> On 2015/01/16, at 11:24, Quincey Morris <quinceymor...@rivergatesoftware.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> Only if it actively interferes with the way your users actually use your app 
> (and they’re complaining about it) could I see an unarguable reason for going 
> your own way on this.

I can see a lot of reasons a particular NSDocument subclass might always go to 
an app-specified directory. Not the common standard use case but specialized 
ones. 
You might have a directory for templates or scripts specific to your app, but 
for customizable files, and it might be in the Application Support folder (or a 
sub folder) for the app. 
In that sort of context you need a specific behavior. 

Another possibility is a network location. 

Yet another might be a secured location that is inside a dmg or something that 
requires authentication first. 
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