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On iPhone and iPad, Apple's screen recording feature records a video of what you're doing on your screen, which is great if you want to capture gameplay, walk someone through a tutorial in an app, demonstrate a bug, or anything else. You can also include a voiceover in screen recordings. Keep reading to learn how.

iPhone-Home-Screen-Gradient.jpg

If you're making a screen recording to demonstrate something in iOS, chances are it would benefit from some voiceover commentary. Fortunately, Apple enables you to do this by activating your device's microphone for the duration of the recording.

To record your voice along with screen activity, simply follow these steps.
  1. Invoke the Control Center by swiping down diagonally from the top-right corner of the screen.
  2. Long press the Screen Recording button in Control Center (if it isn't there, you can add the function via Settings -> Control Center).
    screen-recording-voiceover1.jpg

    Tap the Microphone button so that it turns red and reads "Microphone On."
  3. Select an app from the list that you want to save the recording to.
    When you're ready, tap Start Recording.
    screen-recording-voiceover2.jpg
You can end the recording by tapping the Stop button in the top-left corner of the screen (if your iPhone has a Dynamic Island, tap it to reveal the Stop button), and the recording will be automatically saved to the app that you checked in the app list.

Article Link: Give Your iPhone Screen Recording a Voiceover
 
Don't know why everytime my iPhone is turned off and then turned on again (for example after updating the iOS) it automatically turns off the Screen Recording's Microphone button against my will.
 
That is a great tip about a very hidden feature!

And, wow – this is the first time I've ever heard of the gesture to invoke Control Center interpreted as a diagonal swipe from the upper-right corner as opposed to a vertical swipe down from the upper-right status cluster. I wonder what the code is actually detecting.
 
I think it is just showing how to invoke Control Center. The app it is pointing to is irrelevant.
Correct. But it also took me a second to realize that the step had nothing to do with Tot. Also, I've never had to swipe diagonally to invoke Command Center; straight down has always worked. A stubby shorter arrow that stops just below the battery indicator might've been better.
 
That is a great tip about a very hidden feature!

And, wow – this is the first time I've ever heard of the gesture to invoke Control Center interpreted as a diagonal swipe from the upper-right corner as opposed to a vertical swipe down from the upper-right status cluster. I wonder what the code is actually detecting.

It's not detecting anything different from a swipe down. Perhaps the author of this article thought it was nice to point out, but a diagonal swipe is actually the same as a swipe down.
 
To add to this tip, if you have no script or haven't rehearsed your actions, do as many takes as you need to get the narrated demo right. It is extremely easy to crop the video in Photos app.
 
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Correct. But it also took me a second to realize that the step had nothing to do with Tot. Also, I've never had to swipe diagonally to invoke Command Center; straight down has always worked. A stubby shorter arrow that stops just below the battery indicator might've been better.
Agreed, doing it diagonally is probably not the best instruction. Doing it that way on my iPad brings in the app I last used with slide over. It has to be a straight down swipe on there or it doesn’t work.
 
Does anyone know how to reduce the file size of a screen recording on iPhone/iPad? I don’t always need a recording to be super clear, so a slight reduction in quality to keep the file small would be nice.
 
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