A year and a half ago, Flexibits branched out from its popular calendar app Fantastical to debut Cardhop, an intuitive contacts management app for macOS. Cardhop took Apple’s Contacts to the next level, offering a smart input field that intelligently parses the text you’re typing and figures out what you want to do. Customizable quick actions let you easily perform tasks related to your contacts, such as placing a phone call, sending an email, or contacting on Skype.



Flexibits is now bringing the power of Cardhop to iOS, today launching a universal iPhone and iPad app that offers many of the same features found in the macOS version. The intelligent natural language input is here, automatically detecting whether you’re trying to search, add, or edit a contact based on what you’ve typed.



While Cardhop’s contact cards will look very familiar to those who are used to Apple’s native Contacts app, Cardhop’s enhanced abilities make it much easier to manage and use the information stored on those cards.



Cardhop for iOS makes it easy to edit your contacts, as all you have to do is tap and hold on the piece of information you’re looking to update. As on macOS, there are customizable action keys that give you one-tap access to whatever functions you’re most interested in, and those action keys live right above your keyboard at all times.

Cardhop for iOS offers a choice of dark and light themes, as well as a combination theme that shows your lists and results in a dark color and individual contact cards in a light color. Siri Shortcuts are also supported in Cardhop, letting you automate various actions with your contacts and integrate those actions across apps.



Notes is another area Flexibits has chosen to emphasize with Cardhop. While Apple’s Contacts app lets you take notes about people stored in your database, Cardhop makes the feature more prominent with a slide-up interface and distinctive background (yellow or gray depending on theme), encouraging you to save information about the people you meet for more meaningful future interactions.

Cardhop also supports personal business cards, letting you customize a card with the information you want to share and displaying it like a business card on your phone. With a QR code embedded on the card, it’s easy to share just by letting others scan the code using the camera app on their phones.



The natural language input field in Cardhop supports English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, and Japanese, and if the app incorrectly parses your input, you can hit a flag icon to help the app learn what it should have done.

Finally, Cardhop for iOS supports directory lookups for Google Contacts, G Suite, and Exchange to let you quickly pull down contact information from your accounts on those services. A free update to Cardhop for macOS launching today also brings directory lookups to the desktop.

Flexibits is launching Cardhop for iOS as a paid universal app with no additional in-app purchases required. A limited-time launch sale will see Cardhop priced at $3.99, and once that expires the regular price will be $4.99.

This article, "Cardhop’s Intuitive Contacts Management Comes to iOS" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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