Apple E3092A Cellular Phone With Bluetooth and WLAN Radios User Manual iPhone

Apple Inc. Cellular Phone With Bluetooth and WLAN Radios iPhone

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Document ID3130193
Application ID8LtAGdnUKLaqczSQP9oUCA==
Document DescriptionManual part1
Short Term ConfidentialNo
Permanent ConfidentialNo
SupercedeNo
Document TypeUser Manual
Display FormatAdobe Acrobat PDF - pdf
Filesize484.36kB (6054524 bits)
Date Submitted2016-09-09 00:00:00
Date Available2017-03-01 00:00:00
Creation Date2016-09-07 16:58:58
Producing SoftwareMac OS X 10.12 Quartz PDFContext
Document Lastmod2016-09-07 16:59:16
Document TitleiPhone
Document CreatorSafari
Document Author: Melissa Gioe

iPhone
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iPhone
User Guide
Everything you need to
know about iPhone
Remember when?
Rediscover special moments with Memories
Memories takes photos and videos from special times in your life — that
crazy race with your best friend, the backpacking trip through Italy, that
blurry first year of your sonʼs life — and turns them into short movies.
Get started
Tap the Memories tab in the Photos
app and choose a memory. Tap to
play the Memory movie, or scroll
down below the movie to see
people, places, and other related
memories.
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Make it perfect
You can add or remove specific
photos and videos, change the
soundtrack or title, even adjust the
length of the Memory movie. Just
tap a Memory movie while itʼs
playing, then tap
Remember together
To share your Memory movie, tap
the movie while itʼs playing, tap ,
then email it to a friend or send it
with Messages. Or, if you have
Apple TV, get everyone together
and watch on a big screen. All your
memories are available in the
Photos app on Apple TV when you
use iCloud Photo Library.
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Want to learn more? Check out Memories in Photos.
The gangʼs all here
Use iPhone to plan a night out
Itʼs easy to keep everyone in the loop when you use your iPhone to plan a
night out. From tossing around ideas, to finding a restaurant, to arranging
transportation, iPhone has you covered.
Make a plan
Start a group conversation in
Messages and begin brainstorming
potential activities. When someone
hits on a plan you love, respond
with a Tapback. Double-tap the
message, then give it a thumbs up.
Reserve a table
In Maps, pinch open to zoom in on
the area you want to search. Tap
the search field, tap Food, then tap
Restaurants.
After reading up on a few spots,
choose one and tap Reservations. If
you donʼt see a reservation option,
just tap
to give them a call.
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Call your ride
When itʼs almost time to go, choose
your destination in Maps. Tap
Directions, tap Ride, then request a
ride through an app.
Running late?
Share your location with your
friends so they know youʼre on your
way. In a Messages conversation,
tap , then tap Send My Current
Location.
Want to learn more about what you can do in Messages and Maps? Start
with Find places in Maps, or Messages at a glance.
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Not all features are available in all areas.
Be well
Create habits that support your health and well-being
Move more, sleep better, or schedule some uninterrupted time. Use
iPhone to support your goals for a healthier body and mind.
Steps count
Carry iPhone with you to track how
far you walk or run each day. To
check your progress, open the
Health app, then tap Activity. To see
how many steps youʼve traveled
over time, tap Steps, then tap
Week, Month, or Year.
Sleep better
Use Bedtime in the Clock app to
help you build healthy sleep habits
by consistently going to bed and
waking at the same time. Tap
Bedtime, then follow the onscreen
instructions.
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Unwind
Enjoy a family dinner, write in your
journal, or just sit quietly without
interruptions from alerts or
notifications. Swipe up from the
bottom of the screen to open
Control Center, then turn on Do Not
Disturb . To schedule daily quiet
time, go to Settings > Do Not
Disturb.
Want to learn more about using iPhone to support your health and wellbeing? Start with Your health at a glance.
Welcome
Set up and get started
Whatʼs new in iOS 10
Basics
Personalize your iPhone
Apps
Sharing
iPhone and other devices
Privacy and security
Restart, update, reset, and restore
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Accessibility
Safety, handling, and support
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Set up and get started
A quick look at iPhone
iPhone overview
This guide describes iOS 10 for:
iPhone 7
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iPhone 7 features
Volume buttons
Ring/Silent switch
Status bar
FaceTime camera
Receiver/microphone/speaker
Sleep/Wake button
SIM card tray
iSight camera
Rear microphone
True Tone Flash
Lightning connector
Speaker/microphone
Home button/Touch ID sensor
Microphone
iPhone 7 Plus
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iPhone 7 Plus features
Volume buttons
Ring/Silent switch
Status bar
FaceTime camera
Receiver/microphone/speaker
Sleep/Wake button
SIM card tray
Dual 12MP wide-angle and telephoto cameras
Rear microphone
True Tone Flash
Lightning connector
Speaker/microphone
Home button/Touch ID sensor
Microphone
iPhone SE
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iPhone SE features
Volume buttons
Ring/Silent switch
Status bar
FaceTime camera
Receiver/front microphone
Sleep/Wake button
SIM card tray
iSight camera
Rear microphone
True Tone Flash
Lightning connector
Speaker
Home button/Touch ID sensor
Headset jack
Your features and apps may vary depending on the model of iPhone you have, and on
your location, language, and carrier. To learn which features are available on your iPhone,
see the Compare iPhone models website. To find out which features are supported in
your area, go to the iOS Feature Availability website.
Note: Apps and services that send or receive data over a cellular network may incur
additional fees. Contact your carrier for information about your iPhone service plan and
fees.
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Sleep/Wake button
Use the Sleep/Wake button to turn on or wake iPhone, lock it, or turn it off. Locking
iPhone puts the display to sleep, saves the battery, and prevents anything from
happening if you touch the screen. You can still listen to music and adjust the volume
using the buttons on the side of iPhone, and you can receive phone calls and FaceTime
calls, text messages, alarms, notifications, and other updates.
On iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 6, and iPhone 6 Plus, the
Sleep/Wake button is on the right side:
On iPhone SE, iPhone 5s, iPhone 5c, and iPhone 5, the Sleep/Wake button is on the top
edge:
iPhone locks automatically if you donʼt touch the screen for a minute or so. To adjust the
timing, go to Settings > Display & Brightness > Auto-Lock.
Turn on iPhone. Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the Apple logo appears.
Turn off iPhone. Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the slider appears, then
drag the slider.
Wake iPhone. On iPhone 6s and later, lift iPhone, or press the Sleep/Wake or Home
button to see the Lock screen. To turn Raise to Wake on or off, go to
Settings > Display & Brightness. On iPhone 6 and earlier, press either the Sleep/Wake or
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Home button to see the Lock screen.
From the Lock screen you can check notifications and recent app activity, take photos,
and more. For more information, see Lock screen.
Unlock iPhone. On iPhone 5s and later, wake iPhone, then press the Home button. On
iPhone 5c and iPhone 5, wake iPhone, press the Home button, then enter the passcode if
required.
Set a passcode. For additional security, you can require a passcode to unlock iPhone. If
you didnʼt create a passcode during setup, go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode
(iPhone 5s and later) or Settings > Passcode (other models).
Home button
The Home button takes you to the Home screen, where you can tap an app to open it.
The Home button also provides other convenient shortcuts.
Go to the Home screen. Press the Home button.
Choose the click thatʼs right for you. On iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, go to
Settings > General > Home Button, then choose a click.
See apps youʼve opened. Double-click the Home button when iPhone is unlocked to
show the app switcher, then swipe left or right. See Switch between apps.
Use Siri or Voice Control. Press and hold the Home button. See Make requests and
Voice Control.
On iPhone 5s and later, you can use the sensor in the Home button to unlock iPhone or
make purchases in the iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store (instead of using your
passcode or Apple ID password). On iPhone 6 and later, you can also use the Touch ID
sensor when using Apple Pay (in countries where Apple Pay is supported) to make a
purchase. See Touch ID and About Apple Pay.
You can also use the Home button to turn accessibility features on or off. See
Accessibility Shortcut.
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Volume controls
When youʼre on the phone or listening to songs, movies, or other media, the buttons on
the side of iPhone adjust the audio volume. Otherwise, the buttons control the volume for
the ringer, alerts, and other sound effects. You can also use Siri to turn the volume up or
down. Just say “Turn up the volume” or “Turn down the volume.”
WARNING: For information about avoiding hearing loss, see Important safety
information.
Lock the ringer and alert volumes. Go to Settings > Sounds & Haptics (called Sounds
on iPhone models other than iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus), then turn off Change with
Buttons. To limit the volume for music and videos, go to Settings > Music > Volume Limit.
Note: To limit the maximum headset volume, go to Settings > Music > Volume Limit. To
prevent changes to the volume limit, go to Settings > General > Restrictions > Volume
Limit.
Use Control Center to adjust the volume. When iPhone is locked or when youʼre using
another app, swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center, swipe
left, then adjust the volume.
You can also use either volume button to take a picture or record a video.
Lightning connector
Connect your Lightning to USB Cable to the Lightning connector to charge or sync your
iPhone. For more information about charging, see Charge and monitor the battery. For
more information about syncing, see Sync with iTunes.
On iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, use EarPods with Lightning Connector to listen to audio,
or Lightning to Headphone Jack Adapter to connect headphones or other types of
devices with a 3.5 mm jack.
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Ring/Silent switch
Flip the Ring/Silent switch to put iPhone in ring mode
or silent mode
In ring mode, iPhone plays all sounds. In silent mode (switch shows orange), iPhone
doesnʼt ring or play alerts and other sound effects (but iPhone may still vibrate).
Important: Clock alarms, audio apps such as Music, and many games play sounds
through the built-in speaker, even when iPhone is in silent mode. In some areas, the
sound effects for Camera and Voice Memos are played, even if the Ring/Silent switch is
set to silent.
For information about changing sound and vibration settings, see Sounds and silence.
Use Do Not Disturb. You can silence calls, alerts, and notifications using Do Not Disturb.
Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center, then tap .
SIM card
If you were given a SIM card to install, install it before setting up iPhone.
Important: A Nano-SIM card is required to use cellular services when connecting to
GSM networks and some CDMA networks. iPhone thatʼs been activated on a CDMA
wireless network may also use a SIM card for connecting to a GSM network, primarily for
international roaming. Your iPhone is subject to your wireless service providerʼs policies,
which may include restrictions on switching service providers and roaming, even after
conclusion of any required minimum service contract. Contact your wireless service
provider for more details. Availability of cellular capabilities depends on the wireless
network.
Eject the SIM card tray. Insert a paper clip or the SIM eject tool into the small hole of
the SIM card tray on the right side of iPhone, then press firmly to eject and remove the
tray. Place the SIM card in the tray—the angled corner determines the correct orientation
—then insert the SIM card tray back into iPhone.
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Set a SIM PIN. To protect your SIM card from others using it for phone calls or cellular
data, you can use a SIM PIN. With a SIM PIN, every time you restart your device or
remove the SIM card, your SIM card locks and you see “Locked SIM” in the status bar. To
create one, go to Settings > Phone.
Status icons
The icons in the status bar at the top of the screen give information about iPhone:
Status icon
What it means
Cell signal
Youʼre in range of the cellular network and can
make and receive calls. If thereʼs no signal, “No
service” appears.
Airplane Mode
Airplane Mode is on—you canʼt make phone
calls, and other wireless functions may be
disabled. See Travel with iPhone.
LTE
Your carrierʼs LTE network is available, and
iPhone can connect to the Internet over that
network. (iPhone 5 and later. Not available in all
areas.) See Cellular data settings.
UMTS
Your carrierʼs 4G UMTS (GSM) or LTE network
(depending on the carrier) is available, and
iPhone can connect to the Internet over that
network. (Not available in all areas.) See Cellular
data settings.
UMTS/EV-DO
Your carrierʼs 3G UMTS (GSM) or EV-DO
(CDMA) network is available, and iPhone can
connect to the Internet over that network. See
Cellular data settings.
EDGE
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Your carrierʼs EDGE (GSM) network is available,
and iPhone can connect to the Internet over that
network. See Cellular data settings.
GPRS/1xRTT
Your carrierʼs GPRS (GSM) or 1xRTT (CDMA)
network is available, and iPhone can connect to
the Internet over that network. See Cellular data
settings.
Wi-Fi call
iPhone is set up for Wi-Fi calling. iPhone also
displays a carrier name next to the icon. See
Make a call.
Wi-Fi
iPhone is connected to the Internet over a Wi-Fi
network. See Connect to Wi-Fi.
Do Not Disturb
Do Not Disturb is turned on. See Do Not Disturb.
Personal Hotspot
iPhone is providing a Personal Hotspot for
another device. See Personal Hotspot.
Syncing
iPhone is syncing with iTunes. See Sync with
iTunes.
Network activity
Shows that thereʼs network activity. Some thirdparty apps may also use it to show an active
process.
Call Forwarding
Call Forwarding is set up. See Call forwarding,
call waiting, and caller ID.
VPN
Youʼre connected to a network using VPN. See
VPN settings.
TTY
iPhone is set to work with a TTY machine. See
Support for TTY.
Portrait orientation lock
The iPhone screen is locked in portrait
orientation. See Change the screen orientation.
Alarm
An alarm is set. See Alarms and timers.
Location Services
An item is using Location Services. See Location
Services.
Bluetooth®
Blue or white icon: Bluetooth is on and paired
with a device.
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Gray icon: Bluetooth is on. If iPhone is paired
with a device, the device may be out of range or
turned off.
No icon: Bluetooth is turned off.
See Bluetooth devices.
Bluetooth battery
Shows the battery level of a paired Bluetooth
device.
Battery
Gray icon: Shows the iPhone battery level or
charging status. See Charge and monitor the
battery.
Yellow icon: Low Power Mode is on. See Low
Power Mode.
Accessories included with iPhone
The following accessories are included with iPhone:
Apple headset. EarPods with Lightning Connector (included with iPhone 7 and
iPhone 7 Plus) or EarPods with 3.5 mm Headphone Plug (included with earlier iPhone
models). Use the headset to listen to music and videos, and make phone calls. See Use
your Apple EarPods.
Lightning to Headphone Jack Adapter. Use the Lightning to Headphone Jack Adapter
to connect headphones or other devices that have a 3.5 mm headphone plug.
Connecting cable. Use the Lightning to USB Cable to connect iPhone to your computer
to sync and charge.
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Apple USB power adapter. Use with the Lightning to USB Cable to charge the iPhone
battery.
SIM eject tool. Use to eject the SIM card tray. (Not included in all areas.) See Sim Card.
Gestures
A few simple gestures—tap, drag, swipe, and pinch—are all you need to use iPhone and
its apps.
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3D Touch
3D Touch gives you an additional way to interact with iPhone. On supported devices, you
can press the display to see previews, access useful shortcuts, and more.
3D Touch is supported on:
iPhone 7
iPhone 7 Plus
iPhone 6s
iPhone 6s Plus
For example, press a notification on the Lock screen to respond to it. In Mail, press a
message in the mailbox list for a peek at the message contents, then slide up to see a list
of actions. Or press a little deeper to pop the message open. In Photos, press an image
to peek at it, then swipe up to share or copy it; press a little deeper to pop the image to
full screen. In this document, look for other examples of 3D Touch, which are marked
with .
You can use 3D Touch on the Home screen—press an app icon to see Quick Actions
menus. For example, you can press the Camera icon on the Home screen, then choose
Take Selfie. Quick Actions work in Control Center too. For example, press Flashlight, then
choose bright, medium, or low light.
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With 3D Touch you can vary the pressure when you draw to change the quality of your
lines in some apps. For example, press as you draw in Notes to make a line darker. You
can also use 3D Touch to turn your keyboard into a trackpad and select text when typing.
Change 3D Touch sensitivity. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > 3D Touch, then
set 3D Touch sensitivity to Light, Medium, or Firm.
Apple ID
Your Apple ID is the account you use for just about everything you do with Apple—
including storing your content in iCloud; downloading apps from the App Store;
streaming from Apple Music; buying music, movies, and TV shows from the iTunes Store;
and purchasing books from the iBooks Store.
If you already have an Apple ID, use it when you first set up iPhone, and whenever you
need to sign in to use an Apple service. If you donʼt have an Apple ID, you can create one
anyplace youʼre asked to sign in—for example, the iTunes Store, the App Store, and the
iBooks Store. Itʼs best to have only one Apple ID.
For more information, go to the Apple ID account website.
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Set up iPhone
Setup assistant
WARNING: To avoid injury, read Important safety information before using iPhone.
You can set up iPhone over a Wi-Fi network, or over your carrierʼs cellular network (not
available in all areas). You can also set up iPhone by connecting it to a computer and
using iTunes.
Note: If youʼre using iPhone with a company, school, or other organization, see iPhone in
the enterprise.
Set up iPhone. Turn on iPhone, then follow the setup assistant.
To make setup as smooth as possible, have this information at hand:
The name and password (if applicable) of your Wi-Fi network
The email address and password for your Apple ID
If you donʼt have an Apple ID, you can create one during setup.
Your credit or debit card account information, if you want to add a card to Apple Pay
during setup
Apple Pay is compatible with iPhone 6 and later.
A backup of your data if youʼre upgrading from another device (see Back up iPhone
with iCloud Backup and Back up iPhone with iTunes)
You can also restore iPhone from an iCloud or iTunes backup or migrate from an
Android device during setup.
Note: Find My iPhone—a feature you use to locate your iPhone—is turned on
automatically when you sign in with your Apple ID during iPhone setup. See Find My
iPhone. Find My iPhone includes a feature called Activation Lock that prevents
anyone else from activating and using your iPhone, even if itʼs completely erased.
Before you sell or give away your device, you should erase and unlock iPhone so that
the next owner can activate it.
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Some carriers let you unlock iPhone for use with their network. To see if your carrier
offers this option, see Wireless carrier support and features for iPhone in the United
States and Canada. Contact your carrier for authorization and setup information. You
need to connect iPhone to iTunes to complete the process. Additional fees may apply.
For more information, see the Apple Support article How to unlock your iPhone for use
with another carrier.
Move to iOS from Android
During setup you can migrate your content automatically and securely from your Android
phone.
Download the Move to iOS app. On your device running Android version 4.0 or later, see
the Apple Support article Move from Android to iOS and download the Move to iOS app.
Move your data from Android during setup. When setting up iPhone, on the Apps &
Data screen, select Move Data from Android, turn on Wi-Fi on the Android device, open
the Move to iOS app on the Android device, then follow the steps.
Note: You can use the Move to iOS app only when you first set up iPhone. If youʼve
already finished setup and want to use Move to iOS, you must erase your iOS device and
start over, or move your data manually. See the Apple Support article Move content
manually from your Android device to your iOS device.
The Settings app
The Settings app is on the Home screen. You use it to configure many iPhone settings.
For example, tap Settings, then tap Wallpaper (Settings > Wallpaper) to choose a
different background for the Lock screen and Home screen. Among other things, you can
use Settings to:
Change your password
Select sounds that play during certain events (when you receive an email message,
for example)
Configure privacy controls
Find out how much free storage remains on iPhone
Enable restrictions
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Search for a setting. Open Settings, swipe down to show the Settings field, then enter a
term—alert or password, for example.
Set up other mail, contacts, and calendar accounts
iPhone works with Microsoft Exchange, and many of the most popular Internet-based
mail, contacts, and calendar services.
For information about setting up a Microsoft Exchange account in a corporate
environment, see the Apple Support article Set up Exchange ActiveSync on your iPhone,
iPad, or iPod touch.
Set up an account. Go to Settings, choose a setting to configure (Mail, Contacts, or
Calendar), tap Accounts, then tap Add Account.
You can add contacts using an LDAP or CardDAV account, if your company or
organization supports it. See Add contact accounts.
You can add calendars using a CalDAV calendar account, and you can subscribe to
iCalendar (.ics) calendars or import them from Mail. See Use multiple calendars.
Date and time
The date and time are usually set for you based on your location—take a look at the Lock
screen to see if theyʼre correct.
Set whether iPhone updates the date and time automatically. Go to Settings >
General > Date & Time, then turn Set Automatically on or off. If you set iPhone to update
the time automatically, it gets the correct time over the cellular network and updates it
for the time zone youʼre in. Some carriers donʼt support network time, so in some areas
iPhone may not be able to automatically determine the local time.
Set the date and time manually. Go to Settings > General > Date & Time, then turn off
Set Automatically.
Set whether iPhone shows 24-hour time or 12-hour time. Go to Settings > General >
Date & Time, then turn 24-Hour Time on or off (it may not be available in all areas).
Language and region
Go to Settings > General > Language & Region to set:
The language for iPhone
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The preferred language order for apps and websites
The region format
The calendar format
Advanced settings for dates, times, and numbers
To add a keyboard for another language, go to Settings > General > Keyboard >
Keyboards. For more information, see Use international keyboards.
Connect to the Internet
iPhone connects to the Internet whenever necessary, using a Wi-Fi connection (if
available) or your carrierʼs cellular network.
When an app needs to use the Internet, iPhone does the following, in order:
Connects over the most recently used available Wi-Fi network
Shows a list of Wi-Fi networks in range and connects using the one you choose
Connects over the cellular data network, if available
Note: If a Wi-Fi connection to the Internet isnʼt available, apps and services may transfer
data over your carrierʼs cellular network, which may result in additional fees. Contact
your carrier for information about your cellular data plan rates. To manage cellular data
usage, see Cellular data settings.
Connect to Wi-Fi
If
appears at the top of the screen, youʼre connected to a Wi-Fi network. iPhone
reconnects when you return to the same location.
Configure Wi-Fi. Go to Settings > Wi-Fi, then turn Wi-Fi on or off. (You can also turn WiFi
on or off in Control Center.)
Choose a network: Tap one of the listed networks, then enter the password, if
required.
Ask to join networks: Turn on Ask to Join Networks to be notified when a Wi-Fi
network is available. Otherwise, you must manually join a network when a previously
used network isnʼt available.
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Join a closed Wi-Fi network: Tap Other, then enter the name of the closed network.
You need to know the network name, security type, and password.
Adjust the settings for a Wi-Fi network: Tap
next to a network. You can set an
HTTP proxy, define static network settings, turn on BootP, or renew the settings
provided by a DHCP server.
Note: Some networks may offer different information.
Forget a network: Tap
Network.
next to a network youʼve joined before, then tap Forget This
Set up your own Wi-Fi network. If you have an unconfigured AirPort base station turned
on and within range, you can use iPhone to set it up. Go to Settings > Wi-Fi, then look for
“Set up an AirPort base station.” Tap your base station, and Setup Assistant does the
rest.
Manage an AirPort network. If iPhone is connected to an AirPort base station, go to
Settings > Wi-Fi, tap
next to the network name, then tap Manage This Network. If you
havenʼt yet downloaded AirPort Utility, tap OK to open the App Store, then download it.
Connect iPhone to your computer
By connecting iPhone to your computer you can sync content from your computer using
iTunes and back up iPhone with iTunes.
To use iPhone with your computer, you need:
A Mac with a USB 2.0 or 3.0 port, or a PC with a USB 2.0 port, and one of the
following operating systems:
OS X v10.9 or later with iTunes 12.5 or later
Windows 7 or later with iTunes 12.5 or later
iTunes, available from the iTunes download website
Connect iPhone to your computer. Use the included Lightning to USB Cable.
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Unless iPhone is actively syncing with your computer, you can disconnect it at any time.
Look at the top of the iTunes screen on your computer or on iPhone to see if syncing is in
progress. If you disconnect iPhone while itʼs syncing, some data may not get synced until
the next time you connect iPhone to your computer.
Manage content on your iOS devices
You can transfer information and files between your iOS devices and computers, using
iCloud or iTunes.
iCloud stores your photos and videos, documents, music, calendars, contacts, and
more. It all gets pushed wirelessly to your other iOS devices and computers, keeping
everything up to date. See iCloud.
iTunes syncs music, videos, photos, and more between your computer and iPhone.
Changes you make on one device are copied to the other when you sync. You can
also use iTunes to sync files and documents. See Sync with iTunes.
You can use iCloud or iTunes, or both, depending on your needs. For example, you can
use iCloud to automatically keep your contacts and calendars up to date on all your
devices, and use iTunes to sync music from your computer to iPhone.
You can also manually manage content from iTunes in the Summary pane. To add songs
and videos, choose a song, video, or playlist from your iTunes library, then drag it to
iPhone in the iTunes sidebar. This is useful if your iTunes library contains more items than
can fit on iPhone. See the Apple Support article Sync your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch
with iTunes using USB.
Note: If you have iCloud Music Library turned on, you can manually manage only video.
iCloud
Safely store your photos and videos, documents, music, calendars, contacts, News
favorites and saved stories, and more in iCloud so theyʼre available even if you lose your
iPhone.
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Set up iCloud. Go to Settings > iCloud. Create an Apple ID if you donʼt have one, or use
your existing one.
