iPad&iPhone user

How to use a mouse with your iPad or iPhone

Apple greatly improved the experience of using a Bluetooth mouse – less so a wired on. Leif Johnson reports

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When Apple introduced iPadOS 13.4, hooking up a mouse to your iPad became a lot simpler than it was when iPadOS 13 first dropped, and the overall experience has improved, as well. And at long last, you can hook up Apple’s own Magic Mouse 2 without diving deep into the Settings app or worrying about support dropping after iPadOS updates. Here we’ll show you how.

SET UP A BLUETOOTH MOUSE ON AN iPAD OR iPHONE

The easiest way to use a mouse with your iPad is to set it up with

Bluetooth. Any old Bluetooth mouse should work. Before iPadOS 13.4, you had to dig in the Accessibil­ity menu in order to pair some specific Bluetooth mice, but now you can do it straight through the regular Bluetooth interface.

First, make sure the Bluetooth mouse you want to use is unpaired with any Mac or PC. On the Mac, you can do this by going to the Settings app on your Mac, pressing Bluetooth, and then right-clicking on your mouse in the list you see. Click Remove and the mouse will unpair.

When you’re ready to pair the device with your iPad, make sure you have Bluetooth turned on, and then set your mouse to pairing mode.

1. Go to the Settings app.

2. Press Bluetooth.

3. Make sure Bluetooth is toggled on at the top. (The toggle will be green.) 4. Put your mouse into pairing mode. If your Magic Mouse 2 is unpaired, you should simply have to turn it off and on again for it to show up.

5. You should see your device appear under a header in the Bluetooth interface called Other Devices. 6. Press the name of your device. 7. You might get a ‘Bluetooth Pairing Request.’ If you do, press Pair.

Your mouse should immediatel­y start working. You’ll know it’s working if you can see the new circular pointer moving around the screen.

You can customize your mouse experience by going to Settings > General > Trackpad & Mouse. There you can change the tracking speed and choose whether the ‘Secondary Click’ (right-click) will be on the right or the left. You can also turn off Apple’s ‘Natural Scrolling’, which I’ve personally never found natural.

SET UP A WIRED MOUSE ON YOUR iPAD

You can also use a wired mouse with your iPad, but the set-up is considerab­ly more awkward than it is with Bluetooth. For one thing, you’re going to have a hard time hooking up anything besides a generic optical mouse to anything below the iPad Pro and you’ll likely get a message like the one shown opposite.

For another, you’re going to need to buy the USB-A to Lightning dongle (£29 from fave.co/3bNsbww) before you can hook up most standard wired mice to iPhones and older and lowerend iPads. If you have a 2018 iPad Pro, you’ll need the USB-A to USB-C dongle (£17 from fave.co/3hfYsh2). Once you’ve attached the dongle to

your mouse, you should just be able to plug it in and it will start working – at least if you’re on an iPad Pro.

If you’re on a weaker iPad, you might see the warning above unless you’re working on a weak, rinky-dink mouse like the HP N18ROU. That was the only model I had on hand that I could get to work on the latest iPad mini. As with Bluetooth mice, you can change the tracking speed, the ‘Secondary Click’, and turn off Natural Scrolling by going to Settings > General > Trackpad & Mouse.

SET UP A WIRED MOUSE ON AN IPHONE

You still have to use the comparativ­ely awkward pre-iOS 13.4 method of setting up a mouse on iOS if you want to use one with your iPhone. You’ll almost certainly need a USB-A to Lightning dongle for any iOS 13-compatible iPhone, and based on my tests with several different mice, only the most basic mice will work – even on a powerhouse like the iPhone 11 Pro. Once you’ve hooked up your dongle and plugged the mouse into your iPhone:

1. Open the Settings app.

2. Scroll down to Accessibil­ity and press it.

3. Press the Touch section.

4. In the next menu, you should see a menu item for AssistiveT­ouch at the top. It will likely read Off. Press it.

You’ll then go to another menu. Turn on AssistiveT­ouch through the toggle at the top. It’ll turn green if it’s on.

After this, your wired mouse should start working, so long as it’s basic enough to avoid the warning we saw in the iPad section. Again, you can change the tracking speed, the ‘Secondary Click’, and turn off Natural Scrolling by going to Settings > General > Trackpad & Mouse.

Since Assistive Touch is now on, you may see a circular menu that stays on every screen, and which includes shortcuts to features like the Control Centre or Siri. To hide it, you can go to Settings > Accessibil­ity > Touch > AssistiveT­ouch and then untoggle Always Show Menu. Even if you take this step, the menu will stay visible if you disconnect the mouse. To make it vanish, you’ll have to turn off AssistiveT­ouch by redoing the numbered steps above.

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