In fact, it's the only location available if you don't have any third-party cloud storage apps installed. However, there are a couple of issues where the Files app fails to display any items stored within iCloud or stops showing iCloud as a supported location altogether. But a simple fix lets you make things function properly again. Step 2: Scroll down and tap the toggle next to iCloud Drive to turn it off.
Wait for a couple of seconds, and then turn it on again. You should now find iCloud listed within the Files app again, or if it already was, have your iCloud files and folders show up normally. The Files app is a one-stop portal for all installed cloud storages on your iPhone or iPad. Rather, you need to manually toggle them on — except for iCloud, which should show up by default.
On the Files app, tap the Edit option above Locations. You should now see a list of all cloud storage locations that you can turn on to gain direct access via the Files app.
When the Files app first launched, there were just a handful of cloud storages that actually integrated themselves fully into the Files app. If you still see your files and folders show up in a seprate document picker instead of directly within the Files app, then you must really update the problematic cloud storage.
To do that, get to the App Store, tap Updates, and then tap Update next to the cloud storage app if there's an update available. OneDrive was the last among the big boys to finally make the move to full-on Files integration, and that was over two months ago. On My iPhone or On My iPad is another default location in addition to iCloud that only shows up if you have certain apps installed that store files locally.
But if you find it missing, installing an app such as Word, PowerPoint, or Excel should make the location show up again. Do make sure to check it out.
Me and my IT guy figured out the problem, somehow the documents on iCloud lost their extension, I re added. Hmm, there doesn't seem to be an option to modify extensions in the iPad Pages app. I assume you were doing this in Lion? I guess I could backup first to iTunes , then modify the filenames I also tried emailing a document to myself - which adds the.
Question: Q: Pages documents won't open or download More Less. Communities Get Support. Sign in Sign in Sign in corporate. Browse Search. Ask a question. User profile for user: Charlie Evans Charlie Evans. Question: Q: Question: Q: Pages documents won't open or download I have a few documents in iCloud that suddenly will not open on any iOS device or download through a browser on a Mac. More Less.
Reply I have this question too I have this question too Me too Me too. Helpful answers Drop Down menu. Mar 14, AM in response to Charlie Evans In response to Charlie Evans Hey all, I'm not sure if this is related to the same problem you're encountering, but I thought I'd re-post this here in case it helps anyone.
Good luck! View answer in context. Loading page content. I definitely cant use iCloud anymore, I just can't risk this happening again. Reply Helpful Thread reply - more options Link to this Post.
User profile for user: ebengtso ebengtso. Reply Helpful 1 Thread reply - more options Link to this Post. User profile for user: zisper zisper. User profile for user: nicreid nicreid.
Feb 27, PM in response to Charlie Evans In response to Charlie Evans I am having the same problem although it seems to be with only one document.
Apple, please fix this. User profile for user: David Purdie David Purdie. Document that previously worked fine can not be opened any longer That means long-pressing or force-pressing on protected images in Safari on your iPhone will not do anything or will omit the "Save Image" option. Taking a screenshot is the obvious solution to bypass restrictions, but you won't get the best quality.
Thankfully, there's another way. To download seemingly undownloadable images from a webpage onto your iPhone, you'll need a third-party app, and developer Eduardo Rocha just happens to have one you can use. With his free iOS app, you can save blocked background images and embedded photos and graphics. If the image has a URL readily visible in the webpage's source code, it's fair game. On that note, it's worth mentioning that this tool will not find every image on every website.
Some webpages, like parts of Apple's site, hide the image source URL in the code. While these images can still be found very easily in desktop browsers, I've yet to see an iOS app that also finds dynamically loaded content. Tools usually focus on webpages that block the long-press contextual menu or have background designs. If you want to save a PDF, you can save it and read it offline later thanks to the Books app. Another common file type you might want to try to open on your phone is a ZIP file.
The good news is, thanks to the Files app, you can now download and save ZIP files onto your phone. The downside is that there is currently no way to uncompress — or unzip — those files directly on your iPhone. But more on that later. Some ZIP files are just compressed folders of multiple images or videos, while others are a little more complex. Downloading MP4s and other videos to your iPhone is a bit different than downloading other files.
Most files can only be opened with a specific app, but with videos, you can save them in your photo library, the Files app, or in one of your cloud services. If you want to transfer a video to your iPhone from another device, an easy way to do it is with Google Drive.
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