Content stored in iCloud is pushed wirelessly to your other devices where youʼre signed
in to iCloud with the same Apple ID.
iCloud is available on devices with iOS 5 or later, on Mac computers with OS X v10.7.5 or
later, and on PCs with iCloud for Windows 5 (Windows 7 or later is required). You can also
sign in to iCloud.com from any Mac or PC to access your iCloud information and features
like Photos, Find My iPhone, Mail, Calendar, Contacts, iWork for iCloud, and more.
Note: iCloud may not be available in all areas, and iCloud features may vary by area. For
more information, go to the iCloud website.
With iCloud you can:
Access your purchases: Automatically get iTunes purchases on all your devices set
up with iCloud, or download previous purchases from the iTunes Store, App Store,
and iBooks Store for free, anytime.
Access your music: With an Apple Music membership, any music you added from
Apple Music is accessible from iPhone. With an iTunes Match subscription, music
from your library, including music you imported from CDs or purchased somewhere
other than the iTunes Store, can also be stored in iCloud and played on demand.
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Store your photos and videos: Use iCloud Photo Library to store all your photos and
videos in iCloud. You can access them from any device with iOS 8.1 or later, a Mac
with OS X v10.10.3 or later, a PC with iCloud for Windows 5, and on iCloud.com when
you sign in with the same Apple ID. Use iCloud Photo Sharing to share photos and
videos with only the people you choose, and let them add photos, videos, and
comments.
Note: If you use iCloud Photo Library to store your photos and videos, you canʼt use
iTunes to sync them with your computer.
Share with your family: With Family Sharing, up to six family members can share their
purchases from the iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store. With an optional
Apple Music family membership, all family members can use Apple Music. Pay for
family purchases with the same credit card and approve kidsʼ spending right from a
parentʼs device. Plus, share photos, a family calendar, and more.
Store and retrieve your documents: Store PDFs in iCloud and access them in iBooks
from your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac, or PC. With iCloud Drive you can safely
store your presentations, spreadsheets, images, and other documents in iCloud, and
access them from your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac, or PC. iCloud Drive is available
on any device with iOS 8 or later and on any Mac with OS X v10.10.0 or later. If youʼre
using an earlier version of iOS, see Set up iCloud Drive.
Synchronize mail, contacts, calendars, and more: Keep your mail, contacts,
calendars, notes, and reminders up to date across all your devices.
Note: If you use iCloud to store your contacts and calendars, you canʼt use iTunes to
sync them with your computer.
Keep tabs on your browsing: With Safari tabs you can see the tabs you have open on
your other iOS devices and Mac computers. See Browse the web.
Keep News up to date across all your devices: Access your favorite News sources
and topics as well as the saved stories on all your devices with iOS 9 or later that are
set up with iCloud. (News isnʼt available in all areas). See Get started with News.
Back up your data: Back up iPhone to iCloud automatically when iPhone is connected
to power and Wi-Fi. iCloud data and backups sent over the Internet are encrypted.
See Back up iPhone with iCloud Backup.
Find your iPhone: Locate your missing iPhone on a map, lock it remotely, suspend or
remove the ability to pay using Apple Pay, play a sound, display a message, or erase
all the data on it. Find My iPhone also includes Activation Lock, which requires your
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Apple ID and password to disable Find My iPhone, erase iPhone, or reactivate your
device. See Find My iPhone.
Find your friends: Use Find My Friends to share your location with friends and family.
Store and access your passwords and credit card information: iCloud Keychain keeps
passwords and credit card information up to date across all your designated devices.
With iCloud, you get a free email account and 5 GB of storage for your mail, documents,
photos and videos, and backups. Your purchased music, apps, TV shows, and books
donʼt count against your available storage space. You can increase your iCloud storage
by choosing a plan for up to 1 TB of storage. You can purchase additional storage right
from your device.
Upgrade your iCloud storage. Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage, then tap Change
Storage Plan. For information about upgrading your iCloud storage, see iCloud Help.
View and download previous or shared purchases. You can download purchases from
the iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store.
iTunes Store purchases: Go to the iTunes Store, tap More, then tap Purchased. You
can also access your purchased songs and videos in the Music and Videos apps. In
Music, tap Library. In Videos, tap Movies or TV Shows.
App Store purchases: Go to the App Store, tap Updates, then tap Purchased.
iBooks Store purchases: Go to iBooks, then tap Purchased.
Turn on Automatic Downloads for music, apps, or books. Go to Settings > iTunes &
App Store.
For more information about iCloud, go to the iCloud website. For support information, go
to the iCloud Support website.
Sync with iTunes
Syncing with iTunes copies information from your computer to iPhone, and vice versa.
You can sync by connecting iPhone to your computer, or you can set up iTunes to
wirelessly sync music, videos, photos, and more with Wi-Fi. For help syncing iPhone,
open iTunes on your computer, choose Help > iTunes Help, then select “Add items to
iPod, iPhone, or iPad.” iTunes is available from the iTunes website.
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Note: If features such as iCloud Music Library, iCloud Photo Library, and iCloud calendar
and contacts syncing are turned on, you canʼt use iTunes to sync their associated media
and data.
Sync using a USB cable. Connect iPhone to your computer using the included cable,
open iTunes on your computer, then click the iPhone button in the top-left of the iTunes
window. Select a setting (Summary, Apps, or Music, for example) to configure it.
Note: If iPhone doesnʼt appear in iTunes, make sure youʼre using the latest version of
iTunes, check that the cable is correctly connected, then try restarting your computer.
To learn more, see the Apple Support article Sync your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch with
iTunes using USB.
Set up wireless syncing. Connect iPhone to your computer using the included cable,
open iTunes, click the iPhone button in the top-left of the iTunes window, click Summary,
then select Sync with this iPhone over Wi-Fi.
If Wi-Fi syncing is turned on, both iPhone and your computer are on and connected to
the same wireless network, and iTunes is open on your computer, iPhone syncs when itʼs
connected to a power source.
To learn more, see the Apple Support article Sync your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch with
iTunes using Wi-Fi.
iTunes provides these syncing options:
In the Music pane, you can sync your entire music library or just selected playlists,
artists, albums, and genres.
In the Movies, TV Shows, Podcasts, and Books panes, you can choose to sync all the
media they contain, or just the media you choose.
In the Photos pane, you can sync photos and videos from a supported app or a folder
on your computer.
In the Summary pane, you can set iTunes to automatically sync iPhone when itʼs
attached to your computer. To temporarily prevent syncing when you attach the
device, hold down Command and Option (Mac) or Shift and Control (PC) until you see
iPhone appear in the iTunes window.
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Back up iPhone with iCloud Backup
When you first sign in to iCloud, iCloud Backup turns on automatically. iCloud backs up
iPhone daily over Wi-Fi, when itʼs connected to a power source and is locked. (To lock
iPhone, press the Sleep/Wake button. iPhone also locks automatically if you donʼt touch
the screen for a minute or so.)
iCloud backups are encrypted automatically so that your data is protected from
unauthorized access both while itʼs transmitted to your devices and when itʼs stored in
iCloud. Purchased content, iCloud Photo Sharing, and My Photo Stream content donʼt
count against your 5 GB of free iCloud storage.
Music that wasnʼt purchased in iTunes isnʼt backed up in iCloud, but it can be restored by
syncing with iTunes on your computer. See Sync with iTunes.
When you back up using iCloud, you canʼt simultaneously use iTunes to automatically
back up iPhone to your computer. However, you can use iTunes to manually back up
iPhone to your computer. See Back up iPhone with iTunes.
iCloud backups donʼt include:
Data thatʼs already stored in iCloud, such as contacts, calendars, notes, iCloud
Shared Streams, My Photo Stream, iCloud Photo Library, and the contents of
iCloud Drive
Data stored in other cloud services, such as Gmail and Exchange mail
Apple Pay information and settings
Touch ID settings
Content you didnʼt get directly from the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store,
such as imported MP3s, videos, or CDs
Content from the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store (if itʼs still available, you
can tap to redownload content you purchased)
Stop or resume iCloud backups. Go to Settings > iCloud > Backup, then turn iCloud
Backup off or on.
Back up immediately on iCloud. Go to Settings > iCloud > Backup, then tap Back Up
Now.
View or remove iCloud backups. Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage > Manage Storage.
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Important: Backups for music, movies, or TV show purchases arenʼt available in all
countries. Previous purchases may not be restored from iCloud Backup if they're no
longer in the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store.
If you replace your iPhone, you can use its backup to transfer your information to a new
device. See Restore or reset using iTunes.
For more information, see the Apple Support article About backups in iCloud and iTunes.
Back up iPhone with iTunes
Connect to iTunes and back up. Open iTunes on your computer, then connect the
device to your computer. Click the iPhone button, then click Summary in the sidebar. To
create a manual backup, click Back Up Now. To turn on automatic iTunes backups, click
“This computer.” iTunes automatically backs up iPhone when you connect it to your
computer.
iTunes backups donʼt include:
Content from the iTunes Store and App Store, or PDFs downloaded directly to iBooks
Content synced from iTunes, such as imported MP3s or CDs, videos, books, and
photos (see Sync with iTunes)
Photos already stored in the cloud, such as in iCloud Shared Streams, My Photo
Stream, and iCloud Photo Library
Touch ID settings
Apple Pay information and settings
Activity, Health, and Keychain data
To back up this content, select “Encrypt local backup” in iTunes.
View or remove iTunes backups. Open iTunes on your computer, choose iTunes >
Preferences, then click Devices. Encrypted backups have a lock icon in the list of
backups.
Encrypt iPhone backup. In the Summary pane, select “Encrypt iPhone backup” if you
want to encrypt the information stored on your computer when iTunes makes a backup.
Encrypted backups are indicated by a lock icon
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the backup. If you donʼt select this option, other passwords (such as those for mail
accounts) arenʼt included in the backup, and you have to reenter them if you use the
backup to restore iPhone.
If you replace your iPhone, you can use its backup to transfer your information to a new
device. See Restore iPhone.
For more information, see the Apple Support article About backups in iCloud and iTunes.
iPhone in the enterprise
To use iPhone with your work accounts, you need to know the settings your organization
requires. If you received your iPhone from your organization, the settings and apps you
need might already be installed. If youʼre using your own iPhone, your system
administrator may provide you with settings to enter, or have you connect to a mobile
device management server that installs the required settings and apps for you.
You may be asked to install a configuration profile, which configures iPhone for you, and
may define some settings that you canʼt change. For example, your organization might
turn on Auto-Lock and require you to set a passcode to protect the information in the
accounts you access. You can see your profiles in Settings > General > Profiles & Device
Management. When you delete a profile, the settings and accounts, and everything else
associated with the profile, are also removed.
If your organization wants you to have certain apps, it might provide you with redemption
codes to use in the App Store. When you download an app using a redemption code, you
own the app, even though your organization purchased it for you. Your organization can
also purchase App Store app licenses that the organization retains but assigns to you for
a period of time. An app you receive this way is removed if the organization assigns it to
someone else.
Your organization might also develop custom apps that arenʼt in the App Store. You
install them from a webpage, or you may receive a notification from your organization
asking you to install them wirelessly. These apps belong to your organization, and they
may be removed or stop working if you delete a configuration profile.
If you have questions about the settings, apps, or other requirements for using iPhone in
your enterprise environment, contact the system administrator at your organization. For
general information about using iPhone in business, go to the iPhone in Business
website.
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View this user guide on iPhone
View the user guide in Safari. Tap
, then tap the iPhone User Guide bookmark. (If
you donʼt see a bookmark, go to the iPhone User Guide.)
Add an icon for the user guide to the Home screen: Tap
Screen.
, then tap Add to Home
View the user guide in a different language: Tap the language link (English, for
example) at the bottom of the first page, then choose a language.
View the user guide in iBooks. Open iBooks, then search for “iPhone user” in the
iBooks Store.
For more information about iBooks, see Get books.
Tips for using iOS 10
The Tips app helps you get the most from iPhone.
Get Tips. Open the Tips app (inside the Extras folder). New tips are added frequently.
Get notified when new tips arrive. Go to Settings > Notifications > Tips.
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Whatʼs new in iOS 10
Expressive messaging. Enhance your messages with bubble effects, invisible ink, fullscreen effects, handwritten messages, Digital Touch, larger emoji, iMessage apps
(including stickers), and more. See Messages at a glance.
Broader Siri capabilities. Siri works with many of your favorite apps from the App Store.
For example, you can use Siri with an app to book a ride or send money to a friend in
need. See Siri and apps.
More from Maps. Reserve a table at your favorite restaurant, order a ridesharing vehicle
for a cross-town trip, search for places along your route, and more. See Find places.
Remember meaningful moments. Memories, a new feature of Photos, takes the photos
and videos of special moments, people, and places, and turns them into shareable
Memory movies. See Memories.
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Control your home. The Home app lets you securely control Works with Apple HomeKit
accessories, such as lights, locks, thermostats, smart plugs, and more, even when youʼre
away from home. You can create automations that, for example, turn on the lights at
sunset or unlock your door and dial up the heat when you return home. See Home at a
glance.
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Quickly find music. Music is now simpler. Enjoy the fresh design that provides greater
clarity and simplicity to every aspect of Apple Music. Plus, sing along with your favorite
songs with the new lyrics feature. See Apple Music.
More ways to read News. Easily find interesting stories with the all-new For You design,
subscribe to your favorite publications, and get notifications about the dayʼs most
important stories, right on your Lock screen. See Get started with News.
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A more powerful Lock screen. Interact with notifications and, with an Internet
connection, catch up on news, check your stocks, and get a weather report—all without
unlocking iPhone. See Today View and Notifications.
Become an organ donor. A single organ donor can save as many as eight lives. In the
Health app, you can register to be an organ, eye, or tissue donor with Donate Life
America. See Register as an organ, eye, or tissue donor.
Read your voicemail. With Voicemail transcription, you can quickly scan through a long
voicemail message to find just the information you need. See Visual voicemail.
Apple Pay on the web. Shopping online is now faster, safer, and more private than ever.
Just pick out the things you want, then pay in your browser. See Pay within an app or on
a website.
Noteworthy collaboration. Invite people to view and make edits to notes in your iCloud
account and everyone will see the latest changes. See Collaborate in Notes.
Type in two languages. Add a keyboard in another language, and you can type in two
languages at the same time without having to switch between keyboards. See Add or
change keyboards.
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Basics
Use apps
Home screen
Tap an app to open it.
3D Touch. Press an app to see a Quick Actions menu. See 3D Touch.
Press the Home button anytime to return to the Home screen. Swipe left or right to see
additional Home screens.
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Some apps may include a badge on their Home screen icon, to let you know how many
new items await—for example, the number of new email messages. If thereʼs a problem—
such as a message that couldnʼt be sent—an exclamation mark
appears on the badge.
On a folder, a numbered badge indicates the total number of notifications for all the apps
inside.
Switch between apps
You can easily switch between the apps youʼre using.
View open apps. Double-click the Home button to reveal your open apps in the app
switcher. Swipe left or right to see more. To switch to another app, tap it.
3D Touch. To view open apps, press the left edge of the screen, then swipe right to
switch apps. See 3D Touch.
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Close an app. If an app isnʼt working properly, you can force it to quit. Swipe the app up
from the app switcher display. Then try opening the app again.
Search for apps. If you have lots of apps, you can use Search to find and open them.
Swipe the center of the Home screen down to see the search field. See Search.
Look around
Drag a list up or down to see more. Swipe to scroll quickly; touch the screen to stop
scrolling. Some lists have an index—tap a letter to jump ahead.
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Drag a photo, map, or webpage in any direction to see more.
To quickly jump to the top of a page, tap the status bar at the top of the screen.
Zoom in and out
Pinch open a photo, webpage, or map for a close-up—then pinch closed to zoom back
out. In Photos, keep pinching to see the collection or album the photoʼs in.
Or double-tap a photo or webpage to zoom in, and double-tap again to zoom out. In
Maps, double-tap to zoom in and tap once with two fingers to zoom out.
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Change the screen orientation
Many apps give you a different view when you rotate iPhone.
To lock the screen in portrait orientation, swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to
open Control Center, then tap .
The Portrait orientation lock icon
orientation is locked.
appears in the status bar when the screen
When you use iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6s Plus, or iPhone 7 Plus in landscape orientation,
some apps have special layouts. These apps include:
Mail
Calendar
Settings
Note: These special layouts are not available when Display Zoom is enabled.
Reachability
If you have iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 7, or iPhone 7 Plus
and are using it in portrait orientation, lightly tap the Home button twice to slide the
screen down so that you can reach everything with your thumb.
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Turn off Reachability. Tap Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn off Reachability.
Lock screen
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Lift iPhone, or press the Sleep/Wake button, to see the Lock screen and quickly access
the features and information you need most. You can see your most recent notifications
without unlocking iPhone. You can also:
Swipe down from the top of the screen to see all your recent notifications at once in
Notification Center.
Swipe up from the bottom of the screen to open Control Center.
Swipe right to see Today View and get information from your favorite apps.
Swipe left to open Camera.
Notifications
Notifications help you keep track of whatʼs new. They let you know if you missed a
FaceTime call, if the date of an event moved, and more. You can customize your
notifications so you just see whatʼs important to you.
Respond when iPhone is locked. Swipe the notification left.
3D Touch. Press a notification to respond to it right from the Lock screen. See
3D Touch.
Open the app to respond. Swipe the notification right.
Respond without leaving the current app. Pull the notification down when it appears at
the top of your screen.
Note: This feature works with text and email messages, calendar invitations, and more.
Open Notification Center to view all your notifications at once. Swipe down from the
top edge of any screen.
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3D Touch. Press a notification to respond to it from Notification Center. See
3D Touch.
Clear a notification. Swipe the notification left. To clear a group of notifications, tap
3D Touch. Press
to clear all notifications. See 3D Touch.
Set notification preferences. Go to Settings > Notifications. Tap an app to set its
notification options. For example, choose whether to allow notifications from a specific
app or turn the sound on a notification on or off.
Choose whether to show notifications on the Lock screen. Go to Settings > Touch ID
& Passcode (iPhone 5s and later) or Settings > Passcode (other models), then choose
whether to allow access when locked.
Get government alerts. In some areas, you can turn on alerts in the Government Alerts
list. Go to Settings > Notifications.
For example, in the United States, iPhone can receive presidential alerts, and you can
turn AMBER and Emergency Alerts (which includes both Severe and Extreme Imminent
Threat alerts) on or off (theyʼre on by default). In Japan, iPhone can receive Emergency
Earthquake Alerts from the Japan Meteorological Agency. Government alerts vary by
carrier and iPhone model, and may not work under all conditions.
Silence all your notifications. Go to Settings > Do Not Disturb. You can also use Siri to
turn Do Not Disturb on or off. Say “Turn on Do Not Disturb” or “Turn off Do Not Disturb.”
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Close Notification Center. Swipe up, or press the Home button.
Today View
Get information from your favorite apps, at a glance. Choose from Maps Nearby,
Calendar, Notes, News, Reminders, and more.
Open Today View. Swipe right from the left edge of the Home screen or Lock screen.
Add and organize Today widgets. To choose which widgets appear, tap Edit at the
bottom of the screen. Tap + or — to add or remove widgets. To arrange the order of your
information, touch
, then drag to a new position.
Note: To include traffic conditions for your commute in Today, make sure Frequent
Locations is turned on in Settings > Privacy > Location Services > System Services >
Frequent Locations.
Control Center
Control Center gives you instant access to the camera, calculator, AirPlay Mirroring,
control and playback of currently playing audio, and other handy features. You can also
adjust the brightness, lock the screen in portrait orientation, turn wireless services on or
off, and turn on AirDrop.
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Open Control Center. Swipe up from the bottom edge of any screen (even the Lock
screen).
3D Touch. Press the Flashlight, Timer, or Camera to view a list of quick actions. See
3D Touch.
Control audio. Swipe Control Center left to quickly reach audio controls.
If you set up your iPhone with Bluetooth speakers, headphones, or another device, tap
to switch the output. For information about setting up iPhone with devices using
Bluetooth, see Bluetooth devices.
Open the currently playing audio app. Tap the song title.
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Control home accessories. Swipe Control Center right to reach accessory controls (if
youʼve set up accessories in the Home app).
Close Control Center. Swipe down, tap the top of the screen, or press the Home button.
Turn off access to Control Center in apps or on the Lock screen. Go to Settings >
Control Center.
Search
You can search iPhone, the Internet, and apps for useful information including:
Sports scores and schedules
Weather forecasts
Stock prices
Quick conversions
Calculations
Places nearby
Media, including music, TV shows, movies, and web videos
Websites
Content in apps (for supporting apps)
Siri provides more information even before you start to type. Siri suggests:
Relevant people
Suggested apps
Places nearby
Items in the news
Search with iPhone. Swipe down from the middle of the Home screen to show Search.
Tap an item to get more information, or tap the search field. Results occur as you type; to
hide the keyboard and see more results on the screen, tap Search. Tap an item in the list
to open it.
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Choose what to search. Go to Settings > General > Spotlight Search, then tap to
deselect apps or content.
Turn off Siri Suggestions and Suggestions in Search. Go to Settings > General >
Spotlight Search.
Turn off Location Services for Spotlight Suggestions. Go to Settings > Privacy >
Location Services. Tap System Services, then turn off Location-Based Suggestions.
Search in apps. Many apps include a search field where you can type to find something
within the app. For example, in the Maps app, you can search for a specific location.
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Siri
Make requests
Siri lets you speak to your iPhone to send messages, schedule meetings, place phone
calls, and much more. Siri understands natural speech, so you donʼt have to learn special
commands or keywords. Ask Siri anything, from “set the timer for 3 minutes” to “what
movies are showing tonight?” Open apps, and turn features like Airplane Mode,
Bluetooth, Do Not Disturb, and VoiceOver on or off. Siri is great for keeping you updated
with the latest sports info, helping you decide on a restaurant, and searching the
iTunes Store or App Store.
Note: To use Siri, iPhone must be connected to the Internet. See Connect to the Internet.
Cellular charges may apply.
Summon Siri. Press and hold the Home button, release the button, then make your
request. Or, instead of waiting for Siri to notice that youʼve stopped talking, continue to
hold down the Home button while you speak, then release it when you finish.
If youʼre using a headset, you can use the center or call button in place of the Home
button.
Hey Siri. You can use Siri without pressing the Home button. Just say “Hey Siri,” then
make your request. (For some models, Hey Siri is only recognized when iPhone is
connected to a power source.)
To turn Hey Siri on or off, and to identify if your device must be connected to a power
source to use it, go to Settings > Siri > Allow “Hey Siri”.
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Get Siri hints. Ask Siri “what can you do,” or tap
The onscreen response from Siri often includes information or images that you can tap
for additional detail, or to perform some other action.
Change the voice gender for Siri. Go to Settings > Siri > Siri Voice (may not be available
in all areas).
Adjust the volume for Siri. Use the volume buttons while youʼre interacting with Siri. For
voice feedback options, go to Settings > Siri > Voice Feedback.
Prevent access to Siri when iPhone is locked. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode
(iPhone models with Touch ID) or Settings > Passcode (other models). You can also
disable Siri by turning on restrictions. See Set Restrictions.
Tell Siri about yourself
If you tell Siri about yourself—including things like your home and work addresses, and
your relationships—you can get personalized service like, “send a message to my wife.”
Tell Siri who you are. Fill out your info card in Contacts, then go to Settings > Siri > My
Info and tap your name.
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To let Siri know about a relationship, say something like “Emily Parker is my wife” or
“Ailish Kimber is my mom.”
Note: Siri uses Location Services when your requests require knowing your location. See
Location Services.
Siri and apps
Siri works with many of the apps on iPhone, including Phone, Messages, Maps, Clock,
Calendar, and more. For example, you can say things like:
“Call Mom at home”
“Do I have any new texts from Rick?”
“Iʼm running low on gas”
“Set an alarm for 8 a.m.”
To get personalized service for requests like “FaceTime Mom,” tell Siri about yourself and
your relationships. See Tell Siri about yourself.
More examples of how you can use Siri with apps appear throughout this guide.
Using Siri with third-party apps. Some apps from the App Store also support Siri.
These include apps that let you book a ride, send a message, search photos, send
payments, place calls, and track your workouts. Look for apps that work with Siri in the
App Store.
Make corrections
If Siri doesnʼt get something right, you can tap to edit your request.
Or tap
again, then clarify your request verbally.
Want to cancel that last command? Say “cancel,” tap the Siri icon, or press the Home
button.
Want to change a message before sending it? Say “Change it.”
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Siri Eyes Free
With Siri Eyes Free, you can use iPhone features in your car without looking at or
touching iPhone—you can control it completely by speaking. To talk with Siri, press and
hold the voice command button on your steering wheel until you hear the Siri tone. You
can ask Siri to call people, select and play music, hear and compose text messages, get
directions, read your notifications, find calendar information, add reminders, and more.
Siri Eyes Free is available on select automobiles.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding distractions that could lead to
dangerous situations, see Important safety information.
Use Siri Eyes Free. Connect iPhone to your car using Bluetooth. Refer to the user guide
that came with your car.
For more information about using Siri in your car, see About CarPlay.
