MobileNews

Android 12 DP1: Navigation gestures now work instantly in fullscreen apps

Navigation gestures in Android 10 and beyond have been controversial from day one, and years after it started, Google is still tweaking the formula. In Android 12, navigation gestures now work instantly if you’re using a fullscreen app.

This tweak, noticed by the folks over at Android Police, allows the navigation gestures for back and home to work with just one swipe instead of two. In Android 10 and Android 11, fullscreen apps temporarily disable those swipes, meaning you’ll need to swipe twice; once to enable the gesture, and the second to perform it.

Notably, this might not work for all apps, but it’s a mostly appreciated change in the ones that do support it. Google Photos is perhaps the best example of how this should work. When viewing photos in fullscreen, navigation gestures just work as normal even if the navigation bar is hidden. YouTube, on the other hand, doesn’t support this properly, still requiring two swipes to use the gestures. Twitter is in the same boat with navigation gestures on Android 12 behaving exactly like older versions as seen below.

This definitely fixes a frustrating quirk of Android’s otherwise pretty great navigation gestures. Of course, given that it looks like apps will need to opt in to this… it might be a bit until we can use it consistently.

More on Android 12:


Check out the latest Samsung phones at great prices from Gizmofashion – our recommended retail partner.


Author: Ben Schoon
Source: 9TO5Google

Related posts
AI & RoboticsNews

Anthropic scientists expose how AI actually ‘thinks’ — and discover it secretly plans ahead and sometimes lies

AI & RoboticsNews

ChatGPT gets smarter: OpenAI adds internal data referencing

AI & RoboticsNews

The TAO of data: How Databricks is optimizing  AI LLM fine-tuning without data labels

Cleantech & EV'sNews

The Nissan LEAF is all grown up and better than ever: Here's our first look at the new EV

Sign up for our Newsletter and
stay informed!