iPhone Portable Genius. Paul McFedries
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Название: iPhone Portable Genius

Автор: Paul McFedries

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Справочники

Серия:

isbn: 9781119763635

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ text. Your iPhone immediately begins displaying items that match your text as you type, as shown in Figure 1.5. 1.5 Flick down on the Home screen and then type your search text.

      4 Tap Search to see the complete results. If you see the item you're looking for, tap it to open it.

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      Spotlight looks for a wide variety of items not only on your iPhone, but also on the Internet, iTunes, the App Store, and more. If you find you're getting too many results, you can configure Spotlight to not show results from certain apps. Tap Settings and then tap Siri & Search. In the Siri & Search screen, tap an app you want to remove from Search. Then tap the Show App in Search switch to Off and the Show Content in Search switch to Off.

      Switching between running apps

      Your iPhone is capable of multitasking, which enables you to run multiple apps at the same time. This is useful if, say, you're playing a game and an email message comes in. You can switch to the message, read it, respond to it, and then resume your game right where you left off.

      So how do you switch from one app to another? It depends on your iPhone model:

       If your iPhone has a notch at the top of the screen (pointed out later in Figure 1.11), slide a finger up from the bottom edge of the screen and then pause about halfway up the screen.

       For all other iPhone models, double‐press the Home button (that is, press the Home button twice in succession).

      Either way, you end up at the multitasking screen, which displays thumbnail versions of your running apps. Flick left or right to bring the app thumbnail into view and then tap the app to switch to it.

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      To help you navigate the list of running apps, shut down any apps you won't be using for a while. Display the multitasking screen and then drag any app you want to shut down to the top of the screen.

      Typing on the keyboard

      To use the keyboard, tap into an area that requires text input, and the keyboard appears automatically. Tap the keys that you want to enter. As you touch each key, a magnified version of the letter pops up. If you touch the wrong key, slide your finger over to the correct one. The keyboard does not enter a key until your finger comes off the screen.

      Genius Genius

      If you find yourself trying to type on your iPhone using one hand, you might find it hard to reach all the keys unless you have an exceptionally long thumb. To make things easier on yourself, tap and hold the Emoji keyboard icon (pointed out in Figure 1.6) and then choose either the Right keyboard (if you're right‐handed) or the Left keyboard (if you're left‐handed). These keyboards shift the keys right and left, respectively, for easier one‐handed typing.

      Using special keys

      The keyboard has a few specialty keys that allow you to do some tricks:

       Shift. This key is a little upward‐pointing arrow to the left of the Z key. Tap this key once to engage Shift. The letter keys change to uppercase, and the Shift key changes to a black arrow on a white background. The next letter you type will be a capital letter, at which point the Shift key returns to normal automatically (and the letter keys return to their lowercase versions).

       123. Tap this key to display the numeric keyboard, which includes numbers and most punctuation marks. The key then changes to ABC. Tap ABC to return to the standard keyboard.

       #+=. This key appears within the numeric keyboard. Tap this key to enter yet another keyboard that contains more punctuation marks as well as a few symbols that aren't used frequently.

       Backspace. This key is shaped like a left‐pointing arrow with an X inside it, and it appears to the right of the M key. This key deletes at three different speeds:The first speed deletes in response to a single tap, which deletes just a single letter.The second speed deletes in response to being held. If you hold the delete key, it begins moving backward through letters and won't stop after a single letter.The third speed kicks in if you hold the delete key long enough. This deletes entire words.

       Return. This key moves to the next line when you're typing text. However, this key often changes names and functions, depending on what you're doing. For example, you saw earlier (see Figure 1.5) that this becomes the Search key when you invoke the Search screen.

      Editing text

      Everyone asks me how you're supposed to move throughout the text to edit it. The only obvious option is to delete all the way back to your error, which is impractical to say the least. The solution is in the touchscreen, which enables you to zoom in on the specific section of text you want to edit. Follow these steps:

      1 Press and hold your finger on the line you want to edit. iPhone displays the text inside a magnifying glass, and within that text you see the cursor (you might need to angle your iPhone just so to see the cursor).

      2 Slide your finger along the line. As you slide, the cursor moves through the text in the same direction.

      3 When the cursor is where you want to begin editing, remove your finger.

      Understanding predictive typing

      As you type, the iPhone often tries to predict which word you want to use, and it displays its suggestions in a bar that appears just above the keyboard. (In earlier versions, a single suggestion appears in a little bubble underneath the current word.) This is called predictive typing, and the suggestions you see depend on the context of your writing.