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Enter text
Type and edit text
Tap a text field to see the onscreen keyboard, then tap letters to type. If you touch the
wrong key, you can slide your finger to the correct key. The letter isnʼt entered until you
release your finger from the key.
Tap Shift to type uppercase, or touch the Shift key and slide to a letter. Double-tap Shift
for caps lock. To enter numbers, punctuation, or symbols, tap the Number key
or the
Symbol key
. To quickly end a sentence with a period and a space, just double-tap
the space bar.
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If you see a word underlined in red, tap it to see suggested corrections. If the word you
want doesnʼt appear, type the correction.
Set options for typing or add keyboards. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard.
The onscreen keyboard for iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 7,
and iPhone 7 Plus includes additional keys you may find useful. You can see these keys
when you hold iPhone in landscape orientation.
You can also use an Apple Wireless Keyboard to enter text. See Use an Apple Wireless
Keyboard. To dictate instead of typing, see Dictate.
Revise text. Touch and hold the text to show the magnifying glass, then drag to position
the insertion point.
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Select text. Tap the insertion point to display the selection options. Or double-tap a
word to select it. Drag the grab points to select more or less text. In read-only
documents, such as webpages, touch and hold to select a word.
You can cut, copy, or paste over selected text. With Universal Clipboard, you can also cut
or copy something on one Apple device, and paste it on another.
With some apps, you can also get bold, italic, or underlined text (tap B/I/U); see
suggestions in Look Up; or have iPhone suggest an alternative. Tap to see all the
options. If you choose Look Up, you see suggested information from the web and
different apps. To turn off Suggestions in Look Up, go to Settings > General > Spotlight
Search.
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3D Touch. To turn your keyboard into a trackpad, press the keyboard until it turns
light gray. Move the cursor by dragging around the keyboard. Without lifting your finger,
press a little deeper to select a word. Press twice to select a sentence. Press three times
to select a paragraph. After pressing, you can drag to select more text. See 3D Touch.
Undo the last edit. Shake iPhone, then tap Undo.
Predictive text
As you write, the keyboard predicts your next word, suggests emoji that could take the
place of your word, and makes suggestions based on your recent activity and information
from your apps (not available in all languages). For example, when you type something
like:
“My number is,” your phone number appears as an option.
“Iʼm available at,” the free time in your calendar pops up as an option.
“Iʼm at,” your current location appears as an option when youʼre typing in Messages.
Tap a word to choose it, or accept a highlighted prediction by entering a space or
punctuation. When you tap a suggested word, a space appears after the word. If you
enter a comma, period, or other punctuation, the space is deleted. Reject a suggestion
by tapping your original word (shown as the predictive text option with quotation marks).
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Turn off predictive text. Touch and hold
or
, then slide to Predictive.
If you turn off predictive text, iPhone may still try to suggest corrections for misspelled
words. Accept a correction by entering a space or punctuation, or by tapping return. To
reject a correction, tap the “x.” If you reject the same suggestion a few times, iPhone
stops suggesting it.
Dictate
You can dictate instead of typing. Make sure Enable Dictation is turned on (in Settings >
General > Keyboard) and iPhone is connected to the Internet.
Note: Dictation may not be available in all languages or in all areas, and features may
vary. Cellular data charges may apply. See Cellular data settings.
Dictate text. Tap
on the onscreen keyboard or Search field, then speak. Tap Done
when you finish.
Add text. Tap again and continue dictating. To insert text, tap to place the insertion
point first. You can also replace selected text by dictating.
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Add punctuation or format text. Say the punctuation or format. For example, “Dear
Mary comma the check is in the mail exclamation mark” becomes “Dear Mary, the check
is in the mail!” Punctuation and formatting commands include:
quote … end quote
new paragraph
new line
cap—to capitalize the next word
caps on … caps off—to capitalize the first character of each word
all caps—to make the next word all uppercase
all caps on … all caps off—to make the enclosed words all uppercase
no caps on … no caps off—to make the enclosed words all lowercase
no space on … no space off—to run a series of words together
smiley—to insert :-)
frowny—to insert :-(
winky—to insert ;-)
Save keystrokes
A shortcut lets you enter a word or phrase by typing just a few characters. For example,
type “omw” to enter “On my way!” That oneʼs already set up for you, but you can also
add your own.
Create a shortcut. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard, then tap Text Replacement.
Have a word or phrase you use and donʼt want it corrected? Create a shortcut, but
leave the Shortcut field blank.
Use iCloud to keep your personal dictionary up to date on your other devices. Go to
Settings > iCloud, then turn on iCloud Drive.
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Add or change keyboards
You can turn typing features, such as spell checking, on or off; add keyboards for writing
in different languages; and change the layout of your onscreen keyboard or Apple
Wireless Keyboard.
If youʼve added keyboards in other languages, you can type in two languages without
having to switch between keyboards. Your keyboard automatically switches between the
two languages you type in most often.
Set typing features. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard.
Add a keyboard for another language. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard >
Keyboards > Add New Keyboard.
Switch keyboards. Touch and hold
keyboard.
, then slide your finger to the name of the
You can also tap
to switch from one keyboard to the other. Continue tapping to
access other enabled keyboards.
For information about international keyboards, see Use international keyboards.
Change the keyboard layout. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards, select
a keyboard, then choose a layout.
Use an Apple Wireless Keyboard
You can use an Apple Wireless Keyboard (available separately) to enter text on iPhone.
The keyboard connects via Bluetooth, so you must first pair it with iPhone.
Note: The Apple Wireless Keyboard may not support keyboard features that are on your
device. For example, you canʼt enable dictation with Apple Wireless Keyboard.
Pair an Apple Wireless Keyboard with iPhone. Turn the keyboard on. On iPhone, go to
Settings > Bluetooth and turn on Bluetooth, then tap the keyboard when it appears in the
Devices list.
Once itʼs paired, the keyboard reconnects to iPhone whenever itʼs in range—up to about
33 feet (10 meters). When itʼs connected, the onscreen keyboard doesnʼt appear.
Save your batteries. Turn off Bluetooth and the wireless keyboard when not in use. You
can turn off Bluetooth in Control Center. To turn off the keyboard, hold down the On/off
switch until the green light goes off.
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Sounds and silence
You can change or turn off the sounds iPhone plays when you get a call, text, voicemail,
email, tweet, Facebook post, reminder, or other event.
Tip: If youʼre not hearing or seeing incoming calls and alerts when you expect, swipe
up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center and see if Do Not Disturb
is on.
Set sound options. Go to Settings > Sounds & Haptics (called Sounds on iPhone models
other than iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus) for options such as ringtones and alert tones,
vibration settings and patterns, and ringer and alert volumes.
Set vibration patterns. Go to Settings > Sounds & Haptics (called Sounds on iPhone
models other than iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus), then choose an item from the Sounds
and Vibration Patterns list. Tap Vibration to select a pattern or create your own.
If you want to temporarily silence incoming calls, alerts, and sound effects, see Do Not
Disturb.
Do Not Disturb
Do Not Disturb is an easy way to silence iPhone, whether youʼre going to dinner or to
sleep. It keeps calls and alerts from making any sounds or lighting up the screen.
Turn on Do Not Disturb. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control
Center, then tap . When Do Not Disturb is on,
appears in the status bar.
Note: Even if Do Not Disturb is on, calls and messages from your emergency contacts in
Medical ID still come through as usual, and Alarms still sound.
Configure Do Not Disturb. Go to Settings > Do Not Disturb.
Tip: You can schedule quiet hours, allow calls from your Favorites, and allow repeated
calls to ring through for those emergency situations. You can also set whether Do Not
Disturb silences iPhone only when itʼs locked, or even when itʼs unlocked.
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Voice Control
Voice Control lets you make phone calls and FaceTime calls, and control music playback,
if you have Siri turned off. You may want to use Voice Control if you canʼt use Siri
because youʼre not connected to the Internet. (For information about using Siri to control
iPhone by voice, see Make requests.)
Note: Voice Control and Voice Control settings arenʼt available when Siri is turned on.
Use Voice Control. Turn Siri off in Settings > General > Siri, then press and hold the
Home button until the Voice Control screen appears and you hear a beep, or press and
hold the center button on your headset. See Use your Apple EarPods.
For best results:
Speak clearly and naturally.
Say only Voice Control commands, names, and numbers. Pause slightly between
commands.
Use full names.
Change the language for Voice Control. By default, Voice Control expects you to speak
voice commands in the language thatʼs set for iPhone (in Settings > General > Language
& Region). To use Voice Control in another language or dialect, go to Settings >
General > International > Voice Control.
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Voice Control for the Music app is always on, but you can keep Voice Control from dialing
when iPhone is locked. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode (iPhone 5s and later) or
Settings > Passcode (other models), then turn off Voice Dial.
For specific commands, see Make a call and Siri and Voice Control.
Charge and monitor the battery
iPhone has an internal, lithium-ion rechargeable battery. For more information about the
battery—including tips for maximizing battery life—go to the Apple Lithium-ion Batteries
website.
WARNING: For important safety information about the battery and charging iPhone, see
Important safety information.
Charge the battery. Connect iPhone to a power outlet using the included cable and USB
power adapter.
NOTICE: If you suspect that liquid may be present in the Lightning connector of iPhone,
do not charge iPhone. For more information about exposure to liquid, see Important
handling information.
Note: Connecting iPhone to a power outlet can start an iCloud backup or wireless iTunes
syncing. See Back up iPhone with iTunes and Sync with iTunes.
You can also charge the battery by connecting iPhone to your computer, which also
allows you to sync iPhone with iTunes. See Sync with iTunes. Unless your keyboard has a
high-power USB 2.0 or 3.0 port, you must connect iPhone to a USB 2.0 or 3.0 port on
your computer.
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Important: The battery may drain instead of charge if iPhone is connected to a computer
thatʼs turned off or is in sleep or standby mode.
Show percentage of battery remaining in the status bar. Go to Settings > Battery,
then turn on Battery Percentage.
See proportion of battery used by each app. Go to Settings > Battery.
The battery icon in the upper-right corner shows the battery level or charging status.
When syncing or using iPhone, it may take longer to charge the battery.
Important: If iPhone is very low on power, it may display an image of a nearly depleted
battery, indicating that it needs to charge for up to ten minutes before you can use it. If
iPhone is extremely low on power, the display may be blank for up to two minutes before
the low-battery image appears.
Rechargeable batteries, like those found in iPhone, have a limited number of charge
cycles and may eventually need to be replaced. The iPhone battery should be replaced
by Apple or an authorized service provider. For more information, go to the Battery
service and recycling website.
Low Power Mode
Switch to Low Power Mode when your iPhone battery is low or when you may not have
access to electrical power. Low Power Mode limits background activity and tunes
performance for essential tasks. Using Low Power Mode can significantly increase the
life of the battery charge.
Turn on Low Power Mode. Go to Settings > Battery, then turn on Low Power Mode.
Note: If your iPhone switches to Low Power Mode automatically, it switches back to
normal power mode after charging to 80%. Your iPhone might perform some tasks more
slowly when in Low Power Mode.
Proactive assistant
Based on how you use your iPhone, proactive assistant gives you suggestions for what
you might want to do next. Proactive assistant might help when you:
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Listen to music: Plug in your headphones, and proactive assistant recognizes that
you might want to play an album you started earlier. Your music is ready to play from
the Lock screen—or swipe the Music icon up from the lower left, and proactive
assistant opens the Music app after you unlock iPhone.
Create email and events: When you start adding people to an email or calendar event,
proactive assistant suggests the people you included in previous emails or events.
Receive calls: If you get an incoming call from an unknown number, proactive
assistant lets you know who might be calling—based on phone numbers included in
your emails.
Leave for an event: If your calendar event includes a location, proactive assistant
assesses traffic conditions and notifies you when to leave.
Turn off contact suggestions. Go to Settings > Contacts, then turn off Contacts Found
in Apps.
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Turn off event suggestions. Go to Settings > Calendar, then turn off Events Found in
Apps.
Find My Friends
You can find the Find My Friends app in the Extras folder. Find My Friends is a great way
to share your location with people who are important to you. Friends and family members
who share their locations with you appear on a map, so you can quickly see where they
are. You can set notifications for friends and family members to alert you when they
leave from or arrive at various locations.
Note: For more information about Find My Friends, please refer to the Help in the app.
Turn on Share My Location. Go to Settings > iCloud > Share My Location.
Share your location with a friend. Open Find Friends on iPhone, then tap Add. Select a
contactʼs name, or type a name in the To field, then tap Done. Choose how long you want
to share your location.
Share your location using AirDrop. Tap Add, then select a friend who appears in
AirDrop. Choose how long you want to share your location.
Set a notification. Select a friend, then tap Notify Me. Choose whether you want to be
notified when a friend leaves from or arrives at a location. Choose the friendʼs current
location, or tap Other to create a new location for the notification.
3D Touch. To share a location from the Home screen, tap Extras, press Find Friends,
then choose the Share My Location quick action. See 3D Touch.
Travel with iPhone
If you travel outside your carrierʼs network area, you can avoid roaming charges by
turning off voice and data roaming services in Settings > Cellular. See Cellular data
settings.
Some airlines let you keep your iPhone turned on if you switch to Airplane Mode. You
canʼt make calls or use Bluetooth, but you can listen to music, play games, watch videos,
or use other apps that donʼt require network or phone connections. If the airline allows it,
you can turn Wi-Fi or Bluetooth back on to enable those services, even while in Airplane
Mode.
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Turn on Airplane Mode. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control
Center, then tap . You can also turn Airplane Mode on or off in Settings. When Airplane
Mode is on,
appears in the status bar at the top of the screen.
You can also turn Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on or off in Control Center.
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Personalize your iPhone
Arrange your apps
Arrange apps. Touch and hold any app on the Home screen until you see the app icons
jiggle. Drag an app to move it. Drag an app to the edge of the screen to move it to a
different Home screen, or drag it to the Dock at the bottom of the screen (remove
another app first). Press the Home button to save your arrangement.
Create a new Home screen. While arranging apps, drag an app to the right edge of the
last Home screen. The dots above the Dock show how many Home screens you have,
and which one youʼre viewing.
Start over. Go to Settings > General > Reset, then tap Reset Home Screen Layout to
return the Home screen and apps to their original layout. Any folders youʼve created are
removed, the original wallpaper is restored, and apps youʼve downloaded are placed after
apps that came with your iPhone.
Remove apps
Remove apps from the Home screen. Touch and hold an app on the Home screen until
you see the app icons jiggle, then tap
in the upper-right corner. When you finish,
press the Home button.
In addition to removing third-party apps, you can remove some built-in Apple apps that
come with your iPhone:
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Calculator
Calendar
Compass
Contacts (contact information remains available through the Phone app)
FaceTime
Find My Friends
Home
iBooks
iCloud Drive
iTunes Store
Mail
Maps
Music (also removes the Music app from CarPlay)
News
Notes
Podcasts
Reminders
Stocks
Tips
Videos
Voice Memos
Watch
Weather
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Note: When you remove a built-in app from your Home screen, you also remove any
related user data and configuration files. Removing built-in apps from your Home screen
can affect other system functionality. For more information, see the Apple Support article
Remove built-in apps from the Home screen on your iOS device.
Restore an app you removed. Go to the App Store, search for the app, then tap
Organize with folders
Create a folder. While arranging apps, drag one app onto another. Tap the name of the
folder to rename it. Drag apps into or out of the folder. Press the Home button when you
finish.
You can have multiple pages of apps in a folder.
Delete a folder. Drag out all the apps—the folder is deleted automatically.
Change the wallpaper
Wallpaper settings let you set an image or photo as wallpaper for the Lock screen or
Home screen. You can choose from dynamic and still images.
Change the wallpaper. Go to Settings > Wallpaper > Choose a New Wallpaper.
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Tip: If you choose your own image as wallpaper, you can pinch open to zoom in on
your selected image, then drag your finger to move the image. Pinch closed to zoom
back out.
When choosing an image for new wallpaper, you may be able to tap Perspective to make
your wallpaper move when you change the angle you view the screen. To turn on the
Perspective option for wallpaper you already set, go to Settings > Wallpaper, then tap the
image of the Lock screen or Home screen.
Note: The Perspective option doesnʼt appear if Reduce Motion (in Accessibility settings)
is turned on. See Reduce screen motion.
Set a Live Photo as wallpaper for the Lock screen. On devices with 3D Touch, go to
Settings > Wallpaper > Choose a New Wallpaper. Tap Live, then choose a Live Photo. To
set one of your own Live Photos as the wallpaper, choose one from one of your folders
(below Photos).
3D Touch. When youʼre on the Lock screen, press to play the Live Photo. See
3D Touch.
Adjust the screen brightness and color balance
Dim the screen or use Auto-Brightness to extend battery life. Use Night Shift to shift the
colors in your display to the warmer end of the spectrum at night and make viewing the
screen easier on your eyes.
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Adjust the screen brightness. Go to Settings > Display & Brightness, then drag the
slider. If Auto-Brightness is on, iPhone adjusts the screen brightness for current light
conditions using the built-in ambient light sensor. You can also adjust the brightness in
Control Center.
Use Night Shift. Go to Settings > Display & Brightness > Night Shift.
Turn on Night Shift manually — helpful when youʼre in a darkened room during the day,
for example — or schedule it to turn on automatically. If you schedule Night Shift to turn
on from sunset to sunrise, iPhone uses the data from your clock and your geolocation to
determine when itʼs nighttime for you.
To adjust the color balance for Night Shift, go to Settings > Display & Brightness > Night
Shift, then drag the slider toward the warmer or cooler end of the spectrum.
You can also turn on Night Shift in Control Center. Tap
Display Zoom
On supported devices, you can magnify the screen display. Go to Settings > Display &
Brightness. Tap View (below Display Zoom), choose Zoomed, then tap Set. For additional
zoom features, see Zoom.
App extensions
Some apps let you extend the functionality of your iPhone. An app extension may appear
as a sharing option, an action option, a widget in Today View, a file provider, or a custom
keyboard. For example, if you download Pinterest, Pinterest becomes another option for
sharing when you click .
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App extensions can also help you edit a photo or video in your Photos app. For example,
you can download a photo-related app that lets you apply filters to photos.
Install app extensions. Download the app from the App Store, then open the app and
follow the onscreen instructions.
Turn sharing or action options on or off. Tap , then tap More (drag options to the left
if necessary). Turn off third-party sharing or action options (they're on by default).
Organize sharing and action options. Tap , then tap More (drag options to the left if
necessary). Touch and drag
to rearrange your options.
For more information about Today widgets, see Today View. For more information about
Sharing options, see Share from apps.
Your iPhone name
The name of your iPhone is used by iTunes and iCloud.
Change the name of your iPhone. Go to Settings > General > About > Name.
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Set Restrictions
You can set restrictions for some apps, and for purchased content. For example, parents
can restrict explicit music from appearing in playlists, or disallow changes to certain
settings. Use restrictions to prevent the use of certain apps, the installation of new apps,
or changes to accounts or the volume limit.
Turn on restrictions. Go to Settings > General > Restrictions, then tap Enable
Restrictions. Youʼll be asked to define a restrictions passcode thatʼs necessary to change
the settings you make. This can be different from the passcode for unlocking iPhone.
Important: If you forget your restrictions passcode, you must restore the iPhone
software. See Restore iPhone.
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International keyboards
Use international keyboards
With international keyboards you can type text in many different languages, including
Asian languages and languages written from right to left. For a list of supported
keyboards, go to Appleʼs iPhone website, choose your iPhone, click Tech Specs, then
scroll to Languages.
Manage keyboards. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards.
Add a keyboard: Tap Add New Keyboard, then choose a keyboard from the list.
Repeat to add more keyboards.
Remove a keyboard: Tap Edit, tap
Delete, then tap Done.
next to the keyboard you want to remove, tap
Edit your keyboard list: Tap Edit, drag
then tap Done.
next to a keyboard to a new place in the list,
If youʼve added keyboards in other languages, you can type in two languages without
having to switch between keyboards. Your keyboard automatically switches between the
two languages you type in most often.
Switch keyboards. Touch and hold
keyboard.
, then slide your finger to the name of the
You can also tap
to switch from one keyboard to the other. Continue tapping to
access other enabled keyboards.
Enter accented letters or other characters. Touch and hold the related letter, number,
or symbol, then slide to choose a variant. For example:
On a Thai keyboard: Choose native numbers by touching and holding the related
Arabic number.
On a Chinese, Japanese, or Arabic keyboard: Suggested characters or candidates
appear at the top of the keyboard. Tap a candidate to enter it, or swipe left to see
more candidates.
Use the extended suggested candidate list. Tap the up arrow on the right to view the
full candidate list. To return to the short list, tap the down arrow.
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When using certain Chinese or Japanese keyboards, you can create a shortcut (text
replacement) for word and input pairs. The shortcut is added to your personal dictionary.
When you type a shortcut while using a supported keyboard, the paired word or input is
substituted for the shortcut.
Create shortcuts. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Text Replacement. Shortcuts
are available for:
Simplified Chinese: Pinyin
Traditional Chinese: Pinyin and Zhuyin
Japanese: Romaji and Kana
Reset your personal dictionary. Go to Settings > General > Reset > Reset Keyboard
Dictionary. All custom words and shortcuts are deleted, and the keyboard dictionary
returns to its default state.
Special input methods
You can use keyboards to enter some languages in different ways. A few examples are
Chinese Cangjie and Wubihua, Japanese Kana, and Facemarks. You can also use your
finger or a stylus to write Chinese characters on the screen.
Build Chinese characters from the component Cangjie keys. As you type, suggested
characters appear. Tap a character to choose it, or continue typing up to five
components to see more options.
Build Chinese Wubihua (stroke) characters. Use the keypad to build Chinese
characters using up to five strokes, in the correct writing sequence: horizontal, vertical,
left falling, right falling, and hook. For example, the Chinese character ࢻ (circle) should
begin with the vertical stroke Ӻ.
As you type, suggested Chinese characters appear (the most commonly used
characters appear first). Tap a character to choose it.
If youʼre not sure of the correct stroke, enter an asterisk (*). To see more character
options, type another stroke, or scroll through the character list.
Tap the match key (‫܃‬ᯈ) to show only characters that match exactly what you typed.
Write Chinese characters. Write Chinese characters directly on the screen with your
finger when Simplified or Traditional Chinese handwriting input is turned on.
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3D Touch. Press a little deeper as you write to increase the line width of your
character strokes. See 3D Touch.
As you write character strokes, iPhone recognizes them and shows matching characters
in a list, with the closest match at the top. When you choose a character, its likely followon characters appear in the list as additional choices.
You can type some complex characters, such as 潚 (part of the name for the Hong Kong
International Airport), by writing two or more component characters in sequence. Tap the
character to replace the characters you typed. Roman characters are also recognized.
Type Japanese kana. Use the Kana keypad to select syllables. For more syllable
options, drag the list to the left or tap the arrow key.
Type Japanese romaji. Use the Romaji keyboard to type syllables. Alternative choices
appear along the top of the keyboard; tap one to type it. For more syllable options, tap
the arrow key and select another syllable or word from the window.
Type facemarks or emoticons. Use the Japanese Kana keyboard and tap the
key. Or
you can:
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Use the Japanese Romaji keyboard (QWERTY-Japanese layout): Tap
the
key.
, then tap
Use the Chinese (Simplified or Traditional) Pinyin or (Traditional) Zhuyin keyboard:
Tap
, then tap the
key.
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Apps
Phone
Phone calls
Make a call
Making a call on iPhone is as simple as choosing a number in your contacts, or tapping
one of your favorites or recent calls.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding distractions that could lead to
dangerous situations, see Important safety information.
Add favorites. With Favorites, you can make a call with a single tap. To add someone to
your Favorites list, tap . You can also add names to Favorites from Contacts. In
Contacts, tap Add to Favorites at the bottom of a card, then tap the number to add.
Delete a name or rearrange your Favorites list. Tap Edit.
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Return a recent call. Tap Recents, then tap the call. Tap
to get more info about the
call, or the caller. A red badge indicates the number of missed calls.
You can also reach recent and favorite people youʼve been in contact with from the
multitasking screen—just double-click the Home button.
Dial manually. Tap Keypad, enter the number, then tap Call.
Paste a number to the keypad: Tap the screen above the keyboard, then tap Paste.
Enter a soft (2-second) pause: Touch the “*” key until a comma appears.
Enter a hard pause (to pause dialing until you tap the Dial button): Touch the “#” key
until a semicolon appears.
Redial the last number: Tap Keypad, tap Call to display the number, then tap Call
again.
Use Siri or Voice Control. Press and hold the Home button, say “call” or “dial,” then say
the name or number. You can add “at home,” “work,” or “mobile.” See Make requests and
Voice Control. For example:
“Call Emilyʼs mobile”
“Call the fire department”
“Redial that last number”
When voice dialing a number, speak each digit separately—for example, “four one five,
five five five….” For the 800 area code in the U.S., you can say “eight hundred.”
Use Wi-Fi Calling on your iPhone. (Available with some carriers) Go to Settings >
Phone > Wi-Fi Calling, then turn Wi-Fi Calling on This iPhone on.
Tip: Wi-Fi Calling can be helpful when your iPhone has a low cell signal, because it
uses your Wi-Fi network to make the call.
When someone calls
Tap Accept to answer an incoming call. Or if iPhone is locked, press the Home button.
You can also press the center button on your EarPods.
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Silence a call. Press the Sleep/Wake button or either volume button. You can still answer
the call after silencing it, until it goes to voicemail.
Adjust the volume. Press the volume buttons on the side of your phone to adjust the
volume during a call.
Decline a call and send it directly to voicemail. Do one of the following:
Press the Sleep/Wake button twice quickly.
Press and hold the center button on your headset for about two seconds. Two low
beeps confirm that the call was declined.
Tap Decline (if iPhone is awake when the call comes in).
Note: In some areas, declined calls are disconnected without being sent to voicemail.
Respond with a text message instead of answering. Tap Message, then choose a
reply or tap Custom. To create your own default replies, go to Settings > Phone >
Respond with Text, then tap any of the default messages and replace it with your own
text.
Remind yourself to return the call. Tap Remind Me, then indicate when you want to be
reminded.
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Make and receive calls on your iPad, iPod touch, or Mac
Continuity lets you make calls on your other devices by relaying calls through your
iPhone, which must be turned on and connected to a cellular network. To make calls this
way, you need iOS 8 or later, and OS X v10.10 or later. You must be signed in to iCloud
and FaceTime on all devices using the same Apple ID as on iPhone, and all devices must
be connected to the same Wi-Fi network.
Wi-Fi Calling lets you make and receive phone calls on your iPad or iPod touch (iOS 9 or
later), Apple Watch (watchOS 2 or later), or Mac (OS X v10.11 or later), as long as youʼre
signed in to iCloud and FaceTime with the same Apple ID on the device youʼre using for
calls. Your iPhone doesn't need to be on the same network as your other devices or even
turned on.
Note: Wi-Fi Calling on other devices is available with some carriers, and cellular charges
may apply.
You must first set up your iPhone (iPhone 5c, iPhone 5s, and later), then your other
devices. If you log out of iCloud or FaceTime on iPhone, Wi-Fi Calling is disabled.
Note: When making calls on iPhone SE, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, and later, if the Wi-Fi
connection is lost, calls switch automatically to your carrierʼs cellular network using
VoLTE (Voice over LTE), if available and turned on. See Cellular data settings. (VoLTE
calls also switch to Wi-Fi when a Wi-Fi connection becomes available.) On earlier iPhone
models, and on iPad, iPod touch, or a Mac, a call is dropped if you lose the Wi-Fi
connection. Contact your carrier for feature availability.
Turn on Wi-Fi Calling on your iPhone. Go to Settings > Phone > Wi-Fi Calling, then turn
Wi-Fi Calling on This iPhone on.
If you see Add Wi-Fi Calling For Other Devices, tap it to allow calls from other devices
that arenʼt on the same Wi-Fi network as your iPhone. Otherwise, you can still use your
other devices to make phone calls, but your iPhone must be turned on and on the same
network as your other devices.
Turn on Wi-Fi Calling on another iOS device. On the device, go to Settings > FaceTime,
then turn on FaceTime. If youʼre asked, turn Wi-Fi calling on.
Turn on Wi-Fi Calling on your Mac. On your Mac, open FaceTime, then choose
FaceTime > Preferences > Settings. Select “Calls from iPhone.” If an Upgrade to Wi-Fi
Calling button appears, click it, then follow the instructions.
Receive a call on your iPad, iPod touch, or Mac. Swipe or click the notification to
answer, ignore, or respond with a quick message.
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Make a call from your iPad, iPod touch, or Mac. Tap or click a phone number in
Contacts, Calendar, FaceTime, Messages, Spotlight, or Safari.
Note: Emergency calls on your iPhone are routed through cellular service when available.
In the event that cellular service is not available, and you have enabled Wi-Fi Calling,
emergency calls may be made over Wi-Fi, and your deviceʼs location information may be
used for emergency calls to aid response efforts, regardless of whether you enable
Location Services. Some carriers may use the address you registered with the carrier
when signing up for Wi-Fi Calling as your location.
For more information about Wi-Fi calls, see the Apple Support article Make a call with
Wi-Fi Calling.
Avoid unwanted calls
Block unwanted callers. On a contact card, tap Block this Caller (tap
in Favorites or
Recents to see a callerʼs contact card). You can also block callers in Settings > Phone >
Blocking & Identification. You donʼt receive voice calls, FaceTime calls, or text messages
from blocked callers. For more information about blocking calls, see the Apple Support
article Block calls and block or filter messages.
Identify spam calls. Download a spam-blocking app from the App Store, and iPhone
alerts you to potential spam calls.
To view your spam-blocking apps on iPhone, go to Settings > Phone > Call Blocking and
Identification.
If you have multiple spam-blocking apps, you can change which one checks an unknown
number first. Touch and hold
, then drag to position.
While on a call
When youʼre on a call, the screen shows several call options.
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End a call. Tap
or press the Sleep/Wake button.
Use another app while on a call. Press the Home button, then open the app. To return
to the call, tap the green bar at the top of the screen.
Respond to a second call. You can:
Ignore the call and send it to voicemail: Tap Ignore.
Put the first call on hold and answer the new one: Tap Hold + Accept.
End the first call and answer the new one: When using a GSM network, tap End +
Accept. With a CDMA network, tap End and when the second call rings back, tap
Accept, or drag the slider if iPhone is locked.
With a call on hold, tap Swap to switch between calls, or tap Merge Calls to talk with both
parties at once. See Conference calls.
Note: With CDMA, you canʼt switch between calls if the second call was outgoing, but
you can merge the calls. You canʼt merge calls if the second call was incoming. If you end
the second call or the merged call, both calls are terminated.
Conference calls
With GSM, you can set up a conference call with up to five people (depending on your
carrier).
Note: Conference calls may not be available if your call is using VoLTE (Voice over LTE).
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Create a conference call. While on a call, tap Add Call, make another call, then tap
Merge Calls. Repeat to add more people to the conference.
Drop one person: Tap
next to a person, then tap End.
Talk privately with one person: Tap
Calls to resume the conference.
, then tap Private next to the person. Tap Merge
Add an incoming caller: Tap Hold Call + Answer, then tap Merge Calls.
Emergency calls
Make an emergency call when iPhone is locked. On the Enter Passcode screen, tap
Emergency Call (to dial 911 in the U.S., for example).
Important: You can use iPhone to make an emergency call in many locations, provided
that cellular service is available, but you should not rely on it for emergencies. Some
cellular networks may not accept an emergency call from iPhone if iPhone is not
activated, if iPhone is not compatible with or configured to operate on a particular
cellular network, or (when applicable) if iPhone does not have a SIM card or if the SIM
card is PIN-locked.
In the U.S., location information (if available) is provided to emergency service providers
when you dial 911 or tap Emergency Call. If you tap Emergency Call or dial an emergency
number outside of the U.S., your location information may also be provided to emergency
providers if your carrier supports it. Please review your carrierʼs emergency calling
information to understand the limits of emergency calling over Wi-Fi.
With CDMA, when an emergency call ends, iPhone enters emergency call mode for a few
minutes to allow a call back from emergency services. During this time, data
transmission and text messages are blocked.
Exit emergency call mode (CDMA). Do one of the following:
Tap the Back button.
Press the Sleep/Wake button or the Home button.
Use the keypad to dial a non-emergency number.
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Visual voicemail
Visual voicemail lets you see a list of your messages. You can choose which ones to
listen to, view transcriptions of messages, or delete them, without having to wade
through all of them. A badge on the Voicemail icon tells you how many unheard
messages you have. The first time you tap Voicemail, youʼre asked to create a voicemail
password and record your voicemail greeting.
Note: Voicemail transcription (Beta) is available in English and depends on the quality of
the recording. You wonʼt see transcriptions for voicemails you received before you
upgraded iPhone to iOS 10.
Listen to a voicemail message. Tap Voicemail, then select a message. To listen again,
select the message, then tap . If visual voicemail isnʼt available with your service, tap
Voicemail and follow the voice instructions.
Messages are saved until you delete them or your carrier erases them.
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Do I have any new voicemail?”
“Play the voicemail from Emily”
Delete a message. Swipe or tap the message, then tap Delete.
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Note: In some areas, deleted messages may be permanently erased by your carrier. Your
voice messages may also be deleted if you change your SIM card.
Manage deleted messages. Tap Deleted Messages (at the end of the messages list),
then:
Listen to a deleted message: Tap the message.
Undelete a message: Tap the message and tap Undelete.
Delete messages permanently: Tap Clear All.
Share a message. Tap a message, then tap
Update your greeting. Tap Voicemail, tap Greeting, tap Custom, then tap Record. Or, to
use your carrierʼs generic greeting, tap Default.
Set an alert sound for new voicemail. Go to Settings > Sounds.
Change the password. Go to Settings > Phone > Change Voicemail Password. If you
forgot your voicemail password, contact your wireless carrier.
Contacts
When viewing a contactʼs card, a quick tap lets you make a phone call, create an email
message, find the contactʼs location, and more. See Use Contacts from within the Phone
app.
See the phone number for your iPhone. Tap Contacts, then scroll to the top of your
contacts list.
3D Touch. To add a contact from the Home screen, press Phone, then choose the
Create New Contact quick action. See 3D Touch.
Call forwarding, call waiting, and caller ID
Set up call forwarding, call waiting, or caller ID. (GSM) Go to Settings > Phone.
Call Forwarding: The Call Forwarding icon
appears in the status bar when call
forwarding is on. You must be in range of the cellular network when you set iPhone to
forward calls, or calls wonʼt be forwarded.
Call Waiting: If youʼre on a call and call waiting is turned off, incoming calls go directly
to voicemail.
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Caller ID: For FaceTime calls, your phone number is displayed even if caller ID is
turned off.
For CDMA accounts, contact your carrier for information about enabling and using these
features.
For more information, see the Apple Support article Call forwarding, call waiting, and
other call features on iPhone.
Ringtones and vibrations
iPhone comes with ringtones that sound for incoming calls, Clock alarms, and the Clock
timer. You can also purchase ringtones from songs in the iTunes Store. See Purchase,
rent, or redeem.
Set the default ringtone. Go to Settings > Sounds & Haptics > Ringtone. (Settings >
Sounds > Ringtone on iPhone models other than iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus.)
Assign different ringtones for the special people in your life. Go to Contacts, choose
a contact, tap edit, then tap Ringtone.
Turn the ringer on or off. Flip the switch on the side of iPhone.
Important: Clock alarms still sound when the Ring/Silent switch is set to silent.
Turn vibrate on or off. Go to Settings > Sounds & Haptics. (Settings >
Sounds > Ringtone on iPhone models other than iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus.) See
Sounds and silence.
Set the sound for new voicemail. Go to Settings > Sounds & Haptics > New Voicemail.
(Settings > Sounds > Ringtone on iPhone models other than iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus.)
International calls
For information about making international calls from your home area (including rates
and other charges that may apply), contact your carrier.
When traveling abroad, you may be able to use iPhone to make calls, send and receive
text messages, get visual voicemail, and use apps that access the Internet, depending on
available networks.
Enable international roaming. To turn on Data Roaming and Voice Roaming (CDMA), go
to Settings > Cellular. Contact your carrier for information about availability and fees.
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Important: Voice, text message, and data roaming charges may apply. To avoid charges
while roaming, turn off Data Roaming and Voice Roaming (CDMA).
You may be able to roam on GSM networks, if you have a CDMA account, and your
iPhone has a SIM card installed. While roaming on a GSM network, iPhone has access to
GSM network features. Charges may apply. Contact your carrier for more information.
Set network options. Go to Settings > Cellular to:
Turn data roaming on or off
Turn cellular data on or off
Turn voice roaming on or off (CDMA)
Use GSM networks abroad (CDMA)
See Cellular data settings.
Turn off cellular services. Go to Settings, turn on Airplane Mode, then tap Wi-Fi and
turn it on. Incoming phone calls are sent to voicemail. To resume cellular service, turn
Airplane Mode off.
Make calls to your contacts and favorites while traveling abroad. (GSM) Go to
Settings > Phone, then turn on Dial Assist. Dial Assist automatically adds the prefix or
country code for calls to the U.S.
Select a carrier network. Go to Settings > Carrier. This setting appears on GSM
networks when youʼre outside your carrierʼs network, and other local carrier data
networks are available to use for your phone calls, visual voicemail, and cellular network
Internet connections. You can make calls only on carriers that have a roaming agreement
with your carrier. Additional fees may apply. Roaming charges may be billed to you by the
other carrier, through your carrier.
Once you select a network, iPhone uses only that network. If the network you chose is
unavailable, “No service” appears on iPhone. To look for a different carrier network, go
back to Settings > Carrier.
Get voicemail when visual voicemail isnʼt available. Dial your own number (with
CDMA, add # after your number), or touch and hold “1” on the numeric keypad.
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Safari
Safari at a glance
With Safari on iPhone, you can browse the web, add webpages to your reading list to
read later, and add page icons to the Home screen for quick access. If you sign in to
iCloud with the same Apple ID on all your devices, you can see pages you have open on
other devices, and keep your bookmarks, history, and reading list up to date on your
other devices.
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Search the web
Search the web. Enter a URL or search term in the search field at the top of the page,
then tap a search suggestion, or tap Go on the keyboard to search for exactly what you
typed. If you donʼt want to see suggested search terms, go to Settings > Safari, then turn
off Search Engine Suggestions (below Search).
Quickly search a site youʼve visited before. Enter the name of the site, followed by
your search term. For example, enter “wiki einstein” to search Wikipedia for “einstein.”
Go to Settings > Safari > Quick Website Search to turn this feature on or off.
See your favorites when you enter an address, search, or create a new tab. Go to
Settings > Safari > Favorites, then select the folder containing your favorites.
Search the page. To find a specific word or phrase on the current page, tap , then tap
Find on Page. Enter the word or phrase in the search field to search. Tap
to find other
instances.
Choose your search engine. Go to Settings > Safari > Search Engine.
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Browse the web
Look before you leap. To see the URL of a link before you go there, touch and hold the
link.
3D Touch. To preview items, press a link to get a peek. Press a little deeper to open
it. See 3D Touch.
Open a link in a new tab. Touch and hold the link, then tap Open in New Tab. If you
prefer to stay on the current tab while opening a link in another tab, go to Settings >
Safari > Open Links, then tap In Background.
Browse open tabs. Tap
tab to the left.
. To close a tab, tap
in the upper-left corner, or swipe the
View tabs that are open on your other devices. If you sign in to iCloud with the same
Apple ID on all your devices, and you turn on Safari in Settings > iCloud on iPhone, you
can view tabs that are open on your other devices. Tap , then scroll to the list at the
bottom. To close a tab, swipe left, then tap Close.
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View recently closed tabs. Touch and hold
Get back to the top. Tap the top edge of the screen to quickly return to the top of a long
page.
See more of the page. Turn iPhone to landscape orientation.
Refresh the page. Tap
next to the address in the search field.
See a tabʼs history. Touch and hold
or .
View the desktop version of a site. To see the full desktop version of a site instead of
the mobile version, tap , then tap Request Desktop Site.
Block pop-ups. Go to Settings > Safari, then turn Block Pop-Ups on or off.
Add bookmarks and favorites
Bookmark the current page. Tap
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View and organize your bookmarks. Tap
bookmarks, tap Edit.
, then tap
. To create a folder for
3D Touch. To quickly access your bookmarks from the Home screen, press the Safari
icon, then tap Show Bookmarks. See 3D Touch.
Add a webpage to your favorites. Open the page, tap
, then tap Add to Favorites.
Quickly see your favorite and frequently visited sites. Tap the search field to see your
favorites. Scroll down to see frequently visited sites. (To avoid seeing a list of these sites,
go to Settings > Safari, then turn off Frequently Visited Sites.)
Edit your favorites. Tap
order of favorites.
, tap Favorites, then tap Edit to delete, rename, or change the
Choose which favorites appear when you tap the search field. Go to Settings >
Safari > Favorites.
See your Mac bookmarks on iPhone. Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Safari.
Bookmarks on your Mac appear in Favorites on iPhone.
Add an icon for the current page to your Home screen. To quickly access the page
from your Home screen, tap , then tap Add to Home Screen. The icon appears only on
the device where you add it.
Save a reading list for later
Save interesting items in your reading list so you can revisit them later. You can read
pages in your reading list even when youʼre not connected to the Internet.
Add the current page to your reading list. Tap
, then tap Add to Reading List.
Add a linked page without opening it. Touch and hold the link, then tap Add to Reading
List.
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View your reading list. Tap
, then tap
Delete an item from your reading list. In your reading list, swipe the item to the left.
Limit downloads to Wi-Fi connections. To prevent reading list downloads from using
cellular data, go to Settings > Safari, then turn off Use Cellular Data (below Reading List).
Shared links and subscriptions
You can view links shared from social media, such as Twitter, and feeds youʼve
subscribed to.
View shared links and subscriptions. Tap
, then tap
Subscribe to a feed. On a site that provides a subscription feed, tap
Shared Links.
, then tap Add to
Delete a subscription. Tap
, tap , tap Subscriptions below the list of your shared
links, then tap
next to the subscription you want to delete.
Share links. Tap
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Fill in forms
When you sign in to a website, sign up for a service, or make a purchase, you can fill in a
web form using the onscreen keyboard, or have Safari fill it in for you using AutoFill.
Turn on AutoFill. Go to Settings > Safari > AutoFill.
Tired of always having to sign in? When youʼre asked if you want to save the password
for the site, tap Yes. The next time you visit, your user name and password are filled in for
you.
Choose a different identity. If you use multiple identities with a site and an incorrect
identity is filled in, tap Passwords above the keyboard, then select the identity you prefer.
Fill in a form. Tap a field to bring up the keyboard. Tap
or
above the keyboard to
move from field to field.
Fill it in automatically. When you fill in contact information on a website that supports
AutoFill, tap AutoFill Contact above the keyboard. Tap Customize to edit and store your
information for next time. Or, tap Other Contact to fill in someone elseʼs information.
Add a credit card for purchases. Go to Settings > Safari > AutoFill > Saved Credit
Cards > Add Credit Card. To enter the information without typing, tap Use Camera, then
position iPhone so that your card appears in the frame. Also, when you make an online
purchase, you can allow Safari to save the credit card information. See iCloud Keychain.
Use your credit card information. When you fill in credit card information, tap AutoFill
Credit Card above the keyboard. Enter your cardʼs security code, which isnʼt stored. For
greater security of your credit card information, use a passcode for iPhone.
Submit a form. Tap Go, Search, or the link on the webpage.
Use Reader for distraction-free reading
Use Safari Reader to view a page without ads, navigation, or other distracting items.
Focus on content. Tap
at the left end of the address field. If you donʼt see the icon,
Reader isnʼt available for the page youʼre looking at.
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Share just the good stuff. To share just the article text and a link to it, tap
viewing the page in Reader.
Return to the full page. Tap
while
in the address field again.
Privacy and security
Adjust Safari settings to keep your browsing activities to yourself and protect yourself
from malicious websites.
Keep a low profile. Go to Settings > Safari, then turn on Do Not Track. Safari asks
websites you visit not to track your browsing, but beware—a website can choose not to
honor the request.
Control cookies. Go to Settings > Safari > Block Cookies. To remove cookies already on
iPhone, go to Settings > Safari > Clear History and Website Data.
Let Safari create and store secure passwords for you. When creating a new account,
tap the password field, tap Suggest Password, then tap Use Suggested Password.
View your saved passwords. Go to Settings > Safari > Passwords, then enter your
iPhone passcode or use Touch ID.
Erase your browsing history and data from iPhone. Go to Settings > Safari > Clear
History and Website Data.
Visit sites without making history. Tap
, then tap Private. Sites you visit arenʼt added
to History on iPhone and donʼt appear in the list of tabs on your other devices. To hide
the sites and exit Private Browsing Mode, tap , then tap Private again. The sites
reappear the next time you use Private Browsing Mode.
Watch for suspicious websites. Go to Settings > Safari, then turn on Fraudulent
Website Warning.
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Messages
Messages at a glance
Use Messages to send and receive texts, photos, videos, and more through iMessage or
SMS/MMS services. With the iMessage service, you can enhance your messages with
bubble effects, invisible ink, full-screen effects, your own handwriting, Digital Touch,
iMessage apps, stickers, and more.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding distractions while driving, see
Important safety information.
Set up iMessage and SMS/MMS
With the Messages app, you can exchange messages with other SMS and MMS devices
using your cellular connection on iPhone, and with other iOS devices and Mac computers
using iMessage.
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iMessage is an Apple service that sends messages over Wi-Fi or cellular connections to
other iOS devices (with iOS 5 or later) and Mac computers (with OS X v10.8 or later).
These messages donʼt count against your messaging plan. Messages sent via iMessage
can include photos, videos, and other info. You can see when other people are typing,
and let them know when youʼve read their messages. For security, messages sent via
iMessage are encrypted before theyʼre sent.
iMessage texts appear in blue bubbles, and SMS/MMS texts appear in green bubbles. For
more information about SMS/MMS and iMessage, see the Apple Support article Use
Messages with your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch.
Sign in to iMessage. Go to Settings > Messages, then turn on iMessage.
If youʼre signed in to iMessage with the same Apple ID on all your devices, all the
messages that you send and receive on iPhone can also appear on your other Apple
devices. You can send a message from whichever device is closest to you. You can even
start a conversation on one device and continue it on another with Handoff.
Sign in to iMessage on your other Apple devices.
iOS devices: Go to Settings > Messages, then turn on iMessage.
Mac: Open Messages, choose Messages > Preferences, click Accounts, then select
iMessage in the Accounts list. Enter your Apple ID and password, then click Sign In.
With Continuity, all the SMS/MMS messages that you send and receive on iPhone can
also appear on your other iOS devices and your Mac. For more information, see the Apple
Support article Use Continuity to connect your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, and Mac.
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Send and receive messages
Start a conversation. Tap . Enter the recipientʼs phone number or email address, or
tap
and choose a contact. Tap the text field, then enter your message. Tap
to send.
Alternatively, to start a conversation from Mail, Calendar, or Safari, touch and hold a
phone number, then tap Send Message.
3D Touch. To start a conversation on the Home screen, press the Messages icon,
then tap New Message. See 3D Touch.
Tip: To see what time a message was sent or received, drag a bubble to the left.
Note: An alert
message again.
appears if a message canʼt be sent. Tap the alert to try sending the
Send a message to a group. Tap
, then enter multiple recipients.
To manage a group conversation, tap
. You can name the conversation, add someone
to the conversation, or leave the conversation.
Use emoji. When typing a message, tap
or
to switch to the Emoji keyboard. To
automatically replace text with emoji, tap the highlighted words. See Use international
keyboards.
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Resume a conversation. Tap the conversation in the Messages list.
3D Touch. To preview a conversation and quickly respond, press the conversation in
the Messages list, swipe up, then choose a response. See 3D Touch.
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Send a message to Emily saying how about tomorrow”
“Reply thatʼs great news”
“Read my messages”
“Read my last message from Bob”
Respond with a Tapback. To send a quick response that lets people know what youʼre
thinking, double-tap a message, then choose your response.
View and manage conversation details. Tap
. You can:
Tap a contact to view the contact card.
Perform quick actions such as making a phone call or FaceTime call.
Send your current location or share your location for a specified length of time.
Send read receipts.
View images and attachments.
View the Messages list. Tap or swipe from the left edge. On iPhone 6 Plus,
iPhone 6s Plus, or iPhone 7 Plus, you can see the Messages list and the selected
conversation in landscape orientation.
Search conversations. In the Messages list, swipe down to reveal the search field, then
enter the text youʼre looking for. You can also search conversations from the Home
screen. See Search.
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Delete a conversation. In the Messages list, swipe left on the conversation, then tap
Delete.
Note: You canʼt recover a deleted conversation.
Share photos, videos, and audio
With iMessage or MMS, you can send messages with photos, videos, and audio. Your
carrier determines the size limit of attachments; iPhone may compress photo and video
attachments when necessary.
Send a photo or video. Tap
. You can:
Quickly take a photo from within Messages: Frame the shot in the viewfinder, then
tap .
Choose a recent photo or video: Swipe left to browse through recent shots.
Take a photo or video using Camera: Swipe right, then tap Camera.
Choose a photo or video from your Photo Library: Swipe right, then tap Photo Library.
Then, tap
to send or
to cancel.
Mark up a photo. Tap the photo in the message bubble, then tap Markup. Annotate the
photo with the Markup tools.
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Find and share trending photos and videos from the web. See iMessage apps.
Send an audio message. Touch and hold
to record an audio message, then lift your
finger to stop recording. Tap
to listen to your message before you send it. Tap
to
send or
to cancel.
Note: To save space, iPhone automatically deletes audio messages two minutes after
you listen to them, unless you tap Keep. To always keep them, go to Settings >
Messages > Expire (below Audio Messages), then tap Never.
Raise iPhone to listen or reply to an audio message. Raise iPhone to your ear to play
incoming audio messages; raise it again to reply. To turn this feature on or off, go to
Settings > Messages (below Audio Messages).
Forward a message or attachment. Touch and hold a message or attachment, tap
More, select additional items if desired, then tap
Share, save, or print an attachment. Tap the attachment, then tap
Copy an attachment. Touch and hold the attachment, then tap Copy.
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Share items from another app. In the other app, tap Share or
, then tap Message.
Delete a message or attachment. Touch and hold a message or attachment, tap More,
select additional items if desired, then tap .
Digital Touch
With iMessage, you can use Digital Touch to send sketches, taps, kisses, heartbeats, and
more. You can even add a Digital Touch effect to a photo or video.
Sketch. Tap
again. Tap
, draw with one finger. You can change the color, then start drawing
to send.
Express your feelings. Tap
, then use gestures on the canvas to send a Digital Touch
effect. Your feelings are sent automatically when you finish the gesture:
Tap: Tap with one finger to create a burst of color. You can change the color, then tap
again.
Fireball: Touch and hold with one finger.
Kiss: Tap with two fingers.
Heartbeat: Touch and hold with two fingers.
Heartbreak: Touch and hold with two fingers until you see a heartbeat, then drag
down to break the heart.
Note: If you have Apple Watch or another sensor that records heartbeat data, Messages
may use the recorded data when you send a Digital Touch heartbeat.
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Add a Digital Touch effect to a photo or video. Tap
, then tap . Tap
to take a
photo or
to record a video. Add a Digital Touch effect, such as a sketch or kiss, to the
photo or video, then tap
to send.
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Handwritten messages
With iMessage, you can send a handwritten message. The recipient sees the message
animate, just as ink flows on paper.
Create and send a handwritten message. In landscape orientation, tap the text field,
then tap
cancel.
. Write a message with your finger. Tap Done, then tap
to send or
to
Send a saved message. After you create and send a handwritten message, the message
is saved at the bottom of the handwriting screen. Tap a saved message to use it again.
iMessage apps
With iMessage apps, you can decorate a conversation with stickers, schedule dinner and
a movie, send payments, share a song, and more—all without leaving Messages. Expand
your options by downloading more iMessage apps from the App Store.
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Download iMessage apps. Tap
, tap
, then tap Store.
Use an iMessage app. Tap
, then swipe left or right to browse. Tap an app to add it to
the conversation. Add a comment if you want, then tap
to send or
to cancel.
Decorate with stickers. Tap
to open the app drawer. Swipe left or right to navigate
to a stickers app. Touch and hold a sticker, then drag it anywhere in the conversation.
You can place it on top of a message bubble, dress up a photo, or even put it on another
sticker.
Manage iMessage apps. Tap
, tap
, tap Store, then tap Manage. You can:
Automatically add iMessage apps to the app drawer.
Turn iMessage apps on or off.
Remove an iMessage app. Tap
, tap
, touch and hold an app until you see the app
icons jiggle, then tap
at the top-left corner. To finish, press the Home button.
Animate messages
With iMessage, you can animate a single message with a bubble effect or fill the entire
message screen with a full-screen effect. You can even send a personal message with
invisible ink.
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Use a bubble effect. After you type a message, press
(touch and hold
on devices
without 3D Touch). Tap the choices to preview different bubble effects. Tap
to send.
Tip: Want to send a personal message? When you use invisible ink, the message
remains blurred until the recipient swipes to reveal it.
Use a full-screen effect. After you type a message, press
(touch and hold
on
devices without 3D Touch), then tap Screen. Swipe left or right to preview different
screen effects. Tap
to send.
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iMessage automatically uses the following screen effects for specific text strings:
Balloons for “Happy birthday”
Confetti for “Congratulations”
Fireworks for “Happy New Year”
Manage message notifications and privacy
Manage notifications for messages. Go to Settings > Notifications > Messages. See
Notifications.
Set the alert sound for messages. Go to Settings > Sounds > Text Tone. See Sounds
and silence.
Set a distinctive alert tone or vibration for certain people. In the Contacts app, tap a
contact, tap Edit, then tap Text Tone.
Mute notifications for a conversation. View the conversation, tap
, then turn on Do
Not Disturb.
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Block unwanted messages. To block messages, voice calls, and FaceTime calls from
certain people, go to Settings > Messages > Blocked. For more information, see the
Apple Support article Block phone numbers and contacts or filter messages on your
iPhone, iPad or iPod touch.
Filter unknown senders. Go to Settings > Messages, then turn on Filter Unknown
Senders. This turns off iMessage notifications from people who aren't in your contacts
and sorts them into a separate Messages list. When you view a message from an
unknown sender, tap Report Junk (below the message) to delete it and send it to Apple.
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Music
Music at a glance
Use the Music app to enjoy music stored on iPhone as well as music streamed over the
Internet, including Beats 1 radio, which broadcasts all day, every day from studios in Los
Angeles, New York, and London. With an optional Apple Music membership, listen to
millions of tracks, recommended by music experts.
Note: You need a Wi-Fi or cellular connection to stream music from Apple Music and
Radio. In some cases an Apple ID is also required. Services and features are not available
in all areas, and features may vary by area. Additional charges may apply when using a
cellular connection.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss, see Important safety
information.
Access music
Play music on iPhone in the following ways:
Become an Apple Music member: With a membership and a Wi-Fi or cellular
connection, stream as much music as you like from the Apple Music catalog and
download songs, albums, and playlists. See Apple Music.
Listen to Beats 1: Beats 1 radio is free to listen to live—no subscription required.
Purchase music from the iTunes Store: Go to iTunes Store. See iTunes Store at a
glance.
iCloud Music Library: Listen to your music on any of your devices. iCloud Music
Library contains your imported music, purchased music, and music youʼve added and
downloaded from Apple Music. iCloud Music Library is available to Apple Music
members and iTunes Match subscribers. Find this music in Library. See Library.
Family Sharing: Purchase an Apple Music Family Membership, and everyone in your
Family Sharing group can enjoy Apple Music. See Family Sharing.
Sync music with iTunes on your computer: See Sync with iTunes.
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Apple Music
Apple Music is a subscription music service. As an Apple Music member, you can play
and download all the music you want, and get recommendations for playlists and albums
based on the music you love. You can also explore dozens of ad-free stations and
thousands of playlists for any genre or activity, created by Apple music editors and
expert curators with a passion for music.
Nonmembers can use the Apple Music app to listen to their own music stored on iPhone,
play and download previous iTunes purchases, and listen to live Beats 1 radio shows for
free.
Join Apple Music. You can join Apple Music when you first open Music, or later in
Settings > Music > Join Apple Music.
Individual, family, or student memberships are available.
Individual membership: Get access to the full Apple Music library, expert
recommendations, and on-demand radio stations.
Family membership: Up to six people can enjoy unlimited access to Apple Music on
their devices.
Student membership: Have complete access to Apple Music, with personalized
recommendations, the best new music, and more at a price designed for students.
If youʼre a student at a qualifying school, you can join Apple Music for a discounted
membership price for up to 48 months (4 years). The time neednʼt be continuous.
Student memberships arenʼt available in all locations.
Note: If you end your Apple Music membership, you can no longer stream Apple Music
tracks or play Apple Music tracks youʼve downloaded.
Show or hide Apple Music. Go to Settings > Music, then turn Show Apple Music on or
off.
Use cellular data. Go to Settings > Music > Cellular Data, where you can choose to
stream and download music over a cellular connection. Turn on High Quality Streaming to
always stream music at the highest quality.
Note: High Quality Streaming uses more cellular data, and songs may take longer to start
playing.
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Get personalized recommendations
Apple Music can suggest songs you might enjoy, with a little guidance about your
favorite kinds of music.
Select your favorite genres and artists. When you first tap For You, youʼre asked to tell
Music about your preferences. Tap the genres you like. (Double-tap those you love, and
touch and hold the genres you donʼt care for.) Tap Next, then do the same with the artist
names that appear. Apple Music uses these preferences when recommending music to
you.
Update genre and artist preferences. Tap For You, tap
You.
, then tap Choose Artists For
Library
The Library tab includes any added or downloaded music from Apple Music, music and
music videos synced to iPhone, iTunes purchases, and the music you make available
through iTunes Match.
Browse and play your music. Tap a category, such as Playlists or Albums, touch and
hold the album art, then tap
screen.
to play. Tap the MiniPlayer to show the Now Playing
3D Touch. Press the album art, then tap
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Sort albums and songs. Go to Settings > Music to sort albums or songs by artist or title.
View more categories. In the Library tab, tap Edit, then select additional categories.
View only music stored on iPhone. In the Library tab, tap Downloaded Music.
Play music shared on a nearby computer. If a computer on your network shares music
through iTunes Home Sharing, tap the Library tab, tap Home Sharing, then choose a
shared library.
Remove Apple Music tracks from iCloud Music Library. Go to Settings > Music, then
turn off iCloud Music Library to remove Apple Music tracks from iPhone (it remains in
iCloud). Music you purchased or synced, and music identified by iTunes Match that you
downloaded, remains.
Add Apple Music
Add music from Apple Music to your library. Do one of the following:
Touch and hold a song, album, playlist, or video, then tap Add to Library.
3D Touch. Press the item, then choose Add to Library. See 3D Touch.
When viewing the contents of an album or playlist, tap Add to add it, or tap
individual tracks.
to add
3D Touch. Press the MiniPlayer, then choose Add to Library.
On the Now Playing screen, tap
Music you add to iPhone is also added to other devices where youʼre signed in to iCloud
using the same Apple ID.
Note: You must turn on iCloud Music Library (go to Settings > Music) to add Apple Music
to your library. Apple Music that you add to your library plays only when you have a Wi-Fi
or cellular connection. To play music when youʼre not connected to the Internet, you
must download it to iPhone. See Download music.
Add music to a playlist. Touch and hold an album, playlist, track, or music video. Tap
Add to a Playlist, then choose a playlist.
3D Touch. Press the album, playlist, track, or music video. Tap Add to a Playlist, then
choose a playlist. See 3D Touch.
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The first time you tap Add to Playlist, you can choose to automatically add songs to your
library when you add them to a playlist. If you do this, the songs are also added
automatically to your library on devices where youʼre signed in with the same Apple ID.
Go to Settings > Music > Add Playlist Songs to turn this setting on or off.
Delete music from Library. Touch and hold the song, album, playlist, or music video,
then tap Delete from Library.
3D Touch. Press the album or song, then tap Delete from Library. See 3D Touch.
Download music
Download music from Apple Music. After adding a track, album, or playlist, tap
Add Apple Music.
. See
Note: You must turn on Settings > Music > iCloud Music Library to add and download
Apple Music to your library.
Always download Apple Music. Go to Settings > Music, then turn on Automatic
Downloads.
Download iTunes Match music. If you have an iTunes Match subscription, your
iTunes Match library is available in your library; you donʼt need to add it. To download it,
tap Library, choose a category, select an album, playlist, or song, then tap .
See download progress. On the Library screen, tap Downloaded Music > Downloading.
Limit music storage. If iPhone is low on storage space, you can automatically remove
downloaded music that you havenʼt played in a while. Go to
Settings > Music > Optimize Storage, then choose a minimum amount of music storage.
Remove music stored on iPhone. Touch and hold the song, album, playlist, or music
video. Tap Remove, then tap Remove Downloads. The item is removed from iPhone, but
not from iCloud Music Library.
3D Touch. Press the song or album, then tap Remove. See 3D Touch.
To remove all songs or certain artists from iPhone, go to Settings > Music > Downloaded
Music, tap Edit, then tap
delete.
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Search for music
Search Apple Music. Tap Search, then tap a recent or trending search. To search for
specific music, tap the search field, tap Apple Music, then enter a song, album, playlist,
artist, compilation, or genre. Tap a result to play it.
Search your library. Tap Search, tap the search field, tap Your Library, then enter a
song, album, playlist, or artist. Tap a result to play it.
Play music
Control playback. Tap a song to play it and show the MiniPlayer. Tap the MiniPlayer to
show the Now Playing screen, where you can do the following:
Tap
to skip to the next song.
Tap
to return to the songʼs beginning.
Double-tap
to play the previous song in an album or playlist.
Skip to any point in a song. Drag the playhead.
Share music. Tap
, then tap Share Song.
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Shuffle. Swipe up, then tap
shuffle.
to play your songs in random order. Tap again to turn off
When viewing the contents of a playlist or album, tap Shuffle All.
Repeat. Swipe up, then tap
to repeat an album or playlist. Double-tap
to repeat
a single song.
Add the song to your library. Tap
See lyrics. Swipe up to see Lyrics, then tap Show to see them. Tap Hide to hide them.
More. Tap
for additional options.
See whatʼs up next. Swipe up. Tap a song to play it and the songs that follow. Drag
to reorder the list.
Get audio controls from the Lock screen or when using another app. Swipe up from
the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center, then swipe left. See Control
Center.
Stream music to a Bluetooth or AirPlay-enabled device. Tap
choose a device. See Bluetooth devices and AirPlay Mirroring.
in Now Playing, then
Quickly navigate to the album. Tap the track, artist, or album name in Now Playing.
Hide Now Playing. Tap
at the top of Now Playing.
3D Touch. On the Home screen, press the Music icon, then choose a quick action.
See 3D Touch.
For You
Discover expertly selected playlists and albums based on your tastes.
Play music selected for your tastes. Tap For You, touch and hold an album or playlist,
then tap
to play it. Tap an album or a playlistʼs album art to view its contents.
3D Touch. Press an album or playlist, then tap
to play it. See 3D Touch.
Tell Apple Music what you love. Touch and hold an album or playlist, then tap Love or
Dislike. On the Now Playing screen, or when viewing the contents of an album or playlist,
tap
, then tap Love or Dislike. Telling Music what you do and donʼt like improves future
recommendations.
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Reorder a playlist. Play the playlist, tap the MiniPlayer to show the Now Playing screen,
swipe up to show Up Next, then drag
to rearrange the song order.
Quickly identify an albumʼs most-played tracks. Some albums have a
next to the
most popular tracks.
Do more with your music. Touch and hold an album or playlist to play it, add it to your
library, love or dislike it, and more. Touch and hold an album to create a station based on
its contents.
3D Touch. Press an album or playlist to see options. See 3D Touch.
Playlists
Create playlists to organize your music. Tap Library, tap Playlists, then tap New
Playlist. Enter a title and description, tap Add Music, then select music to add to the
playlist.
You can also tap
in a track list or, on the Now Playing screen, tap Add to a Playlist,
then tap New Playlist.
Customize your playlistʼs artwork. Tap Edit, tap
image from your photo library.
, then take a photo or choose an
Share a playlist. Touch and hold a playlist, then tap Share Playlist.
3D Touch. Press a playlist, then tap Share Playlist. See 3D Touch.
Create a public playlist. Select a playlist, tap Edit, then turn on Public Playlist.
Edit a playlist you created on iPhone. Select the playlist, then tap Edit.
Add more songs: Tap a playlist, tap Edit, tap Add Music, then choose music from your
library.
Delete a song: Tap a playlist, tap Edit, tap
playlist doesnʼt delete it from iPhone.
Change the song order: Drag
, then tap Delete. Deleting a song from a
New and changed playlists are added to iCloud Music Library and appear on all your
devices if youʼre an Apple Music member or iTunes Match subscriber. If youʼre not a
member or subscriber, theyʼre copied to your music library the next time you sync iPhone
with your computer.
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Delete a playlist you created on iPhone. Touch and hold the playlist, then tap Delete
from Library.
3D Touch. Press a playlist, then tap Delete from Library. See 3D Touch.
Browse
Get recommendations for todayʼs best music from music experts.
Explore new music. Tap the Browse tab, then tap New Music.
Browse expert recommendations. Tap Curated Playlists, then choose a playlist, activity
or mood, curator, or genre.
See whatʼs hot. Tap Top Charts, then choose a song, album, or music video.
Browse your favorite genres. Tap Genres, choose a genre, then tap a featured album,
song, artist, playlist, or music video to enjoy music handpicked by music experts.
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Radio
Radio offers the always-on Beats 1, featuring world-class radio programming, the latest
music, and exclusive interviews with popular artists. You can listen to featured stations
created by music experts in virtually every genre. And you can create custom stations
from songs or artists of your choosing.
Listen to live radio. Tap the currently playing Beats 1 program.
Note: Because Beats 1 is live radio, you canʼt pause, rewind, or skip tracks.
Listen to past shows and find out when your favorite shows are on. Tap Explore
Beats 1, then tap a show or DJ.
Listen to your favorite music genre. Tap View All Stations, then tap a genre or featured
station. If you already listened to a station, tap a recently played station on the Radio
screen.
Create a station. Touch and hold an artist or song, then tap Create Station.
3D Touch. Press an artist or song, then tap Create Station. See 3D Touch.
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iTunes Match
With an iTunes Match subscription, all your music can be stored in iCloud—even songs
youʼve imported from CDs. You can access your music from all your devices and listen to
your entire library wherever you are. To learn more about iTunes Match, see the Apple
Support article Subscribe to iTunes Match.
Subscribe to iTunes Match. Go to Settings > Music > Subscribe to iTunes Match.
Turn on iTunes Match. Go to Settings > iTunes & App Store. Sign in if you havenʼt
already. Go to Settings > Music, then turn on iCloud Music Library.
Siri and Voice Control
You can use Siri or Voice Control to control music playback. See Make requests and
Voice Control.
Siri can also help you find music in the iTunes Store. See “Find it with Siri” in Browse or
search.
Use Siri. Press and hold the Home button. In addition to the commands available through
Voice Control, you can use Siri to do the following:
Play an album, artist, song, playlist, or radio station: Say “play” followed by the name
of the artist, album, song, playlist, or station that you want to play. If Siri doesnʼt find
what you asked for, be more specific. For example, say “play the radio station ‘Pure
Popʼ” rather than saying “play ‘Pure Pop.ʼ”
Play music in random order: Say “play (artist or album) shuffled.”
Play similar music: While music is playing, say “play more songs like this one”
or “create a radio station based on this song.”
Browse Apple Music: You can play any Apple Music track by title (“play ‘Smooth
Sailinʼ by Leon Bridges”), by artist (“play M. Ward”), and by chart (“play the top song
from March 1991”).
Choose music by mood: Say something like “play something happy” or “play some
upbeat music.”
Make personalized requests: Say something like “be my DJ,” “play something that I
would like,” “play recommended music,” “play a Mutemath album that Iʼd love,” or
“play my daily playlist.”
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Ask for more information: Ask something like “when was this album released,” “what
is Santigoldʼs most popular album” or “who sings ‘Used Toʼ.”
Add music from Apple Music to your collection (Apple Music membership required):
Say, for example, “add ‘This is Actingʼ by Sia to my Library” or, while playing
something, say “add this to my collection.”
Correct Siri: If Siri doesnʼt play what you expect to hear, say something like “no, the
album” or “no, the version by David Bowie.”
Use Voice Control. Press and hold the Home button. Voice Control only works when Siri
is disabled.
Play or pause music: Say “play music.” To pause, say “pause,” “pause music,” or
“stop.” You can also say “next song” or “previous song.”
Play an album, artist, or playlist: Say “play album,” “play artist,” or “play playlist”
followed by the name of the artist, album, or playlist you wish to play.
Find out more about the current song: Say “whatʼs playing,” “who sings this song,” or
“who is this song by.”
Sound Check, EQ, and volume limit settings
Turn Sound Check on or off. Go to Settings > Music > Sound Check. Sound Check
normalizes the volume level of your audio.
Choose an equalization (EQ) setting. Go to Settings > Music > EQ. EQ settings
generally apply only to music played from the Music app, but they affect all sound
output.
Set a volume limit. Go to Settings > Music > Volume Limit.
Note: To prevent changes to the volume limit, go to Settings > General > Restrictions >
Volume Limit, then tap Donʼt Allow Changes.
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Mail
Write messages
WARNING: For important information about avoiding distractions that could lead to
dangerous situations, see Important safety information.
Create a message. Tap
. Touch and hold to view draft messages youʼve saved.
3D Touch. To create a new message from the Home screen, press Mail, then choose
the New Message quick action. See 3D Touch.
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“New email to Jonah Schmidt”
“Email Simon and say I got the forms, thanks”
Add attachments. Double-tap in the message body, tap Add Attachment, then select
files from iCloud Drive.
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Insert a photo or video. Double-tap in the message body, then tap Insert Photo or
Video.
Quote some text when you reply. Tap the insertion point, then select the text you want
to include. Tap
, then tap Reply. To turn off the indentation of the quoted text, go to
Settings > Mail > Increase Quote Level.
Send a message from a different account. Tap the From field to choose an account.
Change a recipient from Cc to Bcc. After you enter recipients, you can drag them from
one field to another or change their order.
Mark addresses outside certain domains. When youʼre addressing a message to a
recipient thatʼs not in your organizationʼs domain, Mail can color the recipientʼs name red
to alert you. Go to Settings > Mail > Mark Addresses, then define the domains that you
donʼt want marked. You can enter multiple domains separated by commas, such as
“apple.com, example.org.”
Add additional mail accounts. Go to Settings > Mail > Accounts, then tap Add Account.
Change your mail signature. Go to Settings > Mail > Signature. If you have more than
one mail account, you can set a different signature for each of them.
Automatically send a copy to yourself. Turn on Settings > Mail > Always Bcc Myself.
Preview your messages
3D Touch. Press a message to peek at it, then swipe up, left, or right to use quick
actions. Press a little deeper to pop the message open. See 3D Touch.
See a longer preview. Go to Settings > Mail > Preview. You can show up to five lines.
Is this message for me? Go to Settings > Mail, then turn on Show To/Cc Label. If the
label says Cc instead of To, you were just copied. You can also use the To/Cc mailbox,
which gathers all mail addressed to you. To show or hide it, tap Mailboxes, then tap Edit.
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Finish a message later
Look at another message while youʼre writing one. Swipe down on the title bar of a
message youʼre writing. When youʼre ready to return to your message, tap its title at the
bottom of the screen. If you have more than one message waiting to be finished, tap the
bottom of the screen to see them all.
Save a draft for later. If youʼre writing a message and want to finish it later, tap Cancel,
then tap Save Draft. To get it back, touch and hold .
With OS X v10.10 or later, you can also hand off unfinished messages with your Mac. See
Continuity.
See important messages
Get notified of replies to a message or thread. While reading a message, tap
, then
tap Notify Me. While youʼre writing a message, tap
in the Subject field. To change how
notifications appear, go to Settings > Notifications > Mail > Thread Notifications.
Gather important messages. Add important people to your VIP list, so all their
messages appear in the VIP mailbox. Tap the senderʼs name in a message, then tap Add
to VIP. To change how notifications appear, go to Settings > Notifications > Mail > VIP.
Ask Siri. Say something like: “Any new mail from Natalia today?”
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Flag a message so you can find it later. Tap while reading the message. To change
the appearance of the flagged message indicator, go to Settings > Mail > Flag Style. To
see the Flagged mailbox, tap Edit while viewing the Mailboxes list, then tap Flagged.
Search for a message. Scroll to or tap the top of the message list to reveal the search
field. Searching looks at the address fields, the subject, and the message body. To
search multiple accounts at once, search from a smart mailbox, such as All Sent.
Search by timeframe. Scroll to or tap the top of the messages list to reveal the search
field, then type something like “February meeting” to find all messages from February
with the word “meeting.”
Search by message state. To find all flagged, unread messages from people in your VIP
list, type “flag unread vip.” You can also search for other message attributes, such as
“attachment.”
Junk, be gone! Tap while youʼre reading a message, then tap Move to Junk to file it in
the Junk folder. If you accidentally move a message, shake iPhone immediately to undo.
Make a mailbox a favorite. Favorite mailboxes appear at the top of the Mailboxes list so
you can access them easily. To designate a mailbox as a favorite, tap Edit while viewing
the Mailboxes list. Tap Add Mailbox, then select the mailboxes to add.
Show draft messages from all of your accounts. While viewing the Mailboxes list, tap
Edit, tap Add Mailbox, then turn on the All Drafts mailbox.
Delete messages
View then delete a message. Tap a message to open it. To delete it, tap . To turn the
confirmation of deletion on or off, go to Settings > Mail > Ask Before Deleting.
Delete a message with a swipe. While viewing a list of messages, swipe a message to
the left to reveal a menu of actions, then tap Trash. Or, to delete a message in a single
gesture, swipe it all the way to the left.
Delete multiple messages at once. While viewing a list of messages, tap Edit, select
some messages, then tap Trash. If you change your mind, shake iPhone immediately to
undo.
Recover a deleted message. Go to the accountʼs Trash mailbox, open the message,
then tap
and move the message. Or, if you just deleted it, shake iPhone to undo. To
see deleted messages across all your accounts, add the Trash mailbox. To add it, tap Edit
in the mailboxes list, then select it in the list.
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Archive instead of delete. Instead of deleting messages, you can archive them so
theyʼre still around, in the Archive mailbox, if you need them. To turn this option on,
select Archive Mailbox in Settings > Mail > Accounts > [account name] > Advanced.
Then, to delete a message instead of archiving it, touch and hold , then tap Delete.
Stash your trash. You can set how long deleted messages stay in the Trash mailbox. Go
to Settings > Mail > Accounts > [account name] > Advanced > Remove. Some email
services might override your selection; for example, iCloud doesnʼt keep deleted
messages longer than 30 days, even if you select Never.
Attachments
Preview an attachment. Touch and hold an attachment, then tap Quick Look.
3D Touch. Press an attachment to preview it, press deeper to open it using Quick
Look. See 3D Touch.
Save a photo or video to Photos. Touch and hold the photo or video, then tap Quick
Look. Tap , then tap Save Image.
Mark up attachments. You can use Markup to annotate an image or PDF attachment.
Touch and hold the attachment, then tap Markup (if itʼs an attachment youʼre sending) or
“Markup and Reply” (if itʼs an attachment youʼve received).
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Open an attachment with another app. Touch and hold the attachment until a menu
appears, then tap the app you want to use to open the attachment. Some attachments
automatically show a banner with buttons you can use to open other apps.
See messages with attachments. Tap
to turn on filtering, then tap “Filtered by” and
turn on “Only Mail with Attachments.” You can also use the Attachments mailbox, which
shows messages with attachments from all accounts. To add it, tap Edit while viewing the
Mailboxes list.
Add an attachment. See Write messages.
Send large attachments. Mail Drop lets you send files that exceed the maximum size
allowed by your email account. Tap Send when youʼre ready to send a message with
large attachments, then follow the onscreen instructions to use Mail Drop.
Work with multiple messages
Move or mark multiple messages. While viewing a list of messages, tap Edit. Select
some messages, then choose an action. If you change your mind, shake iPhone
immediately to undo.
Manage a message with a swipe. While viewing a list of messages, swipe a message to
the left to reveal a menu of actions. Swipe all the way to the left to select the first action.
You can also swipe a message to the right to reveal another action. Choose the actions
you want to appear in the menus at Settings > Mail > Swipe Options.
Organize your mail with mailboxes. Tap Edit in the mailboxes list to create a new one,
or rename or delete one. (Some built-in mailboxes canʼt be changed.) There are several
smart mailboxes, such as Unread, that show messages from all your accounts. Tap the
ones you want to use.
See the whole conversation. Go to Settings > Mail, then turn on Organize by Thread.
Swipe left or right on a message in a thread to reveal actions. To change how threads are
displayed, go to Settings > Mail. To change the swipe settings, go to Settings > Mail >
Swipe Options.
Filter messages. Tap
to hide messages that donʼt match the current filter. Tap again
to turn the filter off. To set up the filter, tap
to turn on filtering, then tap “Filtered by.”
You can filter by read or flagged status, by messages addressed to you, messages from
VIPs, and other criteria.
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See and save addresses
See who received a message. While viewing the message, tap More in the To field.
Add someone to Contacts or make them a VIP. Tap the personʼs name or email
address, then tap Add to VIP. You can also add the address to a new or existing contact.
Print messages
Print a message. Tap
, then tap Print.
Print an attachment or picture. Tap to view it, tap
, then choose Print.
See AirPrint.
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Calendar
Calendar at a glance
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Set up a meeting with Barry at 9.”
“Do I have a meeting at 10?”
“Where is my 3y30 meeting?”
Add an event. In day view, touch and hold a time until a new event appears, then fill in
the event details. If you add the address of the eventʼs location, youʼre reminded in time
to leave from your current location, based on traffic conditions.
3D Touch. Press Calendar, then choose the New Event quick action. See 3D Touch.
Search for events. Tap
, then enter text in the search field. The titles, invitees,
locations, and notes for the calendars youʼre viewing are searched.
Ask Siri. Say something like: “Whatʼs on my calendar for Friday?”
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View a weekly calendar. Rotate iPhone sideways.
Change your view. Tap a year, month, or day to zoom in or out on your calendar. In week
or day view, pinch to zoom in or out.
3D Touch. In the monthly calendar, press a date to peek at that dayʼs schedule. Then
press deeper to pop open the schedule.
View a list of events. In month view, tap
to see a dayʼs events.
Change the color of a calendar. Tap Calendars, tap
next to the calendar, then
choose a color from the list. For some calendar accounts, such as Google, the color is
set by the server.
Adjust an event. Touch and hold the event, then drag it to a new time, or adjust the grab
points.
Ask Siri. Say something like: “Reschedule my appointment with Barry to next Monday
at 9 a.m.”
Set a default calendar. Go to Settings > Calendar > Default Calendar. When you add an
event using Siri or using other apps, itʼs added to your default calendar.
Fine-tune Calendar. Go to Settings > Calendar where you can set which day of the week
calendar starts with, display week numbers, use Hebrew dates, override the automatic
time zone, and more.
Invitations
iCloud, Microsoft Exchange, and some CalDAV servers you can send and receive meeting
invitations. (Not all calendar servers support every feature.)
Invite others to an event. You can invite people to an event, even if youʼre not the one
who scheduled it, with Exchange and some other servers. Tap an event, tap Edit, then
tap Invitees. Type names, or tap
to pick people from Contacts. If you donʼt want to be
notified when someone declines a meeting, go to Settings > Calendar, then turn off Show
Invitee Declines.
RSVP. Tap an event youʼve been invited to, or tap Inbox and tap an invitation. If you add
comments (which may not be available for all calendars), your comments can be seen by
the organizer but not by other attendees. To see events you declined, tap Calendars,
then turn on Show Declined Events.
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Schedule an event without blocking your schedule. Tap the event, tap Availability,
then tap “free.” Or if itʼs an event you created, tap Show As, then tap “free.” The event
stays on your calendar, but the timeframe doesnʼt appear as busy to others who send
you invitations.
Quickly send an email to attendees. Tap the event, tap Invitees, then tap
Suggest a different meeting time. You can suggest a different time for a meeting
invitation youʼve received. Tap the meeting, then tap Propose New Time. Depending on
the capabilities of your calendar server, the organizer will receive either a counterproposal or an email with your suggestion.
Use multiple calendars
See multiple calendars at once. Tap Calendars, then select the calendars you want to
view.
Turn on iCloud, Google, Exchange, or Yahoo! calendars. Go to Settings > Calendar,
tap Accounts, then turn a calendar on or off.
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Subscribe to a calendar. Go to Settings > Calendar > Accounts > Add Account > Other,
then tap Add Subscribed Calendar. Enter the server and filename of the .ics file to
subscribe to. You can also subscribe to an iCalendar (.ics) calendar published on the
web, by tapping a link to the calendar.
Add a CalDAV account. Go to Settings > Calendar > Accounts > Add Account > Other,
then tap Add CalDAV account.
Add a macOS Server account. Go to Settings > Calendar > Accounts > Add Account >
Other, then tap Add macOS Server Account.
View the Birthdays calendar. Tap Calendars, then tap Birthdays to include birthdays
from Contacts with your events. If you set up a Facebook account in Settings, you can
also include your Facebook friendsʼ birthdays.
View the Holidays calendar. Tap Calendars, then tap Holidays to include national
holidays with your events.
View events sent to you in Mail or other apps. Tap Calendars, then tap Events Found in
Apps.
Change how Calendar notifies you. Go to Settings > Notifications > Calendar. You can
change notification styles for invitations, events found in apps, upcoming events, and
more.
Move an event to another calendar. Tap the event, tap Edit, tap Calendars, then select
a calendar to move it to.
Share iCloud calendars
With Family Sharing, a calendar shared with all the members of your family is created
automatically. See Family Sharing. You can also share an iCloud calendar with other
iCloud users so they can view, add, and change events, and share a read-only version
that anyone can view.
Create an iCloud calendar. Tap Calendars, tap Edit, then tap Add Calendar in the iCloud
section.
Share an iCloud calendar. Tap Calendars, tap Edit, then tap the iCloud calendar you
want to share. Tap Add Person, then enter a name, or tap
to browse your Contacts.
Those you invite receive an email invitation to join the calendar.
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Change a personʼs access to a shared calendar. Tap Calendars, tap Edit, tap the
shared calendar, then tap the person. You can turn off their ability to edit the calendar,
resend the invitation to join the calendar, or stop sharing the calendar with that person.
Turn off notifications for shared calendars. When someone modifies a shared
calendar, youʼre notified of the change. To turn off notifications for shared calendars, go
to Settings > Notifications > Calendar > Shared Calendar Changes.
Share a read-only calendar with anyone. Tap Calendars, tap Edit, then tap the iCloud
calendar you want to share. Turn on Public Calendar, then tap Share Link to copy or send
the URL for your calendar. Anyone can use the URL to subscribe to the calendar using a
compatible app, such as Calendar for macOS.
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Photos
Photos at a glance
With the Photos app you can view, organize, share, and edit photos and videos:
Taken with Camera on iPhone
Stored in iCloud (see iCloud Photo Library)
Shared by others (see iCloud Photo Sharing)
Synced from your computer (see Sync with iTunes)
Saved from an email, text message, webpage, or screenshot
Imported from your camera
You can also have Photos create quick movies from the photos and videos in your library
(see Memories).
Memories isnʼt available on iPhone 5.
The Photos app includes Photos, Memories, Shared, and Albums. Use the tabs at the
bottom of Photos to view and work with your photos:
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Tap Photos to see all your still photos, Live Photos, and videos, organized by Years,
Collections, and Moments. To quickly browse the photos in a collection or year, touch
and hold a thumbnail, then drag.
Tap Memories to view photos and videos based on related dates, places, people, and
more. See Memories.
Tap Shared to see photos and videos you shared with others or that others shared
with you. See iCloud Photo Sharing.
Tap Albums to create and view your albums. See Organize photos and videos.
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View photos and videos
Browse your photos and videos. Tap Photos, then tap a photo. While viewing a photo,
swipe the thumbnails to browse photos, then tap a thumbnail to view a photo. Drag down
the photo to continue browsing Moments or Albums.
Note: By default, Photos displays a representative subset of your photos when you view
by year or by collection in the Photos tab. To see all your photos and videos, go to
Settings > Photos & Camera, then turn off Summarize Photos.
3D Touch. Press the thumbnail in a collection or album to peek at a photo or video.
Swipe up to see a list of quick actions, or press a little deeper to pop open the photo or
video to full screen. See 3D Touch.
Play a Live Photo. If you take a Live Photo on iPhone 6s and later, or if you receive a
Live Photo via iMessage, iCloud Photo Sharing, or AirDrop, you can bring it to life on your
iPhone (iOS 9 or later required). In full screen, press the Live Photo (touch and hold on
devices without 3D Touch). See 3D Touch.
If someone shares a Live Photo with you via email, you receive it as a 12 MP still image.
(A Live Photo, which can be taken on some models of iPhone and iPad, captures the
moments just before and after a picture is taken.)
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Note: On devices that support 3D Touch, you can also use a Live Photo as the wallpaper
on the Lock screen. See Change the wallpaper.
Make a still photo from a Live Photo. View the Live Photo, tap
, tap
, then tap
Duplicate as Still Photo.
View photo and video details. Tap a photo or video, then tap Details, or swipe up, to
see:
Related memories. See Memories.
People identified by Photos. See People.
If available, the location where the photo or video was taken and a link to photos and
videos taken nearby. See Places.
Search photos. From Photos, Memories, or Albums, tap
to search by date (month
and year), place (city and state), category (beach or sunset, for example), or person
(Addie or Jules, for example).
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Show me photos from July”
“Show me photos of California”
“Show me photos of the beach”
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“Show me photos of Alex”
Zoom in or out. Double-tap or pinch a photo open or closed. Drag to see other parts of
the photo.
Play a video. Tap
. To toggle between full screen and fit-to-screen, double-tap the
screen.
Play a slideshow. While viewing a photo or video, tap , then tap Slideshow. To stop the
slideshow, tap the screen, then tap Options to specify a slideshow theme, music, and
more.
To stream a slideshow or video to a TV, see AirPlay Mirroring.
Organize photos and videos
The Albums tab includes albums you create yourself and albums that are created for you,
depending on how you use Photos. For example, photos you take with the FaceTime
camera are automatically added to the Selfies album. Other albums that Photos creates
include People, Places, Videos, Panoramas, Slo-mo, Bursts, and Screenshots.
If you use iCloud Photo Library, all your photos in iCloud are in the All Photos album (see
iCloud Photo Library). Otherwise, you see the Camera Roll album, which includes photos
and videos you took with iPhone and from other sources.
If you use iCloud Photo Library, albums are stored in iCloud. Theyʼre up to date and
accessible on devices where youʼre signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID—iOS
devices with 8.1 or later, Mac computers with OS X v10.10.3 or later, and on iCloud.com.
Create a new album. Tap Albums, tap
, enter a name, then tap Save. Select photos
and videos, then tap Done.
Add items to an existing album. While viewing photo thumbnails, tap Select, select
items, tap Add To, then select the album.
Manage albums. While viewing your album list, tap Edit.
Rename an album: Tap the album name, then enter a new name.
Rearrange albums: Touch to enlarge the albumʼs thumbnail, then drag it to another
location.
Delete an album: Tap
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Note: You canʼt delete albums that Photos creates for you, such as People, Places,
and Selfies.
Mark your favorites. While viewing a photo or video, tap
to add it to the Favorites
album. A photo or video can be part of another album as well as Favorites.
Hide photos or videos you want to keep but not show. While viewing thumbnails, tap
Select, then select the photos or videos you want to hide. Tap , then tap Hide. The
photos or videos are moved to the Hidden album.
Photos and videos are hidden from Moments, Collections, Years, and Memories, but are
still visible in Albums.
Delete a photo or video from Photos. Tap Photos, tap the photo or video, tap , then
tap Delete Photo or Delete Video. Deleted photos and videos are kept in the Recently
Deleted album on iPhone, with a badge showing the remaining days until the item is
permanently removed from iPhone. To delete the photo or video permanently before the
days expire, tap the item, tap Delete, then tap Delete Photo or Delete Video. If you use
iCloud Photo Library, deleted photos and videos are permanently removed from all your
devices using iCloud Photo Library with the same Apple ID.
Recover a deleted photo or video. In the Recently Deleted album, tap the photo or
video, tap Recover, then tap Recover Photo or Recover Video to move the item to the
Camera Roll or, if you use iCloud Photo Library, to the All Photos album.
To recover multiple photos and videos, tap the Recently Deleted album, tap Select, tap
the photos and videos you want to recover, then tap Recover.
Remove a photo or video from an album. Tap the photo or video, then tap . You can
choose to remove it from the album or delete it from your iCloud Photo Library on all your
devices.
Memories
Photos scans your library to create collections of photos and videos called memories.
Memories also include Memory movies, which are set to music. You can keep them and
share them with others. (Memories created from albums that donʼt have enough photos
and videos wonʼt generate a Memory movie.) You can also make a Memory movie from
albums you create. Memories can focus on:
Locations, such as a favorite vacation spot or your neighborhood
Special events, such as birthdays and holidays
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Scenes, such as the beach or forest
Pictures of family and friends
Play a Memory movie. Tap Memories, tap a memory, then tap
Memory movie, then tap .
. To pause, tap the
Scrub through a Memory movie. Tap a Memory movie while itʼs playing to show the
controls, then swipe left or right through the scrubber.
3D Touch. To open recent memories from the Home screen, press Photos, then tap a
memory. See 3D Touch.
View an albumʼs memory. Tap an album you created, then tap . To add it to Memories,
swipe up, then tap Add to Memories.
Save a memory to the Favorite Memories album. Touch and hold a memory, then tap
Add to Favorite Memories.
3D Touch. Press a memory, swipe up, then tap Add to Favorite Memories.
Create memories from holiday events. Go to Settings > Photos & Camera, then turn on
Show Holiday Events.
Change the mood. Tap a Memory movie while itʼs playing, then tap a mood or swipe the
moods left or right to choose a new one. (Each mood includes a distinct title, soundtrack,
and editing style.)
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Change the duration. Tap a Memory movie while itʼs playing, then tap a duration, or
swipe to choose short, medium, or long. All durations may not be available for every
movie.
Customize a Memory movie. Tap a Memory movie while itʼs playing, then tap
the following:
to do
Edit the title: Tap Title, tap the title and subtitle to edit them, then choose a title style.
Choose different music: Tap Music, then choose music from a soundtrack or from
your music library (only music you own thatʼs stored on iPhone is available).
Choose a custom duration: Tap Duration.
Choose photos and videos: Tap Photos & Videos, tap , then tap the photos and
videos you want in the movie. Deselect photos and videos currently in the Memory
movie to remove them.
Delete a photo or video from the Memory movie: Tap Photos & Videos, tap a photo or
video in the timeline, then tap
to remove it from the movie.
Trim a video in the Memory movie: Tap Photos & Videos, tap a video in the timeline,
then trim the video. See Edit photos and trim videos.
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People
Photos scans your photo library for peopleʼs faces and adds the most frequently found
faces to the People album. You can assign names to the people Photos finds, add people
who appear less frequently, mark people as favorites, and view memories that contain
specific people. The more photos you have, the longer the first scan takes.
People are synced among devices where youʼre signed in with the same Apple ID.
Note: The People feature isnʼt available on iPhone 5.
Add more people. Tap Albums, tap People, tap Add People, select people to add, then
tap Add.
Merge people. If the People album shows one person identified as two or more people,
tap Select, tap each instance of the person, then tap Merge.
Remove a misidentified person. Tap a person in the Photos album, then tap Show All to
see all photos they appear in. Tap Select, tap Show Faces, tap the misidentified face, tap
, then tap Not This Person.
Name a person. Tap Albums, tap People, tap a person, tap Add Name, then enter the
name, or tap it in the list if you see it (names in the list are from your Contacts app).
View photos that contain a person. Tap Albums, tap People, then tap the person.
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Mark people as favorites. In the People album tap Select, tap one or more people, then
tap Favorite. You can also drag a person to the Favorites area.
To remove favorites, tap Select, tap the people who you want to remove, then tap
Unfavorite.
Hide and unhide people. Tap Albums, tap People, tap Select, tap the people you want to
hide, then tap Hide. To unhide people, tap Show Hidden People, tap Select, tap people,
then tap Unhide. Photos that contain hidden people donʼt appear in Moments,
Collections, Years, and Memories but are visible in albums.
Show hidden people. Tap Albums, tap People, swipe up, then tap Show Hidden People.
To view all photos with hidden people, tap Albums, then tap Hidden.
Places
The Places album creates collections of your photos and videos based on where they
were taken. Collections are displayed on a map within the album. Only pictures and
videos that have embedded location information (GPS data) are included.
View by location. Tap Albums, tap Places, then tap a collection. Zoom in on the map to
see more specific locations.
See a list of locations. While looking at the map, tap Grid.
View a location in the Maps app. While viewing a photo or video that contains location
information, tap Details, then tap the locationʼs name or address.
View a location-based Memory movie. Tap Albums, tap Places, tap a location that has
several images, tap , then tap .
iCloud Photo Library
iCloud Photo Library automatically uploads the photos and videos you take and stores
them in their original format at full resolution in iCloud. You can access your photos and
videos in iCloud Photo Library from any device where youʼre signed in using the same
Apple ID.
Use the Photos app on iOS devices and Mac computers to open and edit your photos
and videos. Any changes you make are updated on all your devices. See Edit photos and
trim videos.
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To use iCloud Photo Library, you need a device with iOS 8.1 or later, a Mac with OS X
v10.10.3 or later, or a PC with iCloud for Windows 5.
Note: If you turn on iCloud Photo Library, you canʼt use iTunes to sync photos and videos
to iPhone.
Turn on iCloud Photo Library. Go to Settings > iCloud > Photos, or Settings > Photos &
Camera.
Optimize your storage or keep all your photos and videos in full-resolution on
iPhone. If your iCloud storage plan is over 5 GB, Optimize iPhone Storage is on by
default. It manages space on your iPhone by automatically keeping your full-resolution
photos and videos in iCloud and lightweight versions on your iPhone, as needed. To keep
the full-resolution originals on your iPhone, go to Settings > iCloud > Photos, then tap
Download and Keep Originals. Your originals are always stored in iCloud.
Download a full-resolution photo or video. If youʼre not storing full-resolution versions
on iPhone, pinch to zoom in to 100%, or tap
Note: To upload photos and videos to iCloud Photo Library, iPhone must be connected to
Wi-Fi. Using a cellular connection, you can download up to 100 MB at a time.
If your uploaded photos and videos exceed your storage plan, you can upgrade your
iCloud storage. Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage > Change Storage Plan to learn about
the options.
My Photo Stream
My Photo Stream automatically uploads your most recent photos to iCloud, so you can
import them to devices that arenʼt using iCloud Photo Library. (My Photo Stream doesnʼt
upload Live Photos or videos.)
Photos in My Photo Stream donʼt count against your iCloud storage, and theyʼre kept for
30 days in iCloud (up to 1000 photos). Download photos to your computer or iOS device
if you want to keep them permanently. For more information, see the Apple Support
article My Photo Stream FAQ.
Turn My Photo Stream on or off. Go to Settings > iCloud > Photos, or go to Settings >
Photos & Camera.
Use My Photo Stream without iCloud Photo Library. Photos you take with iPhone are
added to the My Photo Stream album when you leave the Camera app and iPhone is
connected to Wi-Fi. Any photos you add—including screenshots and photos saved from
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email, for example—also appear in your My Photo Stream album. Photos added to My
Photo Stream on your other devices appear in your My Photo Stream album on iPhone.
Manage My Photo Stream contents. In the My Photo Stream album, tap Select.
Save your best shots on iPhone: Select the photos, then tap Add To.
Share, print, or copy: Select the photos, then tap
Delete photos: Select the photos, then tap
Note: Although deleted photos are removed from My Photo Stream on all your devices,
the original photos remain in Photos on the device on which they were taken. Photos that
you save to another album on a device or computer also arenʼt deleted. See the Apple
Support article My Photo Stream FAQ.
iCloud Photo Sharing
With iCloud Photo Sharing, you can invite others who are using iCloud Photo Sharing to
view your photos and videos. If theyʼre using iCloud Photo Sharing on a device with iOS 6
or later or on a Mac with OS X v10.8 or later, they can view your albums and leave
comments. If theyʼre on iOS 7 or later or OS X v10.9 or later, they can add their own
photos and videos. You can also publish your album to a website for anyone to view.
iCloud Photo Sharing works with or without iCloud Photo Library and My Photo Stream.
Note: To use iCloud Photo Sharing, iPhone must be connected to the Internet. iCloud
Photo Sharing works over both Wi-Fi and cellular networks. Cellular data charges may
apply. See Cellular data settings.
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Turn on iCloud Photo Sharing. Go to Settings > iCloud > Photos. Or go to Settings >
Photos & Camera.
Share photos and videos. While viewing a photo or video, or after selecting multiple
photos or videos, tap , tap iCloud Photo Sharing, add comments, then share to an
existing shared album or create a new one. You can invite people to view your shared
album using the email address or the mobile phone number they use to receive text
messages.
Enable a public website. Tap Shared, tap an album, tap People, then turn on Public
Website. Tap Share Link if you want to announce the site.
Add items to a shared album. Tap Shared, tap an album, tap
Done. You can add a comment, then tap Post.
, select items, then tap
Delete photos from a shared album. Tap Shared, tap an album, tap Select, select the
photos or videos you want to delete, then tap
album or the photo.
. You must be the owner of the shared
Delete comments from a shared album. Tap the photo or video that contains the
comment. Tap the comment area at the bottom of the screen, touch and hold the
comment, then tap Delete. You must be the owner of the shared album or the comment.
Rename a shared album. Tap Shared, tap Edit, then tap the name and enter a new one.
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Add or remove subscribers, or turn Notifications on or off. Select the shared album,
then tap People.
Subscribe to a shared album. When you receive an invitation, tap the Shared tab
then tap Accept. You can also accept an invitation in an email.
Add items to a shared album you subscribed to. Tap Shared, tap an album, then tap
. Select items, then tap Done. You can add a comment, then tap Post.
See your Family album. When Family Sharing is set up, a shared album called Family is
automatically created in Photos on all family membersʼ devices. Everyone in the family
can contribute photos, videos, and comments to the album, and be notified whenever
something new is added. For more information about setting up Family Sharing, see
Family Sharing.
Other ways to share photos and videos
You can share photos and videos in Mail or Messages, or using other apps you install.
Share or copy a photo or video. View a photo or video, then tap
tap the screen to show the controls.
. If you donʼt see
Tap More in Sharing to turn on the apps you want to use for sharing.
You can share a Live Photo using iMessage, iCloud Photo Sharing, AirDrop, and more. A
shared Live Photo plays in Photos on any iOS device with iOS 9 or later or Mac with OS X
v10.11 or later. For devices or services that donʼt support Live Photos, a Live Photo is
shared as a still photo.
The size limit of attachments is determined by your service provider. iPhone may
compress photo and video attachments, if necessary.
You can also copy a photo or video, then paste it into an email or text message (MMS or
iMessage).
Share a Memory movie. Tap a Memory movie thatʼs playing, tap
option. See Memories.
, then choose a share
Share or copy multiple photos and videos. While viewing by Moment, tap Share.
Save or share a photo or video you receive.
Email: Tap to download the item if necessary, then touch and hold it to see sharing
and other options.
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Text message: Tap the item in the conversation, then tap
Photos and videos that you receive in messages or save from a webpage are saved to
your Photos tab. They can also be viewed in the Camera Roll or, if youʼre using iCloud
Photo Library, the All Photos album.
Edit photos and trim videos
You can edit still photos and Live Photos right on iPhone. If your photos are stored in
iCloud, your edits are updated across all your devices set up with iCloud, and both your
original and edited versions are saved. If you delete a photo, itʼs deleted from all your
devices and iCloud. Photo app extensions can provide special editing options. See App
extensions.
Edit a photo or Live Photo. View the photo full screen, tap
, then tap a tool. To edit a
photo not taken with iPhone, tap the photo, tap
, then tap Duplicate and Edit.
Auto-enhance
qualities.
improves a photoʼs exposure, contrast, saturation, and other
With the Remove Red-eye tool
, tap each eye that needs correcting.
To crop the photo, tap . Photos suggests an optimal crop, but you can drag the
corners of the grid tool to set your own crop. Move the wheel to tilt or straighten the
photo. Tap Auto to align the photo with the horizon, and tap Reset to undo alignment
changes. Tap
to rotate the photo 90 degrees. Tap
to choose a standard crop
ratio, such as 2y3 or Square.
With photo filters
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Tap Adjustments
to set Light, Color, and B&W (black & white) options. Tap the
down arrow, then tap
next to Light, Color, or B&W to choose the element you want
to adjust. Move the slider to the desired effect.
Compare the edited version to the original. Touch and hold the photo to view the
original. Release to see your edits.
Donʼt like the results? Tap Cancel, then tap Discard Changes. Tap Done to save
changes.
Revert to original. After you edit a photo and save your edits, you can revert to the
original image. Tap the image, tap
, then tap Revert.
Trim a video. Tap
to display the controls, drag either end of the frame viewer, then
tap Done. Tap Save as New Clip to save the new video clip in your Videos album.
Set the slow-motion section of a video shot in Slo-mo. (iPhone 5s and later) Tap
then use the vertical bars beneath the frame viewer. (See Shoot video for information
about Slo-mo.)
Print to an AirPrint-enabled printer
Print photos: Tap
, then tap Print.
To print multiple photos while viewing a photo album, tap Select, select the photos, tap
, then tap Print. See AirPrint.
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Import photos and videos
You can import photos and videos directly from a digital camera, an SD memory card, or
another iOS device that has a camera. Use the Lightning to USB Camera Adapter or the
Lightning to SD Card Camera Reader (both sold separately).
1. Insert the camera adapter or card reader into the Lightning connector on iPhone.
2. Do one of the following:
Connect a camera: Use the USB cable that came with the camera to connect the
camera to the camera adapter. Turn on the camera, then make sure itʼs in transfer
mode. For more information, see the documentation that came with the camera.
Insert an SD memory card into the card reader: Donʼt force the card into the slot
on the reader; it fits only one way.
Connect an iOS device: Use the USB cable that came with the iOS device to
connect it to the camera adapter. Turn on and unlock the iOS device.
3. Unlock iPhone.
4. The Photos app opens and displays the photos and videos available for importing.
5. Select the photos and videos to import.
Import all items: Tap Import All.
Import just some items: Tap the items you want to import (a checkmark appears
for each), tap Import, then tap Import Selected.
6. After the photos and videos are imported, keep or delete them on the camera, card,
or iOS device.
7. Disconnect the camera adapter or card reader.
A new event in the Last Import album contains all the photos you just imported.
To transfer the photos to your computer, connect iPhone to your computer and
import the images with a photo app such as Photos or Adobe Elements.
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Camera
Camera at a glance
You can take photos and videos with the iSight camera on the back of iPhone and the
FaceTime camera on the front. On iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, you can take even better
photos in low light and capture photos and Live Photos that take advantage of the Retina
HD display with wide color gamut. With the Dual 12MP wide-angle and telephoto
cameras on iPhone 7 Plus, you can zoom closer at higher resolution.
Take a photo
Choose a photo mode. Camera has several photo modes, so you can shoot stills,
square-format photos, and panoramas. To choose a mode, drag the screen left or right,
or tap the mode labels to choose Photo, Square, or Pano.
Take a photo. Thereʼs more than one way to take a photo:
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Open Camera, choose Photo or Square, then tap the Shutter button, or press either
volume button.
Swipe left on the Lock screen to make the camera screen appear, then take the
picture.
Press the Home button to return to the Lock screen.
3D Touch. In Control Center or on the Home screen, press the Camera icon, then
choose a quick action. See 3D Touch.
Note: Adjust the volume of the shutter sound using the Ringer and Alerts settings in
Settings > Sounds & Haptics (called Sounds on iPhone models other than iPhone 7 and
iPhone 7 Plus). Or mute the sound using the Ring/Silent switch. (In some countries,
muting is disabled.)
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Open Camera”
“Take a photo”
Keep it straight. To display a grid that can help you align shots, go to Settings >
Photos & Camera, then turn on Grid.
Zoom in or out. (Dual 12MP cameras) The Dual 12MP wide-angle and telephoto cameras
on iPhone 7 Plus capture full-resolution stills at 1x and 2x zoom. To quickly switch, toggle
or . You can also zoom at higher resolution to 10x for photos and 6x for videos. For
finer zoom and to zoom beyond 2x, touch and hold the zoom control, then slide left or
right to adjust zoom. You can also pinch the screen to zoom in and out. On other iPhone
models, pinch the screen to zoom in and out.
Take a Live Photo. Live Photos goes beyond snapshots to capture life the way it
happens—in movement and sound. On devices that support Live Photos, make sure Live
Photos is turned on, then tap the Shutter button. The camera records what happens just
before and after you take your photo, along with the audio. The screen indicates the
duration of the exposure. You can edit Live Photos and add filters to them in the Photos
app.
Live Photos works with the iSight and FaceTime cameras. To turn it on or off, tap
(Yellow is on.)
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Take Burst shots. With the iSight or FaceTime camera in Photo or Square mode, touch
and hold the Shutter button to take rapid-fire photos in bursts. The shutter sound is
different, and the counter shows how many shots youʼve taken. Lift your finger to stop.
To see the suggested shots and select the photos you want to keep, tap the burst
thumbnail, then tap Select. The gray dots below the thumbnails mark the suggested
photos. To copy a photo from the burst as a separate photo, tap the circle in the lowerright corner of the photo. To delete the burst of photos, tap the burst thumbnail, then tap
To choose which burst photos to upload to your Photo Stream, go to Settings > Photos &
Camera.
Take a selfie with Retina Flash. On devices that support Retina Flash, use the Retina
HD display as a flash for your selfies. Turn on the flash, switch to the FaceTime camera,
then tap the Shutter button (the display flashes on exposure).
Take a panorama photo. (iSight camera) Choose Pano, tap the Shutter button, then pan
slowly in the direction of the arrow. To finish the pan, tap the button again. To pan in the
other direction, first tap the arrow. To pan vertically, rotate iPhone to landscape
orientation. You can reverse the direction of a vertical pan, too.
On iPhone 7 Plus, toggle between
full resolution.
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and
to shoot a Panorama at 1x and 2x zoom at
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Use the capture timer. Use the capture timer to give yourself time to be in the shot.
First stabilize iPhone, then frame your shot. Tap , tap 3s or 10s, then tap the Shutter
button.
Take a screenshot. To capture whatʼs displayed on your screen, simultaneously press
and release the Sleep/Wake and Home buttons. The screenshot is added to the Photos
tab in Photos, and you can also view it in the Screenshots album or All Photos album (if
youʼre using iCloud Photo Library).
Adjust for the perfect shot
About auto exposure and face detection. When youʼre taking a photo, a rectangle may
briefly appear to indicate where the automatic exposure is set. When you photograph
people, face detection balances the exposure across many faces. A rectangle appears
for each face detected.
Lock the focus and exposure. Exposure is automatic, but you can set the exposure
manually for the next shot by tapping an object or area on the screen. To lock the
exposure and focus, touch and hold until the rectangle pulses. The screen indicates
when exposure and focus are locked. Take as many photos as you want. When you tap
the screen again, exposure and focus unlock, and the automatic settings and face
detection turn back on.
Note: Tapping the screen sets the focus and the exposure, and face detection is
temporarily turned off.
Adjust the exposure. Tap to see
down to adjust the exposure.
next to the exposure rectangle, then slide up or
Turn the flash on or off. Tap . The True Tone flash on the back of iPhone also provides
extra light when you need it. To use it as a flashlight, swipe up from the bottom of any
screen, then tap the Flashlight button in Control Center. See Control Center.
Make it better. You can edit photos and trim videos, right on iPhone. See Edit photos
and trim videos.
Shoot video
With Camera you can shoot video, including slow-motion and time-lapse videos.
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Record a video. Choose Video, then tap the Record button, or press either volume
button, to start and stop recording. By default, video records at 30 fps (frames per
second). Other video modes include:
1080p 60 fps (iPhone 6 and later)
4K 30 fps (iPhone 6s and later)
To change video recording settings, go to Settings > Photos & Camera > Record Video.
Snap a still while recording Tap the white Shutter button.
Take it slow (iPhone 5s and later) Choose Slo-mo to capture slow-motion video. When
you edit the video, you can set just a portion of it to play back in slow motion, and the
rest plays back at regular speed. On iPhone 6 and later, you can choose between 1080p
video at 120 fps and 720p at 240 fps. To change Slo-mo recording settings, go to
Settings > Photos & Camera > Record Slo-mo.
Set the slow-motion section of a video. Tap the thumbnail, then tap Edit. Use the
vertical bars beneath the frame viewer to set the section you want to play back in slow
motion.
Zoom in or out when shooting video. (iSight camera) Pinch the image on the screen
open to zoom in, and pinch closed to zoom out.
The Dual 12MP wide-angle and telephoto cameras on iPhone 7 Plus capture zoom up to
6x for video. Toggle between
and
to zoom in and out, or use the dial for zoom up to
6x.
Capture an experience with time-lapse. (iSight camera) Choose Time-Lapse, set up
iPhone where you want, then tap the Record button to start capturing a sunset, a flower
opening, or other experiences over a period of time. Tap the Record button again to stop
recording. The time-lapse photos are compiled into a short video.
With the Dual 12MP wide-angle and telephoto cameras on iPhone 7 Plus, toggle between
and
to zoom in and out.
With iOS 9 and later, time-lapse videos have video stabilization, which minimizes the
effect of camera movement during capture.
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HDR
HDR (High Dynamic Range) helps you get great shots in high-contrast situations. When
shooting with the iSight camera, iPhone takes multiple photos in rapid succession, at
different exposure settings—and blends them together. The resulting photo has better
detail in the bright and midtone areas.
Use HDR. (iSight camera and the FaceTime camera on iPhone 5s and later) Tap the HDR
button. For best results, keep iPhone steady and avoid subject motion.
On iPhone 5s and later, you can choose HDR Auto so iPhone uses HDR when itʼs most
effective.
Keep the normal photo and the HDR version. Go to Settings > Photos & Camera >
Keep Normal Photo. Both the normal and HDR versions of the photo appear in Photos. In
your albums, HDR versions of photos are marked with “HDR” in the corner.
View, share, and print
Photos and videos you take are saved in Photos. With iCloud Photo Library turned on, all
new photos and videos are automatically uploaded and available in Photos on all your
devices with iOS 8.1 or later that are set up with iCloud Photo Library. When iCloud Photo
Library is turned off, you can still collect up to 1000 of your most recent photos in the My
Photo Stream album from your devices set up with iCloud.
Note: If Location Services is turned on, photos and videos are tagged with location data
that can be used by apps and photo-sharing websites. See Location Services.
View your photos. In Camera, tap the thumbnail image in the lower-left corner, then
swipe left or right to see the photos youʼve taken recently. Tap All Photos to see
everything in the Photos app.
Tap the screen to show or hide the controls.
View sharing and printing options. While viewing an image, tap
apps.
. See Share from
Upload photos and videos. Use iCloud Photo Library to upload photos and videos from
your iPhone to iCloud. You can access them on your devices with iOS 8.1 or later where
youʼre signed in to iCloud using the same Apple ID. You can also upload and download
your photos and videos from the Photos app on iCloud.com.
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Sync photos and videos to iPhone from your Mac. Use the Photos settings pane in
iTunes on your computer. See Sync with iTunes.
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Maps
Find places
WARNING: For important information about navigation and avoiding distractions that
could lead to dangerous situations, see Important safety information.
Move around Maps by dragging the screen. To face a different direction, rotate with two
fingers. To return to north, tap .
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Find coffee near me”
“Show me the Golden Gate Bridge”
Zoom in or out. Double-tap with one finger to zoom in; tap with two fingers to zoom out
—or pinch open or closed. The scale appears in the upper left while zooming. To change
how distance is shown (in miles or kilometers), go to Settings > Maps.
Find nearby attractions, services, and more. Tap the search field, then tap a category
such as Food or Shopping. (For feature availability, see the iOS Feature Availability
website.)
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3D Touch. To find nearby places from the Home screen, press Maps, then choose
the Search Nearby quick action. See 3D Touch.
Search for a location. Tap the search field. You can search for a location in different
ways. For example:
Intersection (“8th and Market”)
Area (“Greenwich Village”)
Landmark (“Guggenheim”)
Zip code (“60622”)
Business (“movies,” “restaurants San Francisco CA,” “Apple Inc New York”)
Maps may also list recent locations, searches, or directions that you can choose from.
Change the search area. Zoom in or out, or drag the screen to another area, then tap
Search Here.
Get info about a location. Tap a location, then swipe up to view all of the information
about it. Swipe to peek at the map, or tap
to close the info display.
Add a favorite location. While viewing info about a location, scroll to the bottom of the
information then tap Add to Favorites.
Book a table and other actions. If youʼve installed apps that have Map extensions, you
may be able to do things like make a reservation at a restaurant or order a ridesharing
vehicle to take you to the location. Visit the App Store to find apps that work with Maps.
Choose your view. Tap
, then choose Map, Transit, or Satellite.
If transit information is unavailable, tap View Routing Apps to use an app for public or
other modes of transportation.
3D Touch. To mark your location from the Home screen, press Maps, then choose
the Mark My Location quick action. See 3D Touch.
Mark a location. Touch and hold the map until a marker appears.
Share a location
Tap a location or marker to display its info, then tap
and choose an option such as Mail
or AirDrop. See Share from apps.
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3D Touch. Press a location, then choose the Share Location or Send My Location
quick action. You can also press Maps on the Home screen, then choose a quick action.
See 3D Touch.
Get more info
3D Touch. Press a location, then choose the Open Homepage or Call quick action.
See 3D Touch.
Find out about traffic conditions. From the map or satellite view, tap
, then turn on
Traffic. Orange shows slowdowns, and red shows stop-and-go traffic. To see an incident
report, tap an incident marker.
Help improve Maps. To report an incorrect label, a missing location, or other issue, tap
, then tap Report an Issue.
Get directions
Note: To get directions, iPhone must be connected to the Internet. To get directions
involving your current location, Location Services must also be on. (See also Location
Services.)
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Give me directions home”
“Transit directions to my dadʼs work”
“Whatʼs my ETA?”
“Find a gas station”
Find a route to a location. Tap a location to display its info, then tap Directions.
Directions are from your current location. To get other directions, tap My Location, then
enter a different location.
Choose a different route. If multiple routes appear, tap the one you want to take.
Show a driving, walking, or transit route. Tap Drive, Walk, or Transit.
In select cities, Maps provides public transportation information and multimodal routing,
from walking to a bus stop or train station to hopping off at your destination.
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If transit routes are unavailable in your area, tap View Routing Apps to use an app for
other modes of transportation.
Choose a transit time or date. Find a transit route, then tap Leave Soon to select a time
or date for departure or arrival. Tap Transit Options to choose which transit vehicles to
consider.
Hear turn-by-turn directions for a route. Find a route, then tap Go.
Maps follows your progress and speaks turn-by-turn directions to your destination. If
iPhone auto-locks, Maps stays onscreen and continues to announce directions.
See the route overview: Tap the route card, then tap Overview. To return to turn-byturn directions, tap Resume.
View directions as a list: Tap the the route card, then tap Details.
Choose a faster route: If you get an alert that suggests a faster route, tap Go to use
that route. Or, ask Siri something like “Take the faster route” or “Donʼt change my
route.”
Maps may reroute you automatically in case of road closure. Maps may also alert you
to heavy traffic, construction, an accident, or other incidents ahead.
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Even if you open another app, Maps continues to give you turn-by-turn directions. To
return to Maps, tap the banner across the top of the screen. To automatically pause
spoken audio (such as a podcast or an audio book) when Maps speaks a turn-by-turn
instruction, go to Settings > Maps > Driving and Navigation, then turn on Pause Spoken
Audio.
Make a quick detour. To make a stop along your route, swipe up on the route card then
tap one of the suggested services, such as Gas Stations. Tap Go to add one to your
route.
Stop turn-by-turn directions. Tap End.
Ask Siri. Say something like: “Stop navigating.”
Use Maps on your Mac to get directions. Open Maps on your Mac (OS X v10.9 or later),
get directions for your trip, then choose File > Share > Send to [your device]. Your Mac
and iPhone must both be set up with iCloud using the same Apple ID.
You can also use Handoff to pick up directions on another device. See Handoff.
Find your car
When you disconnect iPhone from your carʼs Bluetooth or CarPlay system and exit your
parked vehicle, Maps drops a Parked Car pin so you can easily navigate back to where
you left it.
Find where you left your car. Tap the Search field, then choose Parked Car from the
suggestions list.
Turn Parking Location on or off. Go to Maps > Settings > Show Parked Location.
Get a ride
After you find a destination, you can request a ride from a ride sharing company, if you
have a ridesharing app installed. (Not available in all areas.)
Request a ride. Search for your destination, tap Get Directions, then tap Get a Ride. If
you donʼt have a ridesharing app installed, tap Find Ride Hailing Apps to download one
from the App Store.
Get a ridesharing app for Maps. Visit the App Store to find ridesharing apps that work
with Maps.
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Remove markers and routes
Remove a marker. Tap the marker, tap Edit Location, then tap Remove Marker.
Delete a route. Past routes are listed below the Search field. To remove one, swipe it to
the left, then tap Remove.
3D and Flyover
With 3D and Flyover, you can see three-dimensional views of, and even fly over, many of
the worldʼs major cities.
View a 3D map. Drag two fingers up. (Zoom in for a closer look if the 3D map doesnʼt
appear.) For best effect, use the satellite view. Tap
, then tap Satellite.
Adjust the angle. Drag two fingers up or down.
Take a 3D tour with Flyover. An aerial tour is available for select cities and locations,
indicated by
next to the city name. (Zoom out if you donʼt see any
markers.) Tap
the name of the city to display its banner, then tap Tour to begin the tour.
To stop the tour, tap the screen to display the controls, then tap End Flyover Tour. To
return to standard view, tap , then tap Map.
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Clock
Clock at a glance
Use Clock to view times around the world, set a timer or alarm, use a stopwatch, or set
sleep reminders and wake alarms on a daily basis.
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“What time is it?”
“What time is it in London?”
Bedtime
Set the number of hours you want to sleep each night and Clock can remind you to go to
sleep, and sound an alarm to wake you up.
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Set a bedtime reminder and alarm. Tap Bedtime, then follow the onscreen instructions
to set your reminder and alarm. After youʼve done the initial setup, you can slide
and
to adjust your reminder and alarm times.
See your sleep history. The Sleep Analysis portion of the Bedtime tab shows your
sleeping period for the past several days, based on your use of iPhone during those
hours. Your sleep history is automatically provided to Health, too, where you can view
more data.
Set alarm days, tone, and volume. Tap Options.
Suspend the alarm. Tap Bedtime, then drag the screen down to reveal the Bedtime
switch.
Alarms and timers
3D Touch. To set an alarm from the Home screen, press Clock, then choose a quick
action. See 3D Touch.
Create an alarm. Tap Alarm, then tap . Set the time and other options, then give the
alarm a name (like “Water the plants”).
Use the stopwatch or timer. You can use the stopwatch to keep time, record lap times,
or set a timer to alert you when timeʼs up.
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Fall asleep to music or a podcast. Tap Timer, tap When Timer Ends, then choose Stop
Playing at the bottom.
Get quick access to clock features. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to
open Control Center, then tap
iPhone is locked.
. You can access Timer from Control Center even when
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Set the timer for 3 minutes”
“Wake me up tomorrow at 7 a.m.”
“What alarms do I have set?”
Weather
Get the current temperature and 10-day forecast for one or more cities around the world,
with hourly forecasts for the next 12 hours. Weather uses Location Services to get the
forecast for your current location.
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Whatʼs the weather for today?”
“How windy is it out there?”
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“When is sunrise in Paris?”
See the local weather. Swipe to the leftmost screen (available only when Location
Services is turned on in Settings > Privacy > Location Services).
View the current hourly forecast. Swipe the hourly display left or right.
See a detailed forecast. Swipe up.
Add a city. Tap
, then tap
. Enter a city or zip code, then tap Search.
See the weather in another city. Swipe left or right to see weather for another city, or
tap
, then choose a city from the list.
3D Touch. To choose a forecast from the Home screen, press Weather, then choose
a location. Tap Add to add a location. See 3D Touch.
See all your cities at once. Pinch the screen or tap
3D Touch. To preview a cityʼs weather, press a city in your list of locations to peek at
the weather forecast, then press a little deeper to open it. See 3D Touch.
Delete a city. Tap
, swipe the city to the left, then tap Delete.
Rearrange the order of cities. Tap
Choose Fahrenheit or Celsius. Tap
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, touch and hold a city, then drag it up or down.
, then tap °F or °C.
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Turn off local weather. Go to Settings > Privacy, then turn off Location Services. See
Location Services.
Use iCloud to push your list of cities to your other iOS devices. Go to Settings >
iCloud, then turn on iCloud Drive. See iCloud.
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News
News overview
News collects all the stories you want to read, from your favorite sources, based on the
topics that interest you most. You can explore recommended publications (called
channels in News), be notified of important stories from favorite channels, search for
specific channels or topics, save and share your favorite stories, and subscribe to receive
premium stories from select publishers.
Note: You need a Wi-Fi or cellular connection to use News. News isnʼt available in all
areas.
Get started with News
The first time you open News, you can personalize it based on your interests.
Add channels and topics. Open News, then add your preferred channels (publications,
such as magazines, newspapers, or news-based websites). You can also add topics such
as Sports and Entertainment. To see more channels and topics, swipe up. The stories
that appear in For You are influenced by your choices.
Add notifications. Tap Customize Notifications, then choose the publications you want
to deliver the most important stories of the day to your Lock screen.
Receive stories by email. To receive an email with the best Apple News stories selected
by Appleʼs editors, tap Sign Me Up on the Get News in Your Inbox screen.
Seek out additional channels and topics. After you set up News, tap Explore to browse
suggested channels and topics. Or tap a topic such as Travel, Arts, or Sports to browse
it. To add a channel or topic to the Favorites tab, tap
For You
For You presents the best stories from the publications and topics you add to Favorites.
For You also highlights Top Stories of the day, Trending Stories that are popular with
other News readers, and Featured Stories selected by Apple editors.
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Read more stories within a specific group. Tap
such as Technology or Entertainment.
next to Top Stories or next to a topic
3D Touch. To access stories and recently viewed channels from the Home screen,
press News, then choose a quick action. See 3D Touch.
Play a video in the story list. Tap
Get newer stories. Pull down to refresh For You with the latest stories.
Love, save, or share a story. Tap
Share.
, or swipe a story left, then choose Love, Save, or
Dislike a story, mute a channel, or report a concern about a story. Tap
story right, then choose Dislike, Mute Channel, or Report.
To remove a dislike, tap
, or swipe a
, or swipe the disliked story right, then tap Remove Dislike.
Mute a channel. To prevent a channelʼs stories from appearing in For You or in a list of
topics, swipe a story right, then tap Mute Channel. To see stories from that channel
again, tap the channel in Favorites, then tap Donʼt Mute near the top of the screen.
To unmute a channel that isnʼt a favorite, tap Search, search for the channel, tap the
channel in the search results, then tap Donʼt Mute near the top of the screen.
3D Touch. Press a channel in Favorites, or press a story, swipe up, then tap Mute
Channel. See 3D Touch.
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Read stories
Read a story. Tap a story to read it. Web stories delivered through an RSS feed show a
preview. To view an RSS story in full, swipe up. To always view the full story, go to
Settings > News, then turn off Show Story Previews.
3D Touch. Press a story to take a peek at it. Swipe up to see options such as Love,
Save, Share Story, and Mute Channel. Press deeper to pop open the story. See 3D Touch.
Read the next story. When viewing a story, swipe left to read the next story, or swipe
right to read the previous story. Swipe from the left edge to return to the list of stories.
Tell News what you do and donʼt love. When viewing a story, tap
to love the story;
tap
to dislike the story. Tap an icon again to return to a neutral setting. News takes
your feedback into account when picking new stories in For You.
Change the text size. Tap
, then tap the smaller or larger letter to change the size.
(Not available in all stories.)
Share stories. When viewing a story, tap , then choose a sharing option such as
Message or Twitter. To share a story in your list of stories, swipe the story left, tap Share,
then choose a sharing option.
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Report a concern. If you believe a story youʼre viewing is mislabeled, inappropriate,
offensive, or doesnʼt display properly, swipe right, then tap Report.
Favorites
The channels and topics you select when you first open News appear in Favorites.
Favorites also includes channels and topics you add later.
Browse a channelʼs stories. Tap a channel or topic to see the most recently published
stories. In some channels, you can browse sections, such as Politics, Sports, or
Entertainment.
3D Touch. Press a channel or topic to peek at its current stories. See 3D Touch.
Edit your favorites. Tap Edit, then tap
to delete a channel or topic that you no longer
wish to follow.
3D Touch. Press, swipe up, then tap Remove from Favorites. See 3D Touch.
Dig deeper into a topic. Tap a topic to see recent related stories.
Sort favorites. Tap Favorites at the top of the screen, then choose Sort by Name, Sort
by Most Recent, or Sort by Most Visited.
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Manage notifications. Tap
, then turn notifications on or off for your favorite channels.
Search
News keeps track of a wide variety of topics, which makes it easy to find the stories that
interest you.
Search for channels and topics. Tap Search, then enter the name of a channel (CNN or
Wired, for example) or a topic (fashion, business, or politics, for example). In the results
list, tap
to add an item to Favorites.
View trending topics. Search shows trending topics to get you started. Tap a topic to
see related stories, then tap
to add a topic to Favorites.
Save stories
In News you can save stories to read later, online or offline.
Save a story. When viewing your list of stories, swipe a story left, then tap Save. When
reading a story, tap
to save it. To read a saved story, tap Saved, then tap the story.
Delete a saved story. Tap Saved, then swipe a story left.
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Check your reading history. Tap the History tab to see what youʼve read. Swipe a story
left to delete it. To clear your News history or the information used to create
recommendations, tap Clear, then choose one or both options.
Subscriptions in News
Subscribe to channels. With News you can read premium stories from select
publishers. There are three ways to access subscriptions in News:
Subscribe within News: You can purchase a subscription directly in News. In a
channel that offers subscriptions, tap a story that requires a subscription to read,
then tap Subscribe Now.
Access an existing subscription purchased from iTunes or the App Store: News
checks your iTunes Store account for subscriptions you bought as in-app purchases
in publishersʼ apps. If any subscriptions youʼve purchased are also available in News,
youʼre automatically granted access in News. See the About in-app purchases
website.
Access an existing subscription purchased from a publisher: If youʼve purchased a
subscription directly from a publisherʼs website, the publisher may allow you to sign
in to your account in News, and access your subscription in News.
When you subscribe to a channel, itʼs automatically added to Favorites.
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Wallet
Wallet at a glance
Use Wallet to keep cards and passes in one place for easy access:
Cards for Apple Pay: Credit, debit, store, and prepaid cards (not available in all areas)
Passes: Boarding passes, movie tickets, coupons, reward cards, and more
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Apple Pay
About Apple Pay
On supported devices, you can use Apple Pay (not available in all areas) to make
purchases in stores that accept contactless payments, as well as within apps and
websites that support Apple Pay. Wallet holds credit and debit cards, which appear at the
top of your Wallet stack, for Apple Pay transactions.
For more information about how Apple Pay works, go to the Apple Pay website.
Set up Apple Pay
Sign in to iCloud. Go to Settings > iCloud, and sign in with your Apple ID. Then scroll
down and turn on Wallet. See iCloud.
Add a credit or debit card. Tap
next to Apple Pay. The first time you add a credit or
debit card to Wallet, you may be asked to use the card you use with iTunes. Tap Next,
then position iPhone so that your card appears in the frame.
The card issuer determines if your card is eligible for Apple Pay, and may ask you for
additional information to complete the verification process. See the Apple Support article
Apple Pay participating banks.
You can add up to eight credit and debit cards, including store cards.
Note: If you sign out of iCloud at Settings > iCloud, all the credit and debit cards you
added to Apple Pay on iPhone are removed. You can add the cards again the next time
you sign in to iCloud.
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Set your default card. The first card you add to Wallet becomes your default card for
payments. To set a different card as the default, touch and hold the card in Wallet, then
drag it to the front of the stack.
Pay at a store
You can use Apple Pay at contactless readers with one of the following symbols.
Pay using your default card. Place your finger on Touch ID, then hold iPhone about an
inch (2.5 cm) from the symbol on the reader, until iPhone vibrates. A checkmark on the
screen and an audible beep confirm that the payment information has been sent.
Or, if iPhone is locked, double-click the Home button and keep your finger lightly on the
Home button. Hold iPhone near the reader until iPhone vibrates.
3D Touch. To quickly access your default card, press the Wallet icon on the Home
screen. See 3D Touch.
Use another card. When the default card appears, tap it to display all your cards, then
tap the card you want to use.
Tip: When you use Apple Pay at some locations, you may receive a notification that
allows you to easily add a rewards card for that merchant.
Set up a store card for Automatic Selection. To automatically use a store card (rather
than the default card) with the associated merchant, tap the store card, tap , then turn
on Automatic Selection.
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Note: If you have Location Services turned on, the location of your iPhone at the time
you make a purchase may be sent to Apple. See Location Services.
Pay within an app or on a website
When shopping within an app or on a website in Safari, look for the Buy with Apple Pay
button or the Apple Pay payment option.
Pay within an app or on a website. During checkout, tap the Apple Pay or Buy with
Apple Pay button, then review the payment information. Make any changes before you
use Touch ID or your passcode to complete the payment.
Shop on your Mac and pay on iPhone
Using the Safari web browser on your Mac, you can shop and begin checkout on
websites that support Apple Pay, then complete the payment with Apple Pay on your
iPhone.
Set up your Mac and iPhone for Apple Pay.
Set up Apple Pay on iPhone.
Sign in to iCloud with the same Apple ID on both devices.
Turn on Bluetooth on both devices.
Ensure that iPhone is nearby and connected to a cellular or Wi-Fi network.
Checkout. On your Mac, choose the Apple Pay payment option, then review the payment
information. Make any changes to the shipping and billing information, or choose a
different card. Then on iPhone, review the payment summary, and use Touch ID to
complete the payment.
Prevent iPhone from confirming payments on your Mac. If you donʼt want to use
Apple Pay on your iPhone to confirm payments on your Mac, go to Settings > Wallet &
Apple Pay, then turn off Allow Payments on Mac.
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View card activity and manage cards
View a card. Tap a card in the Wallet stack. The last transaction may appear.
View and manage the card information. Tap
. You can:
View the last four digits of the card number and Device Account Number—the
number transmitted to the merchant.
Change the billing information.
Remove the card from Wallet.
View your Apple Pay activity. Tap
, then tap Transactions to view the transactions
made on this iPhone. To hide this information, turn off Transaction History.
Note: The authorized amount may differ from the amount of the payment charged to
your account. For example, a gas station may request an authorization of $99, even
though you only pump $25 worth of gasoline. To see the final charges, see your card
statement, which includes all Apple Pay transactions.
Change the shipping address and contact information for purchases. Go to
Settings > Wallet & Apple Pay.
Prevent cards from appearing on the Lock screen. Go to Settings > Wallet &
Apple Pay. Below Allow Access When Locked, turn off Double-Click Home Button.
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If your iPhone is lost or stolen. If you enabled Find My iPhone, you can use it to help
locate and secure your iPhone—including suspending or removing the ability to make
purchases using your cards in Apple Pay. To do this, sign in with your Apple ID on
iCloud.com, then go to Settings > My Devices. You can also call the issuers of your
cards.
Passes
Use passes in Wallet to check in for a flight, get into a movie, or redeem a coupon.
Passes can include useful information, such as the balance on your coffee card, a
couponʼs expiration date, or your seat number for a concert.
Find apps that support Wallet. Tap
next to Passes, then tap Find Apps for Wallet.
You can also find apps for Wallet in the iTunes Store on your computer.
Add a pass by scanning a code. Tap
next to Passes, then tap Scan Code to Add a
Pass. Point your iPhone at the code and frame it to add the pass.
Add a pass from an app, email, message, or website. Tap the pass or the link, then tap
Add.
Use a pass. If an alert for a pass appears on the Lock screen, swipe up to open Wallet
and display the pass, then present the barcode to the reader. Otherwise, open Wallet,
select the pass, then present the barcode to the reader.
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Add funds to your Apple ID account. At Apple Stores and select retailers in most
countries, you can add funds to your Apple ID account using iTunes Pass. For information
about creating an iTunes Pass, see the Apple Support article About iTunes Pass.
Share a pass. You can share a pass using Mail, Messages, or AirDrop. Tap the pass, tap
, then tap Share Pass. See Share from apps.
Refresh a pass. Passes are usually updated automatically. To refresh a pass manually,
tap the pass, tap , then pull the pass down.
Display a pass based on location. A pass can appear on the Lock screen when you
wake iPhone at the right time and place—for example, when you reach the airport for a
flight youʼre taking. Make sure Location Services is turned on in Settings > Privacy >
Location Services. Then on the pass, tap , and turn on Suggest on Lock Screen.
Prevent passes from appearing on the Lock screen. Go to Settings > Wallet &
Apple Pay. Below Allow Access When Locked, turn off Double-Click Home Button. For
passes with notifications, to prevent a specific pass from appearing on the Lock screen,
tap the pass, tap , then turn off Suggest on Lock Screen.
On iPhone 5 and iPhone 5c, go to Settings > Passcode, tap Turn Passcode On, then turn
off Wallet. Pass notifications continue to appear, but you must enter a passcode to view
the pass.
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Include passes on your other iOS devices. You can have passes that you add to one
iOS device appear on your other iOS devices. Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on
Wallet.
Note: This setting applies only to the passes in Wallet, not to the credit and debit cards.
Rearrange passes. Drag a pass in the stack to move it to a new location. The pass order
is updated on all your devices (iOS 7 or later).
Set notification options. Go to Settings > Notifications > Wallet.
Done with a pass? Tap the pass, tap
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, then tap Remove Pass.
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Notes
Take notes
Use Notes to jot down important information, add attachments—like photos, web links,
or maps—sketch ideas, and keep things organized. You can lock a note to keep it private,
add people so friends can view and edit a note, and more.
Turn on Notes in your iCloud account. Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Notes.
Your iCloud notes appear on all your iOS devices and Mac computers where youʼre
signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID.
Note: If youʼve been using an earlier version of Notes, you may need to upgrade your
iCloud notes to use all the features—sketching, checklists, paragraph styles, password
protection, adding people, and more. See the Upgrade your notes website.
Turn on an On My iPhone account. Go to Settings > Notes, then turn on On My
iPhone. Notes in this account appear only on your iPhone.
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3D Touch. To start a new note from the Home screen, press Notes, then choose a
quick action. See 3D Touch.
Create a new note. Tap
. The first line of the note becomes the noteʼs title.
Ask Siri. Say something like: “Create a new note.”
Add a photo or video to your note. Tap , then tap
. Take a new photo or video, or
tap Photo Library to select and add existing photos and videos.
If you want photos or videos you take in Notes to be automatically added to the Photos
app, go to Settings > Notes, then turn on Save Media to Photos.
Set the default account for when you start new notes with Siri or from the Today
screen. Go to Settings > Notes > Default Account.
Tip: To create and view Notes right from Today View, tap Edit at the bottom of the
Today screen, then add the Notes widget.
Format and edit notes
Create checklists, change paragraph styles, and add attachments.
Start a checklist. Tap a line in your note, tap
checklist format.
Change the text style. Tap
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, tap
, then tap
. Tap
again to remove the
, then select the style.
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Set a default formatting style for the first paragraph. Go to Settings > Notes, then tap
New Notes Start With. Choose Title, Heading, or Body.
Add an attachment. When youʼre in another app and find something that you want to
add to Notes (like a location in Maps or a webpage in Safari), tap Share or , then tap
Add to Notes. You can create a new note or add the attachment to an existing one.
Mark up an image or PDF. For an image, tap it in your note, tap
a PDF, tap it in your note, then tap
, then tap Markup. For
Change the preview size of attachments. Touch and hold an image, sketch, or PDF
attachment in a note, then choose a size for the preview.
Delete notes
Delete a note. In a note, tap
. Or in the notes list, swipe the note left.
Didnʼt mean to delete that note? If you change your mind, open the Recently Deleted
folder. Tap the note you want to keep, tap in the note, then tap Recover.
Create a sketch
Sometimes you may want a sketch to help you capture an idea or plan. Start a sketch
using the pencil, marker, or pen tool. Switch to the eraser if you make a mistake.
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Sketch in your note. Tap , tap , use your finger to sketch, then tap Done. Your
sketch appears in your note. Tap the sketch to edit it.
3D Touch. If you press a little deeper as you draw, the pencil and marker leave a
darker line, and the pen tool leaves a wider line. Press a little deeper as you erase to
increase the area you erase. See 3D Touch.
View more color choices. Tap the current color to view a color palette. Swipe the
palette left or right to see more colors. Or, hold iPhone in landscape orientation.
Draw straight lines. Tap the ruler tool to make it appear on your canvas. Draw a line
along the edge of the ruler. Tap the ruler tool again to make it disappear.
Move the ruler without changing its angle. Drag the ruler with one finger.
Adjust the angle of the ruler. Touch and hold the ruler with two fingers, then rotate your
fingers.
Mask a part of your sketch. Place the ruler along the edge of the area you want to
cover, then start your sketch. Draw lines that start away from the rulerʼs edge, then come
toward it.
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Hide the toolbar. Swipe the toolbar down to hide it and see just the tool youʼre using.
Tap the tool youʼre using to see the toolbar again.
Zoom in. Pinch open so you can sketch the details, then pinch closed to zoom back out.
Tip: Drag two fingers to navigate when youʼre zoomed in.
Scroll through all your sketches in a note. Swipe a sketch left or right with two fingers.
Add another sketch to your note. Tap . Or, if you already have multiple sketches,
swipe your last sketch left with two fingers.
Edit a sketch. Open the note that contains a sketch, then tap the sketch.
Start over. Touch and hold the eraser tool, then tap Erase All.
Organize your notes
3D Touch. To preview a note, press a note in the notes list to get a peek; press a little
deeper to open it. See 3D Touch.
Search for a note. Scroll to the top of the notes list to reveal the search field. If a note is
locked, only its title appears in the search results.
Ask Siri. Say something like: “Show notes from today.”
Sort your notes. Go to Settings > Notes, then choose to sort notes by date edited, date
created, or title.
Search for a specific attachment. Tap
in the lower-left corner of the notes list to see
thumbnails of sketches, photos, links, documents, and other attachments. (You donʼt see
attachments from locked notes.) To go to the note with a specific attachment, touch and
hold the thumbnail of the attachment, then tap Go to Note.
Create a folder to organize your Notes. From the Notes list, tap
to view your folders.
Tap New Folder (at the bottom of the folders list), then name your folder.
Delete a folder. From the Notes list, tap
tap Delete.
Print a note. Tap
to view your folders. Swipe a folder left, then
at the top of the note. For more information about printing, see
AirPrint.
Move notes from one folder or account to another. Swipe the note left in the notes list,
tap Move, then choose the folder or account.
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To move several notes from one folder or account to another, tap Edit in the upper-right
corner of the notes list, tap the notes you want to move, then tap Move To.
Collaborate in Notes
Invite people to view and make edits to notes in your iCloud account, and everyone will
see the latest changes.
Note: You canʼt share a locked note.
Invite friends to share. In a note, tap
, then choose how to send your invitation.
Add people, remove them, or stop sharing a note. In a note youʼve shared, tap
Use notes in multiple accounts
View and edit notes from other accounts (such as Google, Yahoo!, or AOL). Go to
Settings > Notes > Accounts, then add your account. These notes appear in Notes on all
your other iOS devices and Mac computers where youʼre also signed in to that account.
Notes from these accounts canʼt use many the Notes app features.
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Lock notes
Use a single password to lock and unlock notes in your iCloud account or in your On My
iPhone account. On iPhone 5s and later, you can also lock and unlock your notes with
Touch ID (if itʼs enabled).
You can view locked notes that are in your iCloud account on your iOS devices with
iOS 9.3 or later and Mac computers with OS X v10.11.4 or later.
You can lock notes that include images, sketches, maps, and web attachments, but not
other types of attachments like PDFs and iWork documents. You canʼt lock notes that
youʼve shared.
Set Touch ID to unlock your notes. Go to Settings > Notes > Password, then turn on
Use Touch ID (iPhone 5s and later).
Add a lock to a note. In the note, tap
, then tap Lock Note.
When a note is locked, the title remains visible in the notes list.
Unlock your notes. Tap a locked note, tap View Note, then follow the onscreen
instructions.
Unlocking one note unlocks all of your notes until one of the following happens: your
session times out, you tap the lock icon at the top of the screen, you tap Lock Now at the
bottom of the notes list, or you lock your iPhone.
Remove a lock from a note. Tap
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, then tap Remove Lock.
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Change your password. Go to Settings > Notes > Password, then tap Change
Password.
Forgot your password? Go to Settings > Notes > Password, then tap Reset Password.
You canʼt access your locked notes if you forget your password and havenʼt turned on
Touch ID. However, you can set a new password for any notes you want to protect going
forward. For more information, go to the Apple Support article Keep your notes secure
with password-protection.
Import notes from another app to Notes
Import notes from another app. Export the notes from a supported app. Then, with an
Evernote file, for example, touch and hold the exported file attachment (it has a .enex
filename extension) in Mail, then choose Add to Notes. After you import notes, you can
find them in the Imported Notes folder.
For more information, see the Apple Support article Import your notes and files to the
Notes app.
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Reminders
Reminders at a glance
With Reminders you can keep track of all the things you need to do.
3D Touch. To add a reminder from the Home screen, press Reminders, then choose
a quick action. See 3D Touch.
Add a reminder. Tap a blank line in a list.
Share a list using iCloud. While viewing a list, tap Edit, tap Sharing, then tap Add
Person. The people you share with also need to be iCloud users. Anyone who accepts the
invitation can add, delete, and mark items as completed. Family members can also share
a list. See Family Sharing.
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“Remember to take an umbrella”
“Add artichokes to my groceries list”
“Read my work to-do list”
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“Remind me to call my mom at 5”
Set a default list for new reminders. Go to Settings > Reminders.
Delete a list. While viewing a list, tap Edit, then tap Delete List. All of the reminders in
the list are also deleted.
Delete a reminder. Swipe the reminder left, then tap Delete.
Change the order of lists. Touch and hold the list name, then drag the list to a new
location. To change the order of items in a list, tap Edit.
What list was that in? Scroll to the top to see the search field. All lists are searched by
the reminderʼs name.
3D Touch. To set an remindersʼs options, press a reminder, then choose a quick
action. See 3D Touch.
Keep your reminders up to date on other devices. Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn
on Reminders. Some other types of accounts, such as Exchange, also support
Reminders. You can change how reminders in the past are synced in Settings >
Reminders.
With OS X v10.10 or later, you can hand off reminders youʼre editing between your Mac
and iPhone.
Scheduled reminders
Scheduled reminders notify you when theyʼre due.
Ask Siri. Say something like: “Remind me to take my medicine at 6 a.m. tomorrow.”
Schedule a reminder. Swipe a reminder to the left, tap More, then turn on “Remind me
on a day.” Tap Alarm to set the date and time. Tap Repeat to schedule the reminder for
regularly occurring intervals.
Donʼt bother me now. You can turn off Reminders notifications in Settings >
Notifications. To silence notifications temporarily, turn on Do Not Disturb.
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Location reminders
Be reminded when you arrive at or leave a location. Swipe a reminder to the left, tap
More, then turn on “Remind me at a location.” Tap Location, then select a location in the
list, or enter an address. After you define a location, you can drag to change the size of
the geofence on the map, which sets the approximate distance at which you want to be
reminded. You canʼt save a location reminder in Outlook or Microsoft Exchange accounts.
Ask Siri. Say something like: “Remind me to stop at the grocery store when I leave
here.”
Add common locations to your My Info card. When you set a location reminder,
locations in the list include addresses from your My Info card in Contacts. Add your work,
home, and other favorite addresses to your card for easy access in Reminders.
Stocks
Keep track of the major exchanges and your stock portfolio, see the change in value over
time, and get news about the companies youʼre watching.
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Manage your stock list. Tap
Add an item: Tap
Search.
. Enter a symbol, company name, fund name, or index, then tap
3D Touch. Press Stocks on the Home screen, then choose Search. See
3D Touch.
Delete an item: Tap
Rearrange the order of items: Drag
up or down.
While viewing stock info, you can tap any of the values along the right side of the screen
to switch the display to price change, market capitalization, or percentage change. Swipe
the info beneath the stock list to see the summary, chart, or news for the selected stock.
Tap a news headline to view the article in Safari.
On iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6s Plus, or iPhone 7 Plus, use landscape orientation to see your
stock list with news, or with the summary and chart, all at the same time.
You can also see your stocks in Notification Center. See Notifications.
Note: Quotes may be delayed 20 minutes or more, depending upon the reporting
service.
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Add a news article to your reading list. Touch and hold the news headline, then tap
Add to Reading List. To add all news articles to your reading list, tap Add All to Reading
List.
Ask Siri. Say something like:
“How are the markets going?”
“Howʼs Apple stock today?”
Find out more. Tap YAHOO!
View a full-screen chart. Rotate iPhone to landscape orientation. On iPhone 6 Plus,
iPhone 6s Plus, and iPhone 7 Plus, rotate to landscape orientation, then touch the chart
to expand it to full-screen view. Swipe left or right to see your other stock charts.
See the value for a specific date or time: Touch the chart with one finger.
See the difference in value over time: Touch the chart with two fingers.
Use iCloud to keep your stock list up to date. Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on
iCloud. See iCloud.
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Videos
Videos at a glance
Use Videos to watch movies and TV shows on iPhone. In Videos you can also purchase
movies and TV shows from the iTunes Store that can be played on your other devices
where youʼre signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID.
Use the Music app to watch music videos, and use the Podcasts app to watch video
podcasts. To watch videos you record using your iPhone camera, open the Photos app.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss, see Important safety
information.
Watch a video. Tap the video in the list of videos.
Choose where to resume playback. Go to Settings > Videos, tap Start Playing, then
choose From Beginning or Where Left Off.
Choose playback quality. Go to Settings > Video, tap Playback Quality for Wi-Fi (and for
cellular, if youʼve turned on Use Cellular Data), then choose Best Available or Good.
Note: High-quality playback requires a faster Internet connection and uses more data.
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Stream or download? If
appears on a video thumbnail, you can watch the video
without downloading it to iPhone, if you have an Internet connection. To download the
video to iPhone so you can watch without using a Wi-Fi or cellular connection, tap
the video details.
in
To show only the videos that are downloaded to iPhone, go to Settings > Videos, then
turn off Show iTunes Purchases.
Looking for podcasts or iTunes U videos? Open the Podcasts app, or download the
free iTunes U app from the App Store.
Stop playing video automatically. If you often fall asleep while a video plays, open the
Clock app and tap Timer, then swipe to set the number of hours and minutes. Tap When
Timer Ends and choose Stop Playing, tap Set, then tap Start.
Add videos to your library
Buy or rent videos from the iTunes Store. Tap Store in the Videos app, or open
iTunes Store on iPhone, then tap Movies or TV Shows. The iTunes Store isnʼt available in
all areas. See iTunes Store at a glance.
Transfer videos from your computer. Connect iPhone, then sync videos from iTunes on
your computer. See Sync with iTunes.
Stream videos from your computer. To configure video streaming from your computer
to iPhone, turn on Home Sharing in iTunes on your computer. On iPhone, go to Settings >
Videos, then enter the Apple ID and password you used for Home Sharing on your
computer. Open Videos on iPhone, then tap Shared.
Convert a video for iPhone. If you try to sync a video from iTunes on your computer to
iPhone and a message says the video canʼt play on iPhone, you can convert the video.
Select the video in iTunes on your computer, then choose File > Create New Version >
Create iPod or iPhone Version. Then sync the converted video to iPhone.
Delete a video. Tap Edit in the upper right of your collection, then tap
on the video
thumbnail. If you donʼt see the Edit button, look for
on your video thumbnails—those
videos havenʼt been downloaded to iPhone, so you canʼt delete them. To delete an
individual episode of a series, swipe left on the episode in the Episodes list.
Deleting a video (other than a rented movie) from iPhone doesnʼt delete it from the
iTunes library on your computer, and you can sync the video back to iPhone later. If you
donʼt want to sync the video back to iPhone, set iTunes to not sync the video. See Sync
with iTunes.
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