iPhone For Dummies. Bob LeVitus

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offers choices specific to the given app. For example, Apple’s Keynote presentation app has options to create a new presentation or to start with an outline.

      Want to jump back to the last Home screen of icons you had open? Simply press the Home button on models that have one, or swipe up on models that’s don’t. Want to jump to the first screenful of icons, assuming you’re not already there? Press Home or swipe up again.

      Press and hold down the Home key for more than a second or so to summon Siri (unless you turn the Siri feature off in Settings).

      On the iPhone X and later models, press and hold down the side button for more than a second to call Siri into action.

      Finding the single app you want to use among apps spread out over 15 screens is a daunting task. But Apple felt your pain and added a handy organizational tool called Folders. The Folders feature enables you to create folder icons, each holding dozens of apps. You might want to create folders for social apps, photos, travel-related apps, and any number of other categories.

      To create a folder, gently press your finger against an icon and tap Edit Home Screen, making all the icons on the screen jiggle. Decide which apps you want to move to a folder, and drag the icon for the first app on top of the second app. The two apps will now share living quarters.

      Apple names a new folder according to the category of apps you place inside such a folder. You can easily change the folder name by gently pressing down on the folder and tapping Rename in the menu that appears. Next, type a substitute moniker in the bar where the folder name appears.

      To launch an app that’s inside a folder, tap that folder’s icon and then tap the icon for the app that you want to open.

      Apps can be dragged into and out of any folder. If you drag all the apps outside the folder, the folder automatically disappears.

      A potentially simpler and faster way to access apps is by using App Library. You can find it at the very end of your home screen pages as you swipe from right to left.

      You can scroll down to the app of choice, enter the app name in the search box, or tap a letter on the side to jump to listings beginning with that letter. The # symbol (after Z) takes you to apps whose names begin with a number.

      Just below the search box, Apple organizes apps into Suggestions and Recently Added. The latter is self-explanatory. The former consists of suggested apps based on time of day, location, or activity.

Snapshot of checking out App Library.

      FIGURE 2-10: Checking out App Library.

      Apps and the App Library serve an obvious purpose. But sometimes you just want to glance at the headlines, a weather forecast, or other information. With that in mind, Apple added widgets, which you can customize on any of your Home pages and the today view.

      iOS 15 includes built-in Apple widgets for Weather, Clock, Calendar, News, Maps, Fitness, Photos, Reminders, Stocks, Music, TV, Tips, Notes, Shortcuts, Batteries, Screen Time, Files, Podcasts, App Store, Siri Suggestions, Smart Stack, Sleep, Mail, and Game Center. Third-party developers can also contribute widgets.

      If you’re in the today view while the phone is still wiggly, you can tap the + to add widgets. Or in a non-wiggly state, tap Edit at the bottom of that view to surface the + button and take it from there.

      You can also drag one widget on top of another to create a widget stack. You can then flip through these stacks. Inside a stack, Apple displays what it thinks is the right widget based on the time, location, or activity.

      You can also curate widgets into smart stacks that show up at the right time. For example, you might see widgets for the News app when you wake up, the Calendar app as an appointment time nears, and a Fitness summary come evening. Choose Smart Stack from the widget library.

Snapshot of widget icons for the Calendar, News and Music apps stand out next to other icons.

      FIGURE 2-11: Widget icons for your Calendar, News, and Music apps stand out next to other icons.

      Using the Safari browser (see Chapter 11), you can search the web by using Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft Bing, and DuckDuckGo — as well as Chinese search engines if you add a Chinese keyboard or a search engine from another country. But you can also search for people and programs across your iPhone or within specific apps, and do so with an assist from Siri. We show you how to search within apps in the various chapters dedicated to Mail, Contacts, Calendar, Notes, and Music.

      Within search on your phone, you’ll also see Siri search suggestions representing the contacts you engage with the most, people you are scheduled to meet, as well as eateries, shops, and other places of interest nearby.

      To access the search screen on an iPhone, swipe down from any Home screen. To see Siri suggestions (for people to contact or apps you might want to use at the moment), as well as suggestions based on the time and your location (such as places to have lunch, shop, or get gas), swipe from left to right from the Home or Lock screen to summon the today view.

      To actively search on the main search screen, pull down from the top of the screen (like pulling down a window shade) to summon Notification Center, and then swipe left to right to surface the today view. Enter your search query in the box at the top of the display by using the virtual keyboard. The iPhone starts spitting out results the moment you type a single character, and the list narrows as you type additional characters. In fact, even before you tap a key, you’ll see Siri suggestions with icons for apps the phone thinks you might want to access right then and there.

      Search

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