User's Manual

Chapter 1 iPhone at a glance 12
<<Illustration below shows a hand applying Force Touch in two stages—pressing and then
pressing rmly.>>
Some examples of Force Touch:
In Photos: Press a thumbnail to get a one-up preview of a photo, then press rmly to go to
one-up view.
In Calendar: Press a date in month view for a preview of week view, then press rmly to go to
week view.
In Maps: Press a pin and a menu appears with Directions, Call, Open Homepage, and
Share Locations.
On Home screen: Press the Clock app icon to Set Alarm.
Turn Force Touch on or o. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Force Touch and then turn
Force Touch on or o.
Buttons
Most of the buttons you use with iPhone are virtual ones on the touchscreen. A few physical
buttons control basic functions, such as turning iPhone on or adjusting the volume.
Sleep/Wake button
When youre not using iPhone, press the Sleep/Wake button to lock iPhone. Locking iPhone puts
the display to sleep, saves the battery, and prevents anything from happening if you touch the
screen. You can still get phone calls, FaceTime calls, text messages, alarms, and notications. You
can also listen to music and adjust the volume.
On iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus, the Sleep/Wake button is on the right side:
Sleep/Wake
button
Sleep/Wake
button
On earlier iPhone models, the Sleep/Wake button is on the top edge:
Sleep/Wake
button
Sleep/Wake
button
iPhone locks automatically if you don’t touch the screen for a minute or so. To adjust the timing,
go to Settings > General > Auto-Lock.
Turn iPhone on. Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the Apple logo appears.
Unlock iPhone. Press either the Sleep/Wake or Home button, then drag the slider.
Apple Confidential
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