

The eraser will remove entire lines at a time, as opposed to small parts of a line. If you make a mistake, the eraser can come to your aid, but it might not work exactly the way you think it might. In OneNote for iPad, there are different options for left and right handed people, and accommodations are made for a few different ways that you might hold your hand on the screen while writing on the iPad. The palm rejection options are a little more sophisticated than the horizontal guard you get in apps like Notability. You will see that line thickness varies depending on whether you choose the thin, medium or highlighter pens, but there is enough variety here that you will likely find the thickness you want from one of these pens. Note that there are only four colors to choose from with the highlighter pens. To start writing, select the type of pen you want to use then choose a color from either the four default colors on the toolbar, or from one of the 16 colors that reside in the color wheel. Tools available include a thin pen, a medium pen, a highlighter, an eraser, a selection of inking colors, pen thicknesses, and a variety of palm rejection options. If you don’t see a Draw tab, make sure your OneNote app is updated to the latest version. The drawing tools are accessed via the new Draw tab on the toolbar. For the classroom this means students and teachers have the option to use handwriting in OneNote, or annotate existing notes, images and more with the new drawing tools. Given the touch capabilities of the iPad, this is a very useful addition.
#HOW TO USE ONENOTE ON IPAD WITH APPLE PENCIL WINDOWS#
Recently, Microsoft updated OneNote for iPad to include the one thing that iPad users were missing most from their Windows versions of OneNote – Draw tools.
