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August 20, 2025

How to Copy Text from a Photo

Discover the amazing feature that lets you capture words from the real world—no typos, no fuss.

Have you ever been at a friend's house and wanted to save a recipe from one of their cookbooks? Or stood in front of a flyer with a phone number you needed, and sighed at the thought of having to carefully type it all into your phone? For many of us, especially those who find typing on a small keyboard a chore, this is a familiar frustration.

What if you could just point your phone's camera at any printed text and instantly "lift" the words right off the page and into your phone with no re-typing, no typos? The good news is, you can! This magical feature is already built into most modern smartphones, and once you learn it, it truly feels like a superpower. Today, let's learn how to use this text-snatching magic.


Text-Snatch Magic: “Copy Words Straight Off a Photo in Seconds”

This feature uses your phone's camera and a bit of Artificial Intelligence to recognize and capture text from the real world. On an iPhone, it's called "Live Text." On an Android phone, it's part of a feature called "Google Lens."

The practical uses for this feature are truly endless, and once you start using it, you’ll find opportunities everywhere. It's perfect for instantly grabbing a quote from a book, a list of ingredients from a recipe card, or even the Wi-Fi password off a sign at a coffee shop. You might use it to capture the prescription number and pharmacy phone number off a medicine bottle when you need to call in a refill, or for grabbing the long serial number off the back of an appliance for a warranty registration. You can even use it to save a beautiful quote from a book you're reading to share with a friend, all without the hassle of re-typing and the risk of making a typo.

How to Use It (Step-by-Step)

For iPhone Users (Using Live Text):

  1. Open your Camera app.

  2. Point your camera at the text you want to copy. A page in a book, a sign, a label, etc.

  3. You’ll see a yellow frame appear around the text as your phone recognizes it. A small Live Text icon (a square with lines of text inside) will also pop up in the bottom-right corner.

  4. Tap that icon. The image will freeze, and the text will become selectable.

  5. Now, you can simply press and hold a word and drag the blue handles to select the exact text you want, just like you would on a website. Tap "Copy" from the little black menu that appears.

iOS 15: How to use Live Text | Macworld

For Android Users (Using Google Lens):

  1. Open your Camera app.

  2. Look for the Google Lens icon (it often looks like a colorful square that resembles a camera, or you might see the word "Lens"). Tap it to activate Lens mode.

  3. Point your camera at the text. It will automatically highlight all the words it sees.

  4. You can then tap on the words you want to select from the image, and a "Copy text" button will appear at the bottom of the screen. Tap it.

Google Lens can now copy and paste handwritten notes to your computer | The Verge

In both cases, the text is now copied to your phone's invisible clipboard, ready for you to paste into a note, an email, or a text message!

The "Clever" Part: How Does This Magic Actually Work?

This isn't really magic, but it's a brilliant piece of technology called Optical Character Recognition (OCR). Your phone's powerful little computer has been "trained" by analyzing billions of examples of letters, numbers, and words in different fonts. When you point your camera at text, the AI in your phone:

  1. Analyzes the shapes it sees in the image.

  2. Recognizes those shapes as specific characters (an 'A' is an 'A', a 'g' is a 'g').

  3. Instantly converts them into the digital text that you can copy and paste.
    Understanding this, you can see it’s not a trick—it's just your phone being an incredibly fast and accurate reader!


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Quick Tech Tip

This feature also works on photos you've already taken! Open any picture from your photo library that has text in it. On an iPhone, if your phone detects text, the little Live Text icon will automatically appear in the bottom-right corner. On an Android, open the photo in Google Photos and tap the "Lens" button at the bottom. You can copy text from old photos you took years ago!


Tech Term Demystified: 'OCR (Optical Character Recognition)'

We mentioned it in the article, but let's give it a clear definition. OCR is the technology that allows a computer to "read" text from an image. It analyzes a picture of a document or a sign, identifies the individual shapes of the letters and numbers, and converts them into editable, searchable digital text. It’s the powerful technology that turns a picture of words into the words themselves.


Good News Byte

OCR technology is a cornerstone of modern digital accessibility. For people with visual impairments, many apps can now use a phone's camera to read text from a restaurant menu, a piece of mail, or a sign out loud in real-time. It's a powerful example of how this "magical" feature can provide a profound sense of independence and connection to the world.


Did You Know?

The very first machine that could "read" text was invented way back in 1914! It was a device called the Optophone, which used light sensors to detect printed characters and convert them into musical tones to help blind people read. The core idea of OCR has been developing for over a century, but it took the power and convenience of modern smartphones to put this incredible ability in everyone's pocket.


Your Turn to Try the Magic!

This week, find something with clear printed text on it: a book cover, a cereal box, a piece of mail. Open your phone's camera app and just point it at the words. Look for the little icon or the yellow frame to appear. You don't have to copy anything; just watch as your phone recognizes the text in front of you. It's a fun way to see your phone's superpower in action!


Thanks for reading The ! This post is public so feel free to share it.

Wishing you a week of no re-typing,

Steve

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