Maybe this is obvious for some, for others, maybe not.
Anyway, coming from an HTC M8 where I could chose to show how many % were left in my phone without opening the notification bar was a very nice addition.
It is also possible in OxygenOS! Not as obvious as in HTC or Samsung phones.
1. It lives in something called the System UI Tuner
2. To turn on System UI Tuner, you'll have to enable the developer options on your Android 6.0 Marshmallow device. To do this, head into Settings, 'About Phone'. At the bottom of the list you'll see the "build number" for your device software. Tap on this repeatedly and it will unlock the developer options that will be added to the settings menu.
3. Enable System UI Tuner. Swipe down the Quick Settings panel and you'll see the settings gear icon at the top of the display. Press and hold this.
It appears at the bottom of the settings menu.
4. Open up this menu and you'll find a range of options. Toggle "show embedded battery percentage" and you'll get the battery figure added to the icon, so you can always glance at it.
That's it!
You have to keep System UI Tuner enabled in order for the % to show.
Anyway, coming from an HTC M8 where I could chose to show how many % were left in my phone without opening the notification bar was a very nice addition.
It is also possible in OxygenOS! Not as obvious as in HTC or Samsung phones.
1. It lives in something called the System UI Tuner
2. To turn on System UI Tuner, you'll have to enable the developer options on your Android 6.0 Marshmallow device. To do this, head into Settings, 'About Phone'. At the bottom of the list you'll see the "build number" for your device software. Tap on this repeatedly and it will unlock the developer options that will be added to the settings menu.
3. Enable System UI Tuner. Swipe down the Quick Settings panel and you'll see the settings gear icon at the top of the display. Press and hold this.
It appears at the bottom of the settings menu.
4. Open up this menu and you'll find a range of options. Toggle "show embedded battery percentage" and you'll get the battery figure added to the icon, so you can always glance at it.
That's it!
You have to keep System UI Tuner enabled in order for the % to show.
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