Digital artist and developer Kabel Cadle has spotted a handy new feature in iPadOS 18. For the first time, you can format external drives on an iPad, choosing between three different format options. Update: The same option is also available on the iPhone in iOS 18.
This brings the device closer in line with the Macβs Disk Utility app, though it doesnβt yet offer the Restore and First Aid features β¦
Cadle says heβs been keeping an eye on the drive erase function since last yearβs iPadOS 17 betas, to see whether formatting options were added. That has finally happened in iPadOS 18.
In Disc Utility on the Mac, in order to reformat an external drive, you first select the βEraseβ option, and then additional options appear for selecting the new format you wish to reformat the drive with. When I saw the βEraseβ option added in the Files app on iPadOS, I suspected that Apple might be moving towards adding these reformatting options into the Files app on iPadOS. And Iβm excited to confirm that this is exactly what Apple has done in iPadOS 18!
Now in the Files app on iPadOS 18, when we right click or hold press on an external drive and select βEraseβ, new options appear for reformatting the drive. Currently, the format options here are APFS (with options for Case Sensitive or Encrypted), ExFAT, and MS-DOS (FAT), the same format options available in Disc Utility (with the exception of macOS extension formats which wouldnβt make much sense for this feature on iPadOS).
Weβve previously reported on another iPadOS 18 Files app feature which solves a huge pain-point for iPad users: The option to ensure that particular files remain in local storage.
The problem is, Apple βintelligentlyβ decides which files can remain stored in local cache, and will make decisions to remove certain downloads without telling you. So when you need to access a given fileβsay, on an airplane with no connectionβyou might find that the file has been sent back to the cloud and is no longer available.
iPadOS 18 changes that. Not only on the iPad but also the iPhone in iOS 18, you can long-press on a file or folder and find a new βKeep Downloadedβ button in the menu.
Screenshot Kabel Cadle. Via MacStories.