ctrl]+[Q] (Quit) On a Windows operating system [Alt] [F4] will close the active window.
The option to quit an application is typically found in the application's menu bar, often labeled as "File" or "Application Name" (e.g., "Chrome" for Google Chrome). It may be listed as "Quit," "Exit," or "Close." Additionally, keyboard shortcuts, such as Command + Q on Mac or Alt + F4 on Windows, can also be used to quickly quit an application. Some applications may also have a close button in the top corner of the window.
A quick command to close a program on Windows is to press "Alt + F4" while the program is active. On macOS, you can use "Command + Q" to quit the active application. These shortcuts effectively close the currently focused program quickly and efficiently.
Your windows and radio both quit working at the same time because you blew a fuse.