We are working on an app which can recognize the name of the incoming call from the phone number. (Our problem is similar to this one but the solution is different) We have created a CallScreeningService which receives the phone number of the incoming phone call and we are able to display the toast showing the caller id whenever there is a call. However, instead of displaying a toast we want to display a notification. (We had also tried displaying a pop up window over Android native incoming call screen like true caller Android app but failed to show it when app is in background or closed state) Now we are also able to create a notification of caller ID whenever there is a call but it is not visually appearing on the screen.
Is it possible to make the notification visually appear on the screen at the same time as an incoming phone call? If yes, how?
Thank you so much!
Assuming you found a way to keep your app alive in doze mode you need to set your Notification's Channel importance or notification's priority to high or max(side note: Notification channel's importance overrides Notification builder's priority).
NotificationChannel:
NotificationChannel chan = new NotificationChannel(NOTIFICATION_CHANNEL_ID, channelName, NotificationManager.IMPORTANCE_HIGH);
Notification builder:
NotificationCompat.Builder mBuilder =
(NotificationCompat.Builder) new NotificationCompat.Builder(context)
.setSmallIcon(R.drawable.some_small_icon)
.setContentTitle("Title")
.setContentText("This is a test notification with MAX priority")
.setPriority(Notification.PRIORITY_MAX);
If doze mode is killing your app, you can use foreground service with return Service.START_STICKY; or WakefulBroadcastReceiver mixed with startWakefulService().
I create a notification in Service (launched from the BroadcastReceiver) this way:
this.notification = new NotificationCompat.Builder(getApplicationContext())
.setContentTitle("Foo")
.setContentText("Bar")
.setSmallIcon(R.drawable.logo)
.setContentIntent(pIntent)
.build();
this.initializeNotificationSound(volumne, Uri.parse(melody));
this.initializeNotificationVibration();
notification.flags = Notification.FLAG_INSISTENT;
this.notificationManager.cancelAll();
this.notificationManager.notify(0, notification);
This notification is set when a particular SMS is received. I want to create a notification which will play a defined melody and will not be interrupted by the standard SMS notification.
This functionality works pretty good, however in lollipop, following scenario happens:
SMS is received
My notification is launched
After some time, notification sound is stopped and default SMS ringtone is played
This happens only when ringtone mode is silent. Otherwise, it works as expected, because of the cancelAll() method, which interrupts the SMS notification.
Thanks in advance for your response.
You can not change that. If you notice, when more than one notifications are created at the same time, even from a sole application(e.g. Facebook), the sound they make is played simultaneously. This has to do with the notification management of android system itself. Maybe the problem you are facing happens due to some code changes made to the specific Android system version (API level), maybe to the cancelAll() method. One solution would be to find the appropriate line of code for checking current system version. For example:
if(System_version <= lollipop) {
//code works fine. Keep as it is
}
else{
//find the appropriate method and call it here.
}
In Android, if a user sets "Show Notifications" of a specific App to off, is the notification still created? If yes, is it somehow possible to access these created but not shown notifications?
As an example, consider that to create a Status bar Notification, below code is used:
NotificationCompat.Builder mBuilder =
new NotificationCompat.Builder(this)
.setSmallIcon(R.drawable.notification_icon)
.setContentTitle("My notification")
.setContentText("Hello World!");
And to POST this notification, below code is used:
NotificationManager mNotificationManager =
(NotificationManager) getSystemService(Context.NOTIFICATION_SERVICE);
mNotificationManager.notify(mId, mBuilder.build());
But since the "Show Notification" is OFF, above code don't show the Notification on Status bar. So as you can see, although the NotificationCompat.Builder has CREATED a Notification object/instance and filled it with other details such as Title or Text etc. you can NOT access it as it is NOT Allowed to POST by System because of user's preference settings.
Also, Since Android 4.1, users can turn off notifications of an app from application manager, but there is NO API to acheive the same from Application code (on Non-rooted device,that is). And It is not possible to disable notifications from other apps, and you can only control notifications generated by your own app.
Few more pointers that you must have in mind:
1.As a developer we have no way to know whether a call to notify was effective or not. So if I really need to check if the notifications are disabled for the current application there is NO Such setting for that in the API.
2.You really shouldn't concern yourