User's Manual

Appendix A Accessibility 145
Three-nger tap: Speak additional information, such as position within a list or whether text
is selected.
Four-nger tap at top of screen: Select the rst item on the page.
Four-nger tap at bottom of screen: Select the last item on the page.
Activate
Double-tap: Activate the selected item.
Triple-tap: Double-tap an item.
Split-tap: As an alternative to selecting an item and double-tapping to activate it, touch an
item with one nger, and then tap the screen with another.
Double-tap and hold (1 second) + standard gesture: Use a standard gesture. The double-tap
and hold gesture tells iPhone to interpret the next gesture as standard. For example, you can
double-tap and hold, and then without lifting your nger, drag your nger to slide a switch.
Two-nger double-tap: Answer or end a call. Play or pause in Music, Videos, Voice Memos, or
Photos. Take a photo in Camera. Start or pause recording in Camera or Voice Memos. Start or
stop the stopwatch.
Two-nger double-tap and hold: Change an item’s label to make it easier to nd.
Two-nger triple-tap: Open the Item Chooser.
Three-nger double-tap: Mute or unmute VoiceOver.
Three-nger triple-tap: Turn the screen curtain on or o.
Use the VoiceOver rotor
Use the rotor to choose what happens when you swipe up or down with VoiceOver turned on, or
to select special input methods such as Braille Screen Input or Handwriting.
Operate the rotor. Rotate two ngers on the screen around a point between them.
Choose rotor options. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Rotor, then select
the options you want to include in the rotor.
The available rotor options and their eects depend on what you’re doing. For example, if you’re
reading an email, you can use the rotor to switch between speaking text word-by-word or
character-by-character when you swipe up or down. If you’re browsing a webpage, you can set
the rotor to speak all text (word-by-word or character-by-character), or to jump to the next item
of a certain type, such as a header or link.
When you use an Apple Wireless Keyboard to control VoiceOver, you can use the rotor to adjust
settings such as volume, speech rate, use of pitch or phonetics, typing echo, and reading of
punctuation. See Use VoiceOver with an Apple Wireless Keyboard on page 148.
Use the onscreen keyboard
When you activate an editable text eld, the onscreen keyboard appears (unless you have an
Apple Wireless Keyboard attached).
Activate a text eld. Select the text eld, then double-tap. The insertion point and the onscreen
keyboard appear.
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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