Technology
List of Ipad Tricks
Discover the iPad’s hidden keys, set it to read selected text, and get quick access to hundreds of emoticons, plus four other handy iPad customizations.
Use your thumbs to type letters that have no keys
Many of us experience difficulties when entering text on an iPad. Thanks to the device’s split keyboard. This lets you type characters with thumbs while holding the iPad with both hands. To activate the split keyboard, press and hold the small horizontal lines to the right of the minimize-keyboard button in the bottom-right corner, and then choose Split.
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The keyboard shrinks, undocks from the bottom of the screen, and splits into two halves appearing on the left and right sides of the screen. When holding the iPad in two hands, you can use your thumbs to tap keys as you enter text.
If you favor one thumb over another, you can tap the split keyboard’s invisible keys to enter in the vertical row to the right of the left edge and to the left of the right edge, as shown in the screen below.
The “keys” on the iPad’s split keyboard are even smaller than those on the standard keyboard that is docked in the bottom of the screen. Data entry using the onscreen keyboard is challenging to say the least. The thumbs-only approach using the two-hand grip isn’t any easier, but two-thumb tapping is faster than the single-digit approach.
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If you go the thumbs route, you might as well use all the keys available — visible and invisible.
One emoticon is worth a thousand words
One way to reduce your reliance on the iPad’s onscreen keyboard is to express yourself using emoticons.
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To add emoticons to the iPad keyboard, press Settings > General > Keyboard > International Keyboards > Add New Keyboard > Emoji. The first time you activate the onscreen keyboard after enabling a second keyboard layout, a message pops up instructing you to tap the Globe key to switch keyboard layouts.
The Emoji keyboard lists hundreds of colorful emoticons in six categories: those you’ve used recently; smilies, hand gestures, and hearts; animals and plants; common items; transportation and flags; and common symbols (such as clock faces, astrological signs, and Japanese Kanji characters).
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Save key taps by creating keyboard shortcuts for repeated text
To type ‘Hi. How are you?’ without typing the whole sentence, simply create a keyboard shortcut that enters frequently used text automatically.
To do this: tap Settings > General > Keyboard > Add New Shortcut….
Enter the phrase, press your preferred shortcut keys, and press Save. The entry is added to your Shortcuts list, which is shown just above the Add New Shortcut option.
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Thereafter when you enter the shortcut, the phrase appears below the shortcut. Press the space bar to enter the phrase or press the X to the right of the text to retain the shortcut letters.
Set the iPad to recite selected text
If you’d like your iPad to read to you, go to Settings > General > Accessibility, and in the Vision section, toggle Speak Selection to On. Use the slider control to set the speaking rate; the default setting is a couple of clicks to the slow side of the median.
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After you enable selection speaking, a Speak option appears when you select text. Press it to hear a Siri-like voice read the selection. At the default reading speed the voice seems hurried, although the pauses at punctuation are unnaturally long. But like the dancing dog, it’s not that the iPad reads text well, it’s that the machine reads it at all.
Select an entire paragraph with four taps
Selecting text on an iPad is crazy-making: tap the screen to select a single word (or press Select to highlight the word you tapped), and then grab and slide one of the little blue dots that appear in the top-left and bottom-left corners of the selection.
The fast way to select an entire paragraph is to tap it four times. Just like that, your paragraph is ready to be copied or read to you (if you’ve used the above tip to enable the iPad’s text reader).
Swipe the screen to switch among open apps
Most people move from one iPad app to another by pressing the Home button and then pressing the new app’s icon, which may entail a lot of screen swiping or folder opening.
A faster way to go from one open app to another is to swipe the screen left or right using four or five fingers. Alternatively, you can swipe up with four or five fingers to open the multitasking bar at the bottom of the screen, which shows all the apps currently open on the machine.
Double-tap to zoom the screen
You probably know that you can stretch the iPad screen with two fingers to zoom in and pinch with two fingers to zoom out. To get more control over screen zooms, tap the screen twice with three fingers. Repeat the three-finger double-tap to zoom out.
To control the zoom magnification, double-tap with three fingers and hold, then scroll up to zoom in and down to zoom out. Once you’ve got your preferred zoom level, navigate around the screen by swiping left, right, up, and down with three fingers.
To enable zoom, press Settings > General > Accessibility and toggle the Zoom setting in the Vision section to On.
Source: howto.cnet.com