Apple 2 Benutzerhandbuch

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Appendix A    
Accessibility 
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Perform a multi-finger swipe or drag. Tap the menu button, then tap Device, More, then 
Gestures. Tap the number of digits needed for the gesture. When the corresponding circles 
appear on the screen, swipe or drag in the direction required by the gesture. When you finish, 
tap the menu button.
Perform a pinch gesture. Tap the menu button, tap Favorites, and then tap Pinch. When the 
pinch circles appear, touch anywhere on the screen to move the pinch circles, then drag the 
pinch circles in or out to perform a pinch gesture. When you finish, tap the menu button.
Create your own gesture. You can add your own favorite gestures to the control menu (for 
example, tap and hold or two-finger rotation). Tap the menu button, tap Favorites, then tap an 
empty gesture placeholder. Or go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch >  
Create New Gesture.
Example 1:  To create the rotation gesture, go to Settings > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch > 
Create New Gesture. On the gesture recording screen that prompts you to touch to create a 
gesture, rotate two fingers on the iPad screen around a point between them. If it doesn’t turn 
out quite right, tap Cancel and try again. When it looks right, tap Save and give the gesture 
a name—maybe “Rotate 90.” Then, to rotate the view in Maps, for example, open Maps, tap 
the AssistiveTouch menu button, and choose Rotate 90 from Favorites. When the blue circles 
representing the starting finger positions appear, drag them to point around which you want to 
rotate the map, then release. You might want to create several gestures with different degrees 
of rotation.
Example 2:  Let’s create the touch and hold gesture that you use to start rearranging icons on 
your Home screen. This time, on the gesture recording screen, hold down your finger in one spot 
until the recording progress bar reaches halfway, then lift your finger. Be careful not to move 
your finger during recording, or the gesture will be recorded as a drag. Tap Save and name the 
gesture. To use the gesture, tap the AssistiveTouch menu botton and choose your gesture from 
Favorites. When the blue circle representing your touch appears, drag it over a Home screen icon 
and release.
Lock or rotate the screen, adjust iPad volume, or simulate shaking iPad. Tap the menu button, 
then tap Device.
Simulate pressing the Home button. Tap the menu button, then tap Home.
Move the menu button. Drag it anywhere along the edge of the screen.
Exit a menu without performing a gesture. Tap anywhere outside the menu. To return to the 
previous menu, tap the arrow in the middle of the menu.
Widescreen keyboards
All built-in iPad apps show a larger onscreen keyboard when you rotate iPad to landscape view. 
You can also type using an Apple Wireless Keyboard.
Accessibility in OS X
Take advantage of the accessibility features in OS X when you use iTunes to sync information and 
content from your iTunes library to iPad. In the Finder, choose Help > Help Center, then search for 
“accessibility.”
For more information about iPad and OS X accessibility features, go to