Accessibility shortcut, Voiceover, 127 accessibility shortcut 127 voiceover – Apple iPhone iOS 7.1 User Manual

Page 127: Accessibility, Shortcut, Voiceover basics

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Appendix A

Accessibility

127

Accessibility Shortcut

Use the Accessibility Shortcut. Press the Home button quickly three times to turn any of these
features on or off:

VoiceOver

Zoom

Invert Colors

Hearing Aid Control (if you have paired hearing aids)

Guided Access (The shortcut starts Guided Access if it’s already turned on. See

Guided

Access

on page 141.)

Switch Control

AssistiveTouch

Choose the features you want to control. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Accessibility
Shortcut and select the accessibility features you use.
Not so fast. To slow down the triple-click speed, go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
Home-click Speed.

VoiceOver

VoiceOver describes aloud what appears onscreen, so you can use iPhone without seeing it.

VoiceOver tells you about each item on the screen as you select it. The VoiceOver cursor
(a rectangle) encloses the item and VoiceOver speaks its name or describes it.

Touch the screen or drag your finger over it to hear the items on the screen. When you select
text, VoiceOver reads the text. If you turn on Speak Hints, VoiceOver may tell you the name of the
item and provide instructions—for example, “double-tap to open.” To interact with items, such as
buttons and links, use the gestures described in

Learn VoiceOver gestures

on page 130.

When you go to a new screen, VoiceOver plays a sound, then selects and speaks the first item
on the screen (typically in the upper-left corner). VoiceOver also lets you know when the display
changes to landscape or portrait orientation, and when the screen becomes locked or unlocked.

Note: VoiceOver speaks in the language specified in International settings, which may be
influenced by the Region Format setting in Settings > General > International. VoiceOver is
available in many languages, but not all.

VoiceOver basics

Important:

VoiceOver changes the gestures you use to control iPhone. When VoiceOver is on,

you must use VoiceOver gestures to operate iPhone—even to turn VoiceOver off.
Turn VoiceOver on or off. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, or use the
Accessibility Shortcut. See

Accessibility Shortcut

on page 127.

Explore. Drag your finger over the screen. VoiceOver speaks each item you touch. Lift your finger
to leave an item selected.

Select an item: Tap it, or lift your finger while dragging over it.

Select the next or previous item: Swipe right or left with one finger. Item order is left-to-right,
top-to-bottom.

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