WhatsApp adds iMessage-like editing with a 15 minute window
WhatsApp is one of the most popular messaging apps on the planet. To help keep it that way, the app has to keep adding new features, and the latest is the ability to edit a message within 15 minutes of sending.
WhatsApp supports editing sent messages
On Monday, the company officially announced a brand new way to fix your mistakes, even after you send a message. Technically beginning its rollout today, WhatsApp now supports editing messages even after they've been sent.
After sending a message you want to edit, which means you can add or remove text as you see fit, you'll need to long-press on the sent message. Pressing on the message long enough will pop up an "Edit" option, which will be available for up to 15 minutes after the message was initially sent.
After editing the message and sending it out again, the new message will show "edited" right alongside the message. This will give clarity to everyone involved. There isn't a history of the edits, though.
Finally, the edited messages are still protected with end-to-end encryption. The rollout is beginning now, but it will take at least a couple weeks before the feature is available for all WhatsApp users.
That 15 minute time limit should sound familiar to iMessage users, as it's the same length of time iPhone owners have to edit a message they send to other Apple devices. The company launched the iMessage feature with iOS 16.
Read on AppleInsider
WhatsApp supports editing sent messages
On Monday, the company officially announced a brand new way to fix your mistakes, even after you send a message. Technically beginning its rollout today, WhatsApp now supports editing messages even after they've been sent.
After sending a message you want to edit, which means you can add or remove text as you see fit, you'll need to long-press on the sent message. Pressing on the message long enough will pop up an "Edit" option, which will be available for up to 15 minutes after the message was initially sent.
After editing the message and sending it out again, the new message will show "edited" right alongside the message. This will give clarity to everyone involved. There isn't a history of the edits, though.
Finally, the edited messages are still protected with end-to-end encryption. The rollout is beginning now, but it will take at least a couple weeks before the feature is available for all WhatsApp users.
That 15 minute time limit should sound familiar to iMessage users, as it's the same length of time iPhone owners have to edit a message they send to other Apple devices. The company launched the iMessage feature with iOS 16.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Also you can use it on multiple phones and computers without it throwing a fit.
Also it doesn't lose all your chats any time you upgrade your phone to a new one, lose your phone, etc.
It's just better than WA in every conceivable way. I am using it less and less, and using Telegram more and more, friends switching over too.