iPhone For Dummies. Bob LeVitus
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу iPhone For Dummies - Bob LeVitus страница 19
When you press your finger against a letter or a number on the screen, the individual key you press gets bigger, as shown in Figure 2-4. That way, you know that you struck the correct letter or number. If you don’t see the key get bigger, visit Settings ⇒ General ⇒ Keyboard and make sure the Character Preview shift switch is on (green is showing).
Sending a message to an overseas pal? Keep your finger pressed against certain letters, and a row of keys showing variations of the character for foreign alphabets pops up, as shown with the letter e in Figure 2-5. Slide your finger until you reach the key with the relevant accent mark, and release it.FIGURE 2-4: The ABCs of virtual typing.
FIGURE 2-5: Accenting your letters.
Meanwhile, if you press and hold down the period key on the Safari keyboard, you get your choice of .com, .net, .edu, .org, and .us. Pressing and holding down the period key in certain other situations, such as in Messages, Notes, or Pages, gives you a choice of a period or an ellipsis.
If you enabled any international keyboards, you’ll see more choices when you hold down the period key. For example, if you enabled a French keyboard, pressing and holding down the period will also give you options for .eu and .fr.
Alas, typing mistakes are common at first. Say that you meant to type a sentence in the Notes app that reads, “I am typing notes.” But because of the way your fingers struck the virtual keys, you actually entered “I am typing nptes.” Fortunately, Apple knows that the o you meant to press is next to the p that showed up on the keyboard. So the software determines that notes was likely one of the words you had in mind and offers the word as one of its three top suggestions, as shown in Figure 2-6. To accept a suggested word, merely tap it — though if you want the middle word, just type a space to accept that choice. And if for some reason you actually did mean to type nptes, which in this example will be one of the suggested words shown, tap it instead.
FIGURE 2-6: When the keyboard bails you out.
When you’re typing notes or sending email and want to type a number, symbol, or punctuation mark, tap the 123 key. The keyboard morphs into an alternative virtual keyboard with numbers and symbols. The 123 key is now the #+= key. Tap it to display keys with additional symbols. Tap the ABC key to return to the alphabetical keyboard; that key then becomes the 123 key. These extra steps are not hard to get used to, but some may find them irritating.As mentioned, you can rotate the iPhone so that its keyboard changes to a wider landscape mode in certain apps, including Mail, Messages, Notes, and Safari. The keys are slightly larger in landscape mode, a boon to those who do a lot of typing or have largish fingers.
Correcting mistakes
It’s a good idea to type or swipe with abandon and not get hung up over mistyped characters. The iPhone’s self-correcting keyboard will fix many errors and, as mentioned, will help you reduce mistakes in the first place by predicting which words you have in mind. Still, you may have to make some corrections manually.
If the iPhone thinks you’ve made a mistake while typing, it may underline or highlight the suspect word. For instance, in our earlier example, nptes is not a recognized English word, so the iPhone will flag that possible error in the body of your message. Tap the word to see possible alternatives (yes, notes appears) just below the suspect word. You may have to tap Replace to see such alternatives, which may appear above the word. If you want to decline the suggestion and type your own replacement, you can do so. And of course you can keep the word that the iPhone thought you typed in error.
Sometimes misspelled words appear with an underline and no suggested alternative. If you tap the misspelled word, a suggestion for another spelling may appear. Tap the new word to accept it. Sometimes when you tap the underlined word, you instead see the note No Replacements Found.
You can manually correct text by holding your finger down against the screen and then using your finger to drag the cursor to the spot where you need to make the correction. Easy as that.
Choosing an alternative keyboard
Apple permits you to choose an alternative keyboard from a third-party app developer, a boon to the producers of the Microsoft SwiftKey and Fleksy keyboards, among others, that debuted on the rival Android mobile operating system. Some third-party keyboards beat Apple to swipe gestures on the phone (that is, gliding rather than lifting your finger from one key to the next). If you like this input method on other phones, you’ll appreciate being able to employ it on the iPhone, through Apple's or a third-party keyboard.
In the App Store, you can fetch new keyboards — most are free. After you download a keyboard, visit Settings ⇒ General ⇒ Keyboard ⇒ Keyboards ⇒ Add New Keyboard and select your keyboard. Then, press and hold down on the globe key on the iPhone’s own keyboard and select your new keyboard in the list that appears. Alternatively, keep tapping the globe key until the keyboard you want takes over.
Cutting, copying, pasting, and replacing
Apple adds pizzazz to the usual cut, copy, and paste functions, and provides another helpful remedy for correcting errors: the aforementioned Replace pop-up option that appears when you double-tap a word. (A Look Up option is here too.)
Here’s how to exploit the copy-and-paste feature. Say you’re in the Notes app, jotting down ideas that you want to copy in an email message. Double-tap a word to select it, and then drag the grab points or handles to select a larger block of text, as shown in Figure 2-7, top. (You can use the handles to contract selected text too.) After you’ve selected the text, tap Copy. (If you want to delete the text block, tap Cut instead.)
FIGURE 2-7: Drag the grab points to select text and tap Copy (top) and then tap Paste (bottom) to make the selected text appear elsewhere.
Now open the Mail program (see Chapter 12) and start composing a message. When you decide where to insert the text you just copied, tap the cursor.