Not exact matches
This menu shows a
list of
open tasks overlayed on top of the screen and lets you either switch apps or close an app simply by
swiping it away.
For instance, tapping on the Photo icon
opens a thumbnail collage of your photos, which can be expanded to a thumbnail
list of photos by
swiping left on the collage with your finger.
You double - tap to
open one,
swipe left or right to clear one, or clear all notifications from the bottom of the
list.
In BlackBerry's good - looking — but rarely used — PlayBook OS, you can
swipe up from any page to see a
list of window - like cards for every
open app.
Peeking and
swiping up on the screen will bring up an ad hoc context menu that applies to an app — in Safari a Peek and
swipe will get you a quick menu that lets you
open a site in a new tab, add to reading
list or copy the link.
To disable an app,
open the Settings screen, tap Apps,
swipe over to the All
list, and locate the app.
Edge's taskbar icon now offers jump
list support, so you can right - click or
swipe up on the Edge icon on the taskbar to get quick access to tasks like
opening a new browser window.
While the app boasts a number of features outlined below, its main selling point is the support for a simple
swipe gesture that
opens the
list of your installed -LSB-...]
When you
swipe down from the top of the screen, you will see a
list of all the
open tabs.
Just slide to
open the drawer and
swipe down from the top to reveal a
list of
open apps.
The
swipe action for
opening the app
list is commonly read as a quick tap for going back a step.
Swipe from left to right to scroll through the
list of
open apps.
Users can
swipe up in the Start screen to
open the
list of all apps and
swipe down gesture will bring up a desktop app bar which provides a number of options to share the screen on a projector or to access snap.
The lock screen now includes a full
list of notifications that are actionable — notifications can be
swiped to dismiss them or tapped to
open the relevant apps.
But
swiping right from the app's main screen (camera) now
opens a
list of your contacts and conversations, and with another
swipe to the right, you can initiate a text chat.
Swiping in on the bottom - right side opens up a list of running apps, swiping up on any of them individually closes them — just as it does on othe
Swiping in on the bottom - right side
opens up a
list of running apps,
swiping up on any of them individually closes them — just as it does on othe
swiping up on any of them individually closes them — just as it does on other OSes.
Tap to go home,
swipe to the right to look at the
list of
open apps and
swipe to the left to go back.
A
swipe from the right - hand side of the device
opens the apps menu for instant access, with the most recently used apps at the top of the
list.
What makes Action Launcher unique is its sliding panels;
swiping in from the left pulls in a vertically scrolling app
list, eliminating the need for an app drawer icon taking up precious home screen space, and
swiping in from the right
opens a drawer that holds additional apps and widgets.
The first step is to
open the Settings app by
swiping right - to - left at the Start screen and finding the app in the alphabetical apps
list.
A simple
swipe opens the app
list.
While the app boasts a number of features outlined below, its main selling point is the support for a simple
swipe gesture that
opens the
list of your installed apps.