For years,Horned Japanese Female College Student: Pleasure Share House one of the biggest criticisms of Snapchat has been that the app's intentionally unintuitive design makes it difficult to use, particularly for new users. While longtime users are well-acquainted with the app's swipe-based interface and other quirks, it could be difficult for newcomers (and, let's be honest, older users) to grasp.
Some of that is now changing.
Earlier this week, Snapchat officially rolled out its latest update, which added a search bar that makes it much easier to find things within the app -- although it does take some time to get right.
SEE ALSO: Forget Facebook, forget Snapchat: Teens are doing it themselvesThe good news, however, is that once you get used to it, you can actually save quite a bit of time as it reduces the need to swipe around to different parts of the app. Here's a look at everything you need to know to master Snapchat's new search.
The search bar can help you find conversations, contacts, friends, live stories and just about anything else you'd expect to find in the main section of the app. You can use this a few different ways, either as a shortcut to find specific group conversations or friends you already follow, or as a way to search for new friends.
Though some have dubbed it "universal search," there are a few things you can't find from the main search bar. Searching items in Memories, for example, still requires that you first navigate to the Memories section of the app (from there you can search for specific photos you have previously saved). You also can't search the text of your chats or for items within, say, the settings menu.
If a friend uses an emoji in their username or emoji are used in the title of a group chat, then searching for that emoji will surface the relevant person or conversation. You may recall that Snapchat also uses emoji as its own form of verification for official accounts. In that case, it will surface the relevant celebrity (or celebrities) associated with that emoji.
Speaking of verified accounts, Snapchat's search also allows you access the public-facing stories of verified users, even if you haven't formally followed them in the app. Search for a celeb and a thumbnail will appear next to the add button if they have a current story. Tap into the story and you can watch without actually adding them.
We should note that this appears to apply to both officially verified accounts as well as normal accounts with public-facing stories. So, keep in mind that if you have your story set to be viewable by everyone, even those who don't follow you can see it. (Note that if you have your story set to friends only, friends will also be able to view your story via search.)
In the search menu, you'll also notice a lower section that has three different menus: New Friends, Quick Add and contacts. These provide shortcuts to different people Snapchat predicts you may want to interact with.
New friends, as the name suggests, surfaces friends you have recently added. Contacts, on the other hand, shows people in your contacts who you haven't yet added or those who you may want to invite to the app.
Likewise, the Quick Add section surfaces follow suggestions based on mutual friends and people you have recently added in your address book (the app displays this context under their username.)
Besides individual accounts and your own chats, you can also search for Discover publishers as well as live stories. There are a few different ways you can use this. You can search directly for a publisher or live story, like "NBA," which would surface both the NBA's publisher as well as any relevant live stories.
Or, you can also search by story title. For example, search for "Trump" and you can also see any relevant live story with the name in the title. However, this doesn't apply to content within publisher channels, so searching for "Trump" won't surface individual stories within Discover pages.
Topics Snapchat
Another nor'easter set to cripple travel, trigger thundersnowBlackBerry sues Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp for patent infringementFirst look at Android P: Google goes allUK Daily Deals: Xbox One X bundle, Dell laptop, Mother's Day giftsMilo Ventimiglia taught me about fire safety. Here's what I learned.Michael B. Jordan announces on Instagram that he'll be adopting inclusion ridersPeople have a lot of opinions about this nor'easter's 'unofficial' nameWorld's oldest message in a bottle found on Australian beach'Solo: A Star Wars Story' partners with Solo cups because of courseThe moment 'Silicon Valley' decided to split with T.J. MillerAnother nor'easter set to cripple travel, trigger thundersnowEd Sheeran bought early bird fans pizza before his show in AustraliaNational park scented candles are here for people who love the great indoorsHuawei P20 bares all in new leaked imagesChloe Kim, Patty Jenkins, and more get their own Barbie dolls for International Women's Day'Call Me By Your Name' is a book worth reading—even if you've already seen the film15 of the most important women in tech who changed the worldSecond weather 'bomb' in less than a week is about to hit NortheastWeather bureau staff investigated for alleged cryptocurrency mining on work computersEd Sheeran bought early bird fans pizza before his show in Australia Gmail Smart Compose basically writes your emails for you Deadpool's 'no spoilers' letter is as hilariously brutal as you'd expect Extreme 2016 Arctic heat wave stoked by climate change and low sea ice Deadpool is really angry Canada didn't get invited to Eurovision Boston Dynamics says its stair Google's new tool lets anyone turn Street View images into VR 'tours' David Beckham can't stay mad at Ryan Reynolds in this 'Deadpool 2' vid Analyst fires back after Elon Musk shut him down in Tesla earnings call Juul vapes will contribute to a dangerous e Review: Xiaomi Mi Electric Scooter is all over the roads for a reason The worst thing about Microsoft HoloLens is still its field of view Google's human Australia is spending millions to make GPS signals more accurate 'Brooklyn Nine 'Destiny 2's newest raid, Spire of Stars, is proving difficult Instagram introduces interactive emoji slider poll for stories Jordan Peele announces new film with super creepy poster Taylor Swift addresses Kim Kardashian feud at 'Reputation' concert Google tries to burst filter bubbles with redesigned 'News' app Congress released more than 3,000 Russian Facebook ads
1.0583s , 10157.4296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Horned Japanese Female College Student: Pleasure Share House】,Prosperous Times Information Network