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Quit all apps
Quit all apps










  1. Quit all apps plus#
  2. Quit all apps free#

Haven’t used it in 5 days, and have background app refresh turned off, and it’s eating up 30 percent of my battery life… Honestly I don’t think we should still have to be asking this question in 2017, apple has known about these problems for quite a while now. 5 days later, I’m finally noticing that my battery usage is higher than normal and look in battery statistics and see that in the last 24 hours youtube has consumed 30 percent of my battery life. The Quit Everything command kills all running applications, with any exceptions that you specify. When the youtube app is installed, I can look at one video and then continue on with my day and week. Cleaner apps are dubious at best and will never be able to safely kill system apps. Bring the program you want to quit to the foreground by tapping or clicking on it. However, reality reveals that there are apps such as facebook and youtube and many others, which will use very large amounts of battery when “not running” even with background app refresh turned off. Answer (1 of 10): The only way to do this is to shut down the phone and turn it back on. The little known but very handy ALT + F4 keyboard shortcut performs the same, behind the scenes, program-closing magic that clicking or tapping that X in the top-right of a program window does. There is a myth that force closing is unnecessary based on an overly simplistic understanding of ios’s memory management. When you are looking at the battery usage statistics, you should be able to swipe the youtube app, for example, and check a box that says force quit when not using.

Quit all apps free#

You free up memory and processor time, helping to speed up your iPhone.Īpple should add an ability to the battery screen in settings to check a box for heavy hitting apps to force close them when you hit the home button. If you have a large number of apps running, this method can be much faster than swiping each one up individually to close it. Memory usage after closing all running apps A Helpful Shortcut to Close All Your Apps As you can see, more than a gigabyte of memory has been freed up.

quit all apps

Next, you can see the memory usage after completing the process.

Quit all apps plus#

The first screenshot below shows the memory usage on my iPhone 7 Plus just before I close running apps all at once. It will not quit any apps put in the exceptions array. Since your apps will still show up if you double-press the Home Button, let’s show that this process actually works. That’s because they’ve actually been shut down. Close all apps: Swipe up from the bottom, hold, then let go.

quit all apps

Apps will prompt you to save any unsaved work before they close. From shortcuts Close one app: Swipe up from the bottom, hold, then let go.

quit all apps

However, you will probably notice these apps refresh or relaunch when you tap on them. Quit one, some, or all apps from one tidy spot. If you double-press the Home Button, you’ll still see each of them listed. That’s it, your apps have all been suspended. Next, press and hold the Home Button for approximately five seconds, or until you are returned to either your Lock or Home Screen. To close running apps all at once on your iPhone, get to the Shutdown screen












Quit all apps