Читать книгу iPad and iPad Pro For Dummies - Paul McFedries - Страница 28

Basic Training

Оглавление

IN THIS CHAPTER

Mastering multitouch

Cutting, copying, and pasting

Multitasking with your iPad

Spotlighting the search feature

By now you know that the iPad you hold in your hands is very different from other computers.

You also know that the iPad is rewriting the rule book for mainstream computing. How so? For starters, iPads don’t come with a mouse or any other kind of pointing device. They lack traditional computing ports or connectors, such as USB. And they have no physical or built-in keyboard, though Apple will sell you a Smart Keyboard accessory for recent iPad models.

iPads even differ from other so-called tablet PCs, some of which feature a pen or stylus and let you write in digital ink. As I point out (pun intended) in Chapter 1, the iPad relies on an input device that you always have with you: your finger. Okay, some iPads can use Apple Pencil and other styluses, but what makes an iPad so powerful is that a stylus is optional.

If you own an iPhone, you already have a gigantic start in figuring out how to master the iPad multitouch method of navigating the interface with your fingers. If you’ve been using iOS 15, you have an even bigger head start. You have my permission to skim the rest of this chapter, but I urge you to stick around anyway because some aspects of iPadOS work in subtly different ways than iOS on the iPhone. If you’re a total novice, don’t fret. Nothing about multitouch is painful.

iPad and iPad Pro For Dummies

Подняться наверх