Google Docs are great — until you lose your internet connection and suddenly that tiny-but-vital addition that just popped into your head has to stay unwritten until you reconnect.
It's frustratingly common, but avoidable: Google Drive files, such as Docs, Sheets, and Slides, can be edited offline if you have the foresight to turn on that feature.
There are a few other things you'll have to do before you can turn on offline editing:
Once you've handled those, here's how to enable and use the extension on desktop or via the mobile app:
1. Open Google Chrome and go to drive.google.com/drive/settings.
2. In the Offline section, tick the box next to "Create, open and edit your recent Google Docs, Sheets and Slides files on this device while offline."
3. Reload the page for each of the Google Drive files that you want to edit while offline (you should also see a notification to that effect on any open Google Docs in your browser).
To save space, you could instead opt to save specific Google Docs. For that, you'd go to drive.google.com, find your Doc, right click it and toggle on the "available offline" option.
The kinds of files you'll be able to save for use offline will depend on your phone. Both Android and iPhone users will be able to save Google Docs, Sheets and Slides. But only Android users can view or edit videos, images, and PDFs that are saved to their Drive.
Regardless of your phone model, here's how to enable offline editing within your mobile app:
1. Open your Google Drive app.
2. Next to the file you want, tap "More" (three stacked dots).
3. Tap "Make Available Offline."
Once you're offline, you can simply open your Drive app, go to the menu (three stacked lines) and tap "Offline" to find and access your saved, edit-ready files.
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