If youād like to send your current location to someone, then there are all sorts of ways you could do so under iOS. For example, you could open the Maps app and touch the blue dot that indicates where you are. When you do that, thereāll be a big āShare My Locationā button.
You can also press with a little force on the Maps app icon itself to reveal a āSend My Locationā choice (assuming your device supports 3D Touch).
Or if youād prefer, you could instead go to Messages, open the conversation youāre having with the person you want to send your location to, and touch the āiā at the upper-right corner.
Afterward, youāll find a button labeled āSend My Current Location.ā (Here, āShare My Locationā wonāt just send where you are right now; itāll ask to let the other person see your location for an hour, until the end of the day, or indefinitely.)
When you do any of those things, your recipient will see a small map within the conversationā¦
ā¦and if he taps it, heāll get options for directions to where you are, among other choices.
But Apple has provided a darn fast way to do this using its built-in predictive text, as well. If you type āIām atā (followed by a space), then a button labeled āCurrent Locationā will appear above your keyboard.
An interesting note about this, though, is that if you tap that āCurrent Locationā button, it automatically sends the info to your recipient.
So youāre left with āIām atā just staring at you within your text box. Thisā¦this is kind of weird behavior, I think, because then you canāt really send the āIām atā AFTER your location has been delivered, right? Youāll just look like a tool. So this is nifty and all, and I do use it pretty often, but I end up just deleting āIām atā after it passes along my location. Strange interface decision on a very cool feature, Apple.