Get comfortable and let me spin you a yarn you’ll one day tell your children. Last week, I went out for lunch. It does get better. Anyway, the cafe I went to had taken COVID precautions and removed all physical menus. In their place was a QR code stuck on each table. The idea was you scan it and are directed to a PDF of the menu online. I huffed and puffed about how irritating this was, as I don’t have a QR code reader app on my iPhone. I was about to leave the restaurant until my companion told me you could just use the camera app. “Sorry, what?” I said, “No, that’s not right, you can’t scan a QR code on an iPhone just using the camera…” At which point I scanned the QR code with my iPhone using the camera app and it opened a web page on Safari. I was shocked at this revelation, appalled with myself for not knowing about it, and then kinda happy that it existed. But also — and this is vital — deeply ashamed.
So, how do I scan a QR code on an iPhone?
You really want to scan a QR code on an iPhone huh? And you didn’t get it from what I said above? It’s disgustingly simple. Step one: open the default iOS camera app. Step two: point it at QR code. Step three: profit. Honestly, I’m speechless. I had no idea, despite the very website I write for (this one) having literally covered this feature being launched in iOS 11 back in 2017. 2017. But, I didn’t know. And that’s fine. I actually came up with a term for this the last time I realized something totally basic I wasn’t aware of (in that instance, how to turn on a Nintendo Switch using a controller): a blankspace. Or, alternatively, being blankspaced. And it turns out I seem to have a lot of blankspace in my mind. Anyway, just so we’re all on the same page, you can scan a QR code on an iPhone using the iOS camera app. That’s it. That’s the tip. May god have mercy on my soul.