> If you measure it across a high impedance then it looks like a voltage spike. If you measure it across a low impedance then it's not necessarily much of a spike.
"Disconnect" implies an open circuit and high impedance.
Irrelevant. If it's not an open circuit, then the inductor is connected to things in parallel, and the impedance increase creates a voltage spike. If the load impedance is significantly lower than the thing being disconnected, then you're just disconnecting something that doesn't matter to the circuit and it's silly to be that pedantic about an irrelevant situation. You're bending the statement from "disconnecting an inductor" to "disconnecting something from an inductor (while something else is still connected)"
"Disconnect" implies an open circuit and high impedance.