Chapter 16. Settings
The Settings app is like the Control Panel in Windows or System Preferences on the Mac. It’s a tweaking center that affects every aspect of the iPhone: the screen, ringtones, email, Web connection, and so on. You scroll the Settings list as you would any iPhone list: by dragging your finger up or down the screen.
Most of the items on the Settings page are doorways to other screens, where you make the actual changes. When you’re finished inspecting or changing the preference settings, you can return to the main Settings screen by tapping the Settings button in the upper-left corner—or jump out of Settings altogether by pressing the Home button.
In this book, you can read about the iPhone’s preference settings in the appropriate spots—wherever they’re relevant. And the Control Center, of course, is designed to eliminate trips into Settings.
But so you’ll have it all in one place, here’s an item-by-item walkthrough of the Settings app and its new structure in iOS 7.
Two New Settings Tricks
The Settings app is many screens deep. You might “drill down” by tapping, for example, General, then Keyboard, then Shortcuts. It’s a lot of tapping, a lot of navigation.
So in iOS 7, you have two kinds of shortcuts.
First, you can jump directly to a particular Settings screen—from within any app—using Siri (Chapter 4). You can say, for example, “Open Sound settings,” “Open Brightness ...
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