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Is Feedback Assistant a Black Hole Unless You Post on the Forums?
If I only report issues through the Feedback Assistant and not post on the Developer Forum, will Apple even see my feedback? Over the past year, I've reported seven bugs through the Feedback Assistant, but haven't received any feedback. This is because I started using my test device to follow the iOS beta releases from WWDC a year ago, and iOS prompted me to use the Feedback Assistant to report issues. The other day, while conducting automated testing, I discovered a feature wasn't working. I figured the Feedback Assistant should be used to report bugs, so I specifically registered a Developer Forum account to post about it. The engineer told me I should use the Feedback Assistant. Seeing that none of my seven reports over the past year have received any feedback from Apple, I'm wondering if posting on the Developer Forum is mandatory for feedback to be effective. If that's the design, why isn't this information included in the iOS Developer Preview?
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Apple Makes Notification Center Testing Nearly Impossible on macOS
I know that using a mouse to control an iPhone simulator on macOS allows me to swipe down from the top right corner to open the Control Center, but why can't I swipe down from the top left corner to open the Notification Center? Am I doing something wrong, or does iOS disable mouse access to the Notification Center on macOS? Also, it seems that you can't use a mouse or gestures to open the Notification Center or Control Center in iPhone Mirroring at all. I saw that Accessibility has a feature to open the Notification Center or Control Center with the keyboard, but it doesn't work in my tests on macOS. I have an application feature that needs to check the effect of the media playback cards in the Notification Center, but I can't check it at all. Every time I compile to a real device and test manually. Is there any way to reliably trigger the Notification Center and Control Center on macOS? Otherwise, testing on a real device every time is too cumbersome, and I can't automate the testing at all!
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Feature Request: Keyboard Shortcuts for Notification Center and Control Center in iOS Simulator and iPhone Mirroring
Hello, I would like to suggest adding dedicated keyboard shortcuts or menu commands for opening Notification Center and Control Center in both iOS Simulator and iPhone Mirroring. At the moment, these interfaces generally need to be opened by dragging downward from a specific area at the top of the simulated or mirrored iPhone screen. While this works for normal manual interaction, it is less reliable when using a mouse, especially when the window is resized or when the pointer needs to begin very close to the screen edge. This also creates difficulties for automated UI testing and computer-use agents, such as Codex-based testing workflows. These systems interact with the screen through mouse and keyboard input, so accurately reproducing an edge swipe can be unreliable. A small difference in the starting position may open Spotlight, scroll the current application, move the window, or fail to trigger the system interface entirely. It would be helpful if Apple could provide commands such as: Open Notification Center Open Control Center Dismiss Notification Center or Control Center These commands could be exposed through: Keyboard shortcuts The Simulator “Device” or “Features” menu The iPhone Mirroring toolbar or menu bar Accessibility or UI automation interfaces For example, Simulator already provides menu commands and shortcuts for actions such as pressing the Home button, locking the device, rotating the screen, and triggering other hardware-related interactions. Notification Center and Control Center could be handled in a similar way. This would improve: Manual testing with a mouse and keyboard Automated testing of applications that interact with notifications, media controls, Bluetooth, Focus modes, screen recording, and other system features Accessibility for users who have difficulty performing precise drag gestures Reliability for computer-use and vision-based testing agents Ideally, the commands should behave like genuine system gestures rather than directly changing internal state, so developers can test the complete user-visible interaction. Thank you for considering this feature.
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Is Feedback Assistant a Black Hole Unless You Post on the Forums?
If I only report issues through the Feedback Assistant and not post on the Developer Forum, will Apple even see my feedback? Over the past year, I've reported seven bugs through the Feedback Assistant, but haven't received any feedback. This is because I started using my test device to follow the iOS beta releases from WWDC a year ago, and iOS prompted me to use the Feedback Assistant to report issues. The other day, while conducting automated testing, I discovered a feature wasn't working. I figured the Feedback Assistant should be used to report bugs, so I specifically registered a Developer Forum account to post about it. The engineer told me I should use the Feedback Assistant. Seeing that none of my seven reports over the past year have received any feedback from Apple, I'm wondering if posting on the Developer Forum is mandatory for feedback to be effective. If that's the design, why isn't this information included in the iOS Developer Preview?
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24
Activity
17h
Apple Makes Notification Center Testing Nearly Impossible on macOS
I know that using a mouse to control an iPhone simulator on macOS allows me to swipe down from the top right corner to open the Control Center, but why can't I swipe down from the top left corner to open the Notification Center? Am I doing something wrong, or does iOS disable mouse access to the Notification Center on macOS? Also, it seems that you can't use a mouse or gestures to open the Notification Center or Control Center in iPhone Mirroring at all. I saw that Accessibility has a feature to open the Notification Center or Control Center with the keyboard, but it doesn't work in my tests on macOS. I have an application feature that needs to check the effect of the media playback cards in the Notification Center, but I can't check it at all. Every time I compile to a real device and test manually. Is there any way to reliably trigger the Notification Center and Control Center on macOS? Otherwise, testing on a real device every time is too cumbersome, and I can't automate the testing at all!
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17h
Feature Request: Keyboard Shortcuts for Notification Center and Control Center in iOS Simulator and iPhone Mirroring
Hello, I would like to suggest adding dedicated keyboard shortcuts or menu commands for opening Notification Center and Control Center in both iOS Simulator and iPhone Mirroring. At the moment, these interfaces generally need to be opened by dragging downward from a specific area at the top of the simulated or mirrored iPhone screen. While this works for normal manual interaction, it is less reliable when using a mouse, especially when the window is resized or when the pointer needs to begin very close to the screen edge. This also creates difficulties for automated UI testing and computer-use agents, such as Codex-based testing workflows. These systems interact with the screen through mouse and keyboard input, so accurately reproducing an edge swipe can be unreliable. A small difference in the starting position may open Spotlight, scroll the current application, move the window, or fail to trigger the system interface entirely. It would be helpful if Apple could provide commands such as: Open Notification Center Open Control Center Dismiss Notification Center or Control Center These commands could be exposed through: Keyboard shortcuts The Simulator “Device” or “Features” menu The iPhone Mirroring toolbar or menu bar Accessibility or UI automation interfaces For example, Simulator already provides menu commands and shortcuts for actions such as pressing the Home button, locking the device, rotating the screen, and triggering other hardware-related interactions. Notification Center and Control Center could be handled in a similar way. This would improve: Manual testing with a mouse and keyboard Automated testing of applications that interact with notifications, media controls, Bluetooth, Focus modes, screen recording, and other system features Accessibility for users who have difficulty performing precise drag gestures Reliability for computer-use and vision-based testing agents Ideally, the commands should behave like genuine system gestures rather than directly changing internal state, so developers can test the complete user-visible interaction. Thank you for considering this feature.
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