Ever since its appearance in Android Pie, I always consider 2 button navigation is a bad attempt by Google trying to play catch-up with the fad generated by the iPhone X. However, due to a bug with A13 QPR2 it had to be temporarily removed and many were not happy about this. So, 2 button navigation users, may I ask why do you prefer this method? To me it makes you do more for the same action whilst doesn’t save any screen space.

  • Max-P
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    941 year ago

    I’ve switched to purely gesture navigation and never looked back. Wouldn’t surprise me if they’d remove 2 button too eventually.

    Never understood 2 button navigation, it’s just a lot of wasted space for just 2 buttons. Gimme 3-4-5 buttons to do useful stuff if you’re gonna use the space.

    • Never_Sm1leOP
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      171 year ago

      I felt the same. 3 button do the job quicker (a single tap to get what you want) but occupy a part of the screen. Gesture makes you do more but give you back the screen estate. 2 button seems to combine the downside without offering anything advantageous.

      • Max-P
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        131 year ago

        I also find the back gesture to be surprisingly convenient. It’s easier to reach, in part because you can reach it from anywhere on either side of the screen. And the gestures from the bottom lets you go back/forward an app, home and also all of the recent apps. And also assistant or an app of your choice by swiping from the bottom corners.

        Plus, on top of that, on LineageOS you can also bind a custom action for a second stage for the back gesture if you swipe it further away, like kill app or go back to the previous app. And left/right side from the top for notifications/quick settings, and swipe at the top for brightness.

        Zero pixels used for what, 9 different actions? It’s pretty sweet!

        • Never_Sm1leOP
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          41 year ago

          Yeah it’s small, but a few phones got burn in from it (my cousin’s LG V30 is one example). Personally I use 3 button on a LCD screen so that’s not a problem for me.

            • @NightOwl@lemmy.one
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              11 year ago

              I don’t feel like testing it out on my own device, since haven’t had one that hasn’t gotten burn in yet. Especially with how expensive phones have gotten that I’ll be using it beyond the usual two year upgrade path.

    • @Die4Ever@programming.dev
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      161 year ago

      Dedicated buttons for copy, paste, and undo would be amazing. I don’t think Android has good support for undo though, it would be cool to undo accidental swipes like when you accidentally swipe away a notification, or if you accidentally tap the space around a dialog box and it disappears

      • @Bop@lemmy.film
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        51 year ago

        Agreed! I’ve thought this for a while. It’s crazy that iPhone still doesn’t have a back button, and it blows me away that neither iOS nor Android have undo or redo.

        • @iod@lemmy.ml
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          31 year ago

          Ios kinda does have undo via a shake but you could also say it’s not discoverable, slow and awkward. No idea if Android has anything system and not app-lvl though.

      • @portside
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        21 year ago

        I was on Lollipop and had root, I had next and previous music buttons on either side, good times

    • @portside
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      11 year ago

      I want to use gesture navigation without giving up my favorite launcher. Too bad I can never full enjoy it.

        • @portside
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          11 year ago

          Oh, I thought you were talking about system navigation gestures. I am using KISS launcher

  • Carighan Maconar
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    111 year ago

    I will be honest, it’s been three phones since I had one that even still showed the option.

    It’s all either the full 3-button nav, or the proper gesture navigation. 2-button was this hybrid Google did very briefly, but luckily it’s gone now.

  • @UESPA_Sputnik@lemmy.world
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    101 year ago

    I’m not using two-button navigation but there was one nice thing it did in Android 9: you could flip the pill to the right and hold it to scroll through open apps until you’ve reached the app you wanted to switch to (or move your finger left/right to scroll in that direction), and only then lift the finger.

    Unfortunately that only worked in Android 9. In Android 10 you could only swipe to the very next app. Not sure why they butchered that carousel navigation; probably to bring it in line with full gesture navigation.

  • danielfgom
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    91 year ago

    For Android power users like the people on this community, gestures are a no brainer. However for your average user they are undiscoverable and not easy to use. Especially for middle aged and older users.

    Hence Samsung uses the 2/3 butto layout by default. My wife is 45 years old and can’t use gestures so she’s using the 3 buttons.

    So is every other middle aged+ person I know.

  • kratoz29
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    51 year ago

    I never understood it either.

    I moved from iPhone 6s to my current phone, a Poco F2 Pro, so it was a no brainer to go with Full Screen Gestures for me since iOS always has been gesture based (regardless of my device having a physical home button).

    I think I made the jump when A10 was a thing, so I briefly tried the Android buttons and I wasn’t a fan, sadly IT IS YET the only way to have a third party launcher working with nice animations, because Android broke the animations since A11 if I remember correctly.

    Every time when I am in a mood to try another Launcher that ain’t a stock launcher or Pixel Launcher I go back to the Android buttons, but never to the two buttons.

  • Nate
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    1 year ago

    I still have a half working version modded into my Pixel 7 Pro. I like the gesture to go home, but I prefer having a back button because with gesture navigation I can’t use the pullout menus.

    For recents (what’s broken, I have to go to the home screen first before I can pull it up) I use it much less frequently and would rather a half swipe to activate.

    I really hope the bug gets patched, but I’m expecting it to stop working entirely in Android 14

    EDIT; Saw another comment mention the slide on the bottom bar to switch apps, which I also use much more frequently than the recents gesture

    • glibg10b
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      11 year ago

      with gesture navigation I can’t use the pullout menus

      You can. Just tap and hold the edge of the screen

      • Nate
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        31 year ago

        Huh, didn’t know that. Not the most elegant solution though

      • Nate
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        11 year ago

        Been using gesture nav for a few days and man this is jank. Many times holding the edge activates a long press action on something on the screen. Worst offender being discord. Only reason I’m still using it is that I’m sure I’m going to lose 2 button nav here in the next update or so.

        • glibg10b
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          1 year ago

          I’ve been using it for years and never have issues with it. I guess it just takes some getting used to

          • Nate
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            11 year ago

            Most likely, I did some more research into it last night and apparently a two finger swipe or a 45 degree swipe will activate the bar more reliably, both of which are a bit obnoxious. I’m sticking with it for now, we’ll see how it goes!

            • glibg10b
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              11 year ago

              I personally swipe up/down then away from the edge

  • WEAPONX
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    21 year ago

    I’m using Oneplus’s gesture navigation. I like it because it allows easier one-handed use on huge and unwieldy phones.

    • @Psythik@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I miss the gesture navigation in my OnePlus 6T. Samsung’s gestures are jank. Always activating the back gesture when I don’t want it to, and not activating it when I want it to. It likes to get in the way of things that are on the sides of my screen. I can’t even scroll through my photos to upload one in Google Messages without the damn thing trying to go back instead. Have to do it carefully and slowly.

      Still better than touchscreen button navigation, though. (Bring back physical buttons!)

      • ImaginaryFox
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        31 year ago

        Try one hand operation + in good lock. Currently my favorite gesture system, since I don’t even have to reach down and can activate multiple actions from the side.

        • @Psythik@lemm.ee
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          11 year ago

          Will do. I don’t utilize Good Lock as much as I should. Thanks for the suggestion.

          • ImaginaryFox
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            21 year ago

            Tip I have is to adjust the angles to one that makes it feel most consistent to you for the up and down gestures. You can also set up long swipes too for where if you swipe a little further until you feel a haptics you can have it do stuff like make it show a mini quick tools so you don’t have to reach up and pull the status bar down to access them.

            It’s pretty useful and you can have it behave differently for the left and right side so have lot of different actions available.

  • @lemmyuser100002@lemmy.world
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    11 year ago

    It was nice because it was distinct from Apple’s implementation and worked with drawers. It felt like for Android 10, they polled a bunch of already-familiar iOS users to see what gestures felt right.