How to Set & Use the Accessibility Shortcut on iPhone and iPad
How to Set & Use the Accessibility Shortcut on iPhone and iPad
The Accessibility Shortcut in iOS allows users to quickly enable and use various accessibility features on an iPhone or iPad, giving near instant access from just about anywhere to features like AssistiveTouch, Invert Colors, Color Filters, the Magnifier, Reduce White Point, Smart Invert, VoiceOver, and Zoom. For example, a great usage for the Accessibility Shortcut is to quickly access the , or to toggle Smart Invert on, or to temporarily turn the screen greyscale, or zoom the display to read some text or element that is too small to distinguish without that extra zoom level. There are nine possible Accessibility Shortcut options to choose from in the latest iOS releases, we will show you how to set the Accessibility Shortcut to customize it for your own use, and of course well show you how to use the Accessibility Shortcut on an iPhone and iPad as well. The Accessibility Shortcut can be customized to initiate a single Accessibility feature, or bring up a menu with multiple Accessibility choices. Here is how you can set and customize this capability on an iPhone or iPad: Go ahead and summon the Accessibility Shortcut* to confirm your changes are working as expected. Note that whether you select multiple Accessibility Shortcut options or just a single option, summoning the feature is the same. * Accessing the Accessibility Shortcut differs per iOS device, and whether or not the iPhone or iPad has a Home button or not. For all devices with a Home button, including nearly all iPad and iPhone devices, you in rapid succession to access the Accessibility Shortcut. For devices without a Home button, like iPhone X, you to access the Accessibility shortcut instead. If you have just a single option chosen as the Accessibility Shortcut, then triple-clicking the button will enable that particular Accessibility feature. If you have multiple Accessibility Shortcut options enabled, then triple-clicking the button will trigger a menu: It may be helpful to know that you can also , as well as if you find that the default click speed required isnt working well for you. The Accessibility Shortcut isnt the only way to quickly get to various Accessibility features, and if you find yourself using some with some regularity but not often enough to include it in the Accessibility Shortcut, then you can to have access to those, or also to have access to some other helpful Accessibility features as well, like the ability to increase text size. Its worth mentioning that Mac users arent left out either, where a similar feature exists .
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