With Android 13, Google began work on a predictive back gesture to “let users preview the destination or other result of a back gesture before fully completing it,” and you can now preview it with the Phone app on Pixel.
Update 12/29: As of year’s end, the following Google apps support the predictive back gesture:
- Google Calculator
- Google Calendar
- Google News
- Google Phone
- Google TV
- Settings
Original 9/28: You first need to enable Developer options (Settings > About phone > tap “Build number” — located at the bottom — seven times). Once done, use Settings search to find “Predictive back animations” and enable that toggle.
After that, make sure the Google Phone app is up-to-date and/or part of the beta channel. We’re seeing predictive back gesture support live on version 90.0.x.
Every time you use the back gesture (to exit) while on one of the main views/tabs (Favorites, Recents, Contacts, Voicemail), the app window will shrink down and you’ll see your homescreen in addition to the usual back arrow. The windowing animation used here is nice, and this works on both the left and right edges of the screen.
Top comment by Prashanta Bajracharya
Would have liked it better if this was the default rather than having each developer having to implement it.
That is the extent of this feature, and it’s meant to let people “decide whether to continue or stay in the current view.” For example, it prevents accidental app closures while you’re in the middle of a task and could be useful in stopping accidental app closures.
Google calls the predictive back gesture a “multi-year release” as it won’t be enabled by default until Android 14 (API level 34), with only the Pixel’s Phone dialer supporting it today among first-party apps. The preview is meant to spur developer support, and hopefully, there will be wide adoption in roughly a year.
Update 9/30: Google TV is another app that supports the predictive back gesture.
More on Google Phone:
- Google Phone app appears to be testing a new ‘bottom bar’ in-call UI on Pixel phones
- Phone app starts rolling out Material You-inspired dialer to Pixels
- Google Phone & Messages address potential privacy concerns, reduce call & message metadata collection
Dylan Roussel contributed to this article.
FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.
Comments