If the share icon is a box with an up arrow, maybe a box with a down arrow could mean save?
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I'm not sure if anybody said it yet, but I think a simple figure embracing something would be pretty universal for a "save" and then delete would be that figure rejecting something by putting his hands up and turning its head.
Seems pretty easy...
You need an icon of a paper with text on it, an arrow pointing from the paper down to a larger box.
A hammer and chisel with a stone slate… some combination of that
Two types:
- "Save state" like in video games or word processors
- For saving state in current application
- There is hard disc / cloud saving
- "Save file" like in web browsers
- This is for creating a copy of a file you found and want to keep
- There is hard disc / cloud saving
In both cases you will want to signify saving to disc (this could look like a thick round disc) versus saving to the cloud
This would work for the foreseeable future I think. At some point tech changes and although we could just update the icon as that happens I'm wondering if we can design something that is at least resistant to becoming obsolete (like a floppy or even hdd/ssd) and is mostly recognizable to most people. It's an impossible question but there could be some cool ideas that come up out of this post.
The word "save" localized appropriately.
This would work as long as the device the user was using adopted localization properly and all applications supported all languages. Consider also there are people who can speak a language but aren't able to read it. Those are a small percentage but they exist.
The goal of this would be to come up with an icon that would be most recognizable as save to the most people and future people after languages have changed.
Maybe something like a document going into a safe? As things are increasingly digital, both of those technologies become somewhat less relevant. On the other hand, one could go with 保存 on a button. Chinese and Japanese speakers will instantly know what it does. Others could learn. At some point, kanji are just slightly more complex squiggles to represent an increasingly non-concrete thing.