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iPad and iPad Pro For Dummies. Bob LeVitusЧитать онлайн книгу.

iPad and iPad Pro For Dummies - Bob LeVitus


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(provided that you tap the Undo Paste or Undo option when it appears and keep the shake feature enabled in Settings ⇒ Accessibility ⇒ Touch ⇒ Shake to Undo).You might also see these options:Auto-Correct: If you happen to select a word with a typo, the iPad might underline that word. If you tap the underlined work, the iPad might show you the word it thinks you meant to spell. Tap that suggested word to accept it.Predict: A predictive word feature reveals up to three word or phrase options in buttons just above the keyboard. If one of these words or phrases is what you had in mind, tap the appropriate button.Replace: The iPad may show you possible replacement words. For example, replacement words for test might be fest, rest, or text. Tap the word to substitute it for the word you originally typed.Indent Right or Left: Pretty self-explanatory. With this option, you can indent highlighted text to the right or left.Look Up: Tap your selected word for a definition, courtesy of the New Oxford American Dictionary, the Oxford Dictionary of English, an Apple dictionary, or a foreign language dictionary if you’ve downloaded any dictionaries onto your iPad. But Look Up goes well beyond definitions and includes searches that extend to the App Store, Apple Music, Twitter, the web, Wikipedia, and more.

      Multitasking

      Through multitasking, you can run numerous apps in the background simultaneously and easily switch from one app to another. The following examples illustrate what multitasking enables you to do on your iPad:

       A third-party app, such as Slacker Personal Radio, can continue to play music while you surf the web, peek at pictures, or check email. Without multitasking, Slacker would shut down the moment you opened another app.

       A navigation app can update your position while you’re listening to, say, Pandora Internet radio. From time to time, the navigation app will pipe in with turn-by-turn directions, lowering the volume of the music so you can hear the instructions.

       If you’re uploading images to a photo website and the process is taking longer than you want, you can switch to another app, confident that the images will continue to upload behind the scenes.

       You can leave voice notes in the Evernote app while checking out a web page.

      Multitasking couldn’t be easier — and it only gets better in iPadOS. Your iPad can anticipate your needs. For example, if it detects, over time, that you tend to turn to your social networking apps around the same time every morning, it will make sure the feeds are ready for you.

      To remove an app from the multitasking rotation, swipe up on the app’s preview. Poof — it’s gone.

      Now let’s look at some other tricks that make multitasking even more powerful.

      Splitting the screen

      You can exploit all that gorgeous screen real estate on your iPad to make multitasking even more productive.

Photo illustration of the tablet held sideways in landscape mode in which the previews for the apps appear sideways.

      FIGURE 2-5: Scroll to the left to see the apps you’ve recently used or are still running.

      FIGURE 2-6: iPadOS split view in action with Safari on the left and Mail on the right.

      

In Safari, you have two ways to open in split view when using the iPad in landscape mode. The first way is to long-press a link on a web page, which opens several options, including a preview of the link. Drag that preview to the side to open it in split view.

      The second way requires you to have Tabs turned on. Go to Settings ⇒ Safari and toggle Show Tab Bar so that it turns green. In the Safari app, you can then drag a tab to the right edge of the screen and release, and a new split view is created.

      We bet you can think of all sorts of reasons to run two apps at the same time. Maybe you’re composing a message to a friend in the Mail app while scrolling through Safari in the smaller panel to find a place to have lunch. Or perhaps you’re sketching in one app while using a photo in another as a reference point.

      

Drag down the gray handle at the top of the side app and the iPad switches to pop-over mode. Instead of running side by side, your first app now runs underneath the second one.

      When you’re finished with that secondary app, just slide it away by dragging the gray handle in the middle to the right side of the screen. The slide-over feature works with Apple’s own apps and some third-party apps. Apps that don’t support it can still have a second app running on top of them, as described in the preceding tip.

      Picture-in-picture

      There’s a good possibility that your television at home has a picture-in-picture feature that enables you to watch one channel in the main portion of the TV screen while checking out a second channel in a small window on the screen. You don’t really want to miss any of the action in the big game now, do you?

      Since iOS 9, your iPad has had the same feature. The picture-in-picture feature on the iPad works when you’re on a FaceTime video call, watching a video stored on your iPad, or streaming a video from one of the many streaming video services. These topics are reserved for Chapter 8.

      Picture-in-picture couldn’t be simpler. While watching a video, press (not tap) the Home button, or simply swipe up from the bottom of the screen. The video picture shrinks into a small window hanging out in the lower-right corner of the display.

Photo illustration of picture-in-picture feature in iPad.

      FIGURE 2-7: Like some TVs, the iPad has a picture-in-picture feature.

      Meanwhile, if the video window is blocking a portion of the screen that you want to see, you can drag it to another space.

      Organizing icons into folders

      Finding the single app that you want to use among apps spread out over 15 screens may seem like a daunting task. But Apple felt


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