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Apple in iOS 17 introduced a range of small features and tweaks that make using the iPhone a better, and more intuitive experience. There are minor but notable changes to the keyboard, which is a key part of the operating system.

iOS-17-General-Keyboard-Feature.jpg

This guide highlights everything new with the keyboard and keyboard-related features.

Autocorrect

The machine learning technology that Apple is using for autocorrect has been improved in iOS 17. Apple says it has adopted a "transformer language model," that will better personalize autocorrect to each user. It is able to learn your personal preferences and word choices to be more useful to you.

iOS-17-Autocorrect-Feature.jpg

After using iOS 17 for a few weeks, most users will notice that the autocorrect suggestions are much better at predicting what you want to say and presenting words for you to tap to autofill. When you use acronyms, shortened words, slang words, and colloquialisms, autocorrect is not as aggressive with the automatic correcting, but it is still able to correct accidental typos.

On stage, Apple's Craig Federighi humorously said that the iPhone would no longer swap in "ducking" for a certain swear word that you actually meant to type. The new engine still makes mistakes, but most users should find that it is improved compared to iOS 16.

Correcting Autocorrect

When autocorrect changes a word, there is now a blue line underneath the corrected word that you can tap. Tapping the blue line shows the original word that you typed, and you can tap it to choose that instead. If there are other possible autocorrect options for what you typed, those will also be displayed.

autocorrect-underline-ios-17.jpg

The functionality is useful for when autocorrect does correct something that you did not want fixed because it takes just a tap to revert rather than having to retype the word.

Word Autofill

Some word suggestions now pop up in line when you are typing, and you can tap on the space bar to insert them. If you start typing "Didn't" for example, the iPhone will offer 't as an autofill option after you type "didn," so that you can just tap on the space bar rather than continuing to spell out the word.

ios-17-word-autofill.jpg

It makes for quicker typing, and this is a function that gets better as you use iOS 17 more often.

Sentence Autofill

The word autofill feature that makes suggestions inline also works for entire sentences in some cases, so you can type what you need with just a tap or two of the space bar.

Better Grammar Correction

After you finish typing a sentence, if you've used a word wrong or have another grammar error in what you've written, the iPhone will let you know by highlighting the mistake. You can tap on it to see suggested corrections.

ios-17-grammar-correction.jpg

As an example, if you write a sentence and accidentally swap "affect" for "effect," the iPhone can tell and will suggest the word you should be using instead, or in some cases, just correct it. This is true for then/than, they're/their/there, two/to/too, your/you're, its/it's, and other common grammatical errors. iOS 16 corrected some of these issues, but iOS 17 does more.

Dictation

The Dictation feature built into the iPhone has been updated with the same transformer language model that Apple is using for text, so dictation should be able to better suss out what you're attempting to say when there are multiple word options.

Dictation is still far from perfect in our testing, and it does take some time to get better.

Stickers as Emoji

Emoji are an integral part of the keyboard, and in iOS 17, stickers and emoji have been merged. If you tap on the emoji icon on the keyboard, it will bring up emoji and also all of your stickers. The end result is that you can use stickers in more places across the operating system, and in the Messages app, emoji can be used like stickers and can be placed anywhere.

ios-17-emoji-sticker-keyboard.jpg

Read More

More information on all of the new features in the iOS 17 update can be found in our iOS 17 roundup.

Article Link: iOS 17: What's New With Autocorrect, Dictation and the Keyboard
 
Last edited:

polyphenol

macrumors 68000
Sep 9, 2020
1,948
2,323
Wales
I often discuss two medicines: levothyroxine and liothyronine.

The first is in the standard dictionary. The second I added.

If I type them correctly, no problem. But almost any mistake I make in typing liothyronine sees it replaced by levothyroxine.

IOS and macOS. And very annoying.

Is this going to fix it?
 

vinegarshots

macrumors 6502a
Sep 24, 2018
952
1,318
It does seem to work better so far, except these changes don't seem to be universal to the gesture/swipe typing. It would be nice if it underlined corrected words when swiping, but it doesn't seem to do that, and still corrects things you had previously typed without any visual cue that it did so.
 

Shirasaki

macrumors P6
May 16, 2015
15,911
11,280
I often discuss two medicines: levothyroxine and liothyronine.

The first is in the standard dictionary. The second I added.

If I type them correctly, no problem. But almost any mistake I make in typing liothyronine sees it replaced by levothyroxine.

IOS and macOS. And very annoying.

Is this going to fix it?
Nah. There’s no reason for them to care such minuscule detail.
 
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