The search actually has the largest touch area of all the letters, because it extends to the top of the pane.
There are a lot of ways to get there:
* Tap the status bar, which takes you to the to of most scrollable areas.
* Be conservative, if you accidentally hit A, scroll up.
* Hold your finger down on the letters to activate scrubbing mode, then slide your finger to the top.
I'm not saying they're all perfect usability wise, but picking out search as a small touch target seems a little odd to me. But then I've probably spent a lot longer than most obsessing over every pixel and touch target of the UI.
To me it seems like a trade off. Is searching contacts important enough to have a big button for? Where would you put it without completely overhauling the iOS UI? Is it of more or equal importance than any of the current elements? Admittedly annecdotal, but I see far more people scrubbing to the first letter of the contact and flicking through the list, because typing takes time (though a 'hard to find/activate' search feature might contribute to that). It seems to me putting it where it is allows for a good cross-platform solution to an unobtrusive search function.
There are a lot of ways to get there: * Tap the status bar, which takes you to the to of most scrollable areas. * Be conservative, if you accidentally hit A, scroll up. * Hold your finger down on the letters to activate scrubbing mode, then slide your finger to the top.
I'm not saying they're all perfect usability wise, but picking out search as a small touch target seems a little odd to me. But then I've probably spent a lot longer than most obsessing over every pixel and touch target of the UI.
To me it seems like a trade off. Is searching contacts important enough to have a big button for? Where would you put it without completely overhauling the iOS UI? Is it of more or equal importance than any of the current elements? Admittedly annecdotal, but I see far more people scrubbing to the first letter of the contact and flicking through the list, because typing takes time (though a 'hard to find/activate' search feature might contribute to that). It seems to me putting it where it is allows for a good cross-platform solution to an unobtrusive search function.