Learn how to open and edit files in Google Docs using your mobile phone (Google Docs for iOS or Google Docs for Android). This short 3-minute video shows how to open, close, add text, format, and use the phone’s keyboard or an external keyboard. Narrated by the author of the top-selling Google Drive & Docs In 30 Minutes.
Find out how to correct spelling mistakes before you print or share a letter, report, or any other document in Google Docs. This video is narrated by Ian Lamont, author of Google Drive & Docs In 30 Minutes.
Learn how to add a new row to your spreadsheet, using the new Google Sheets interface released in 2015. This Google Sheets tutorial is about one minute long, and is narrated by Ian Lamont, author of the top-selling Google Drive & Docs In 30 Minutes (2nd Edition).
Want to create a company letterhead or a more professional-looking invoice in Google Docs? In this quick video, learn how to add, delete, and modify a graphic logo in the Google Docs header, including resizing the logo and changing its position. This video is narrated by Ian Lamont, author of Google Drive & Docs In 30 Minutes.
How to convert an MS Word .docx or .doc document to a PDF for free, using the new Google Drive interface. It’s a three-step process, but it’s relatively quick and avoids using Adobe Acrobat or spammy online services. This tutorial uses the new Google Drive/Google Docs interface, introduced in 2015. This Google Drive tutorial is narrated by Ian Lamont, author of the top-selling technology guides Google Drive & Docs In 30 Minutes, Excel Basics In 30 Minutes, and Twitter In 30 Minutes. Leave questions in the comments, and the author will try to answer them to the best of his ability!
If the virtual keyboard on your phone is difficult to use with the Google Docs mobile app, and you don’t want to use voice-to-text dictation features of Android or iOS, you have the option of pairing a Bluetooth keyboard to your phone.
Bluetooth is a short-range wireless technology that lets people wirelessly connect their phones to other computers or accessories. Bluetooth keyboards are inexpensive and lightweight, and can easily fit into a briefcase or small backpack. For the Google Docs mobile app on an iPhone or Android phone, serious typing is only possible with a bluetooth keyboard.
After turning on Bluetooth on your Phone (via Settings > Bluetooth) and charging the keyboard, follow the manufacturer’s instructions to pair it to your phone using a special on-screen code. This only needs to be done once; afterwards the phone will automatically detect the keyboard as long as the phone’s Bluetooth is activated and the keyboard has power. The following video shows how to pair a bluetooth keyboard to an iPad running a recent version of iOS:
You can then use the keyboard to type email or use other applications, including productivity apps such as Microsoft Word, Google Docs, PowerPoint, and more. I have heard of students who can’t afford a computer using their phone and a Bluetooth keyboard to complete reports and other homework assignments using Google Docs!
If you have never owned a touch-screen device, entering text into the Google mobile apps (including Google Docs for iOS) will seem strange at first. Instead of a tiny physical keyboard (like the BlackBerry) letters and words are entered on the iPhone’s screen using a tiny virtual keyboard. The touch screen can also be used to select, copy, and paste.
Step-by-step instructions on how to use these features are shown below. Once you get the hang of it, the touch screen will seem like second nature.
How to use the iPhone’s virtual keyboard
Tapping your finger in any area that allows text input (including the cells in Google Sheets, the composition field in Google Docs, or the name field on any of the iOS apps) brings up a virtual keyboard, which covers the bottom third of the screen.
If you have never used a touch screen keyboard before, it will be awkward at first. To type a single letter, a light tap is all it takes. As you type the letter, a tiny square displays the letter being typed right above the key. This is a visual confirmation that you are typing the correct key.
Other keyboard functions include:
- Deleting a letter. Press the gray Delete button on the right side of the keyboard.
- Make a letter uppercase. Tap the shift key (upward-pointing arrow highlighted in the image below) once and then tap the letter.
- Tap the shift button once. It will change from gray to white, and the letters will change from lowercase to uppercase.
- Shift-lock. Double-tap the shift key. It turns white, and the arrow is underlined. Tap it again to switch back to lowercase mode.
- Add basic punctuation or numbers. Tap the “123” key once, which brings up the numbers keyboard (see screenshot, above).
- Add advanced punctuation and numerical operators. From the numbers keyboard, tap the “#+=” button.
- Emoji and international keyboards. Tap the globe or emoji icon next to the space bar.
How to place the cursor to add or delete text
To place a cursor on another part of the screen (for instance, to add or delete text in the middle of the sentence) follow these instructions:
- Hold your finger on the place on the screen where you want to place the cursor.
- A magnifying glass appears under your finger, showing the text and the placement of the cursor (see image, below). Move your finger down slightly to get a better view, but don’t let go.
- Move to the left or right to move the cursor.
- When the cursor is placed where you want it, lift your finger.
- Add or delete text as needed using the keyboard.
How to copy and paste text
It is also possible to select a word or phrase. Tap and briefly hold a word. The word will be highlighted, with two handles on either side and a menu above:
- Pull the handles to increase the size of the highlighted text, or select All.
- Copy or cut the text (you can paste it somewhere else later by double-tapping where you want to insert the text).
- Tap the arrow to see other options, which may include formatting and inserting photos into emails.