9 typing tips every iPhone and iPad user should know

05.02.2015
Wish it were a little easier to type in ALL CAPS on your iPhone, or ever get stumped while looking for the em dash What about typing letters with accent marks, or dealing with cumbersome URLs Or maybe you're just hankering for an alternative to tapping on a slippery glass screen.

These 9 tips can make typing on your iPhone or iPad a little easier. Even if you've been tap-tap-tapping away on the iOS keyboard for years, it's possible you missed one of these time-saving shortcuts. Or just point your new-to-iOS friends here if they ever complain that the iPhone's keyboard isn't as good as Android's. (As if.)

The .com shortcut

Want to type a URL directly into the address bar in Mobile Safari Don't bother with laboriously tapping in ".com" or ".net".

Instead, just tap and hold the "." key; when you do, a pop-up balloon will reveal a series of shortcuts, from .com to .us.

Nice accent

Don't get caught skipping the accent grave in "voilà" while typing that email on your iPhone or iPad.

You can access a generous portion of accent marks--acute, grave, circumflex, and otherwise--by tapping and holding a letter key (like "a").

Swipe to type

Sick to death of painstakingly tapping out messages on your device's touchscreen Try swiping instead of typing.

The concept is simple: Rather than tapping each individual key when typing a word, swipe-to-type keyboards let you slide your fingertip from one key to the next.

As your finger loops around the keys, your phone predicts the work you're trying to type--er, swipe.

Sound weird Indeed, swiping to type does take some getting used to, but it'll become second nature with practice.

The standard iOS keyboard lacked the swipe-to-type capabilities our Android friends have bragged on for years--until iOS 8. That update finally brought third-party keypads--particularly Swype and SwiftKey--to the iPhone and iPad.

Caps locked and loaded

See the Shift key Just double-tap it. When you do, a little horizontal line will appear near the bottom of the Shift key, indicating that you're in ALL CAPS mode. Starting with iOS 7, Apple made the Shift key's different looks (for lower-case, upper-case, and all-caps) much more subtle, so much so that an entire year later in iOS 8, I still get it wrong sometimes.

If you double-tap your Shift key and nothing happens, head to Settings > General > Keyboard, and make sure "Enable Caps Lock" is switched on.

You're so money

Want to type the currency symbols for the yen (¥), the euro (€), or the pound (£) Simple.

Just tap and hold the key for the dollar sign. When you do, a pop-up bubble will display a series of additional money-minded options.

Shortcuts for symbols

I've rarely met an em dash I haven't liked--and come to think of it, I'm also a sucker for bulleted lists. How does someone like me survive typing on an iPhone Easy.

Tap and hold the dash key to reveal even more dashing buttons, including the em dash, a bullet key, and the indispensable underscore. (To, uh, underscore how convenient this is: If you don't use this shortcut, the underscore is three more taps away. First tap the number key, and then the symbols key, then you can tap the underscore.)

Bonus tip: Try tapping and holding other symbol keys. For example, you'll find "curly" quotes by tapping and holding the quote key.

Embrace the emoji

What's a text message without a smiley Good question. Luckily, the iOS keyboards come with more emoji than you can shake a stick at.

First you'll need to enable the emoji keyboard: In Settings > General > Keyboard, tap Keyboard again, then check to see if "Emoji" is in the list of installed keyboards. If it's not, tap "Add New Keyboard" and find Emoji in the list. Now whenever you're using the keyboard, you can tap the key with the globe icon, and feast your eyes on all the gorgeous emoji ready to unleash. Unfortunately, you can't reorder them, but the first tab keeps your most recently used emoji at your fingertips.

Talk instead of type

It's easy to forget that both your iPhone and iPad will take dictation whenever you're not in the mood to type. Just tap the little microphone icon on the keyboard, to the left of the space bar.

As a bonus, the iOS 8 Messages app has two microphone buttons. The rectangular white microphone button to the left of the space bar takes dictation as usual, translating your words into text. But if you're communicating with another iMessages user, you can tap and hold the gray cicular microphone button to the right to the iMessage text box to record a voice message that's sent as audio. You'll save typing time and your messaging buddy get to hear the joy, sadness, or utter ambivalence in your voice. It's fun.

The number slide

There's really no reason to switch from the keyboard's letters layout to its numbers layout if you only need to type one measly numeral or bit of punctuation. Instead, press the button with the numbers on it, but don't pick your finger up off the screen. Instead, slide it to the key you want to type, and then lift your finger off the screen. The number/punctuation will be typed and the screen will snap right back to the letters view.

Of course, to type a simple period at the end of your sentences, you don't even need that slide trick. In Settings > General > Keyboard, there's a switch to enable ". Shortcut." That's the period shortcut--once it's enabled, you can just type two spaces at the end of a sentence to automatically make a period.

(www.macworld.com)

Ben Patterson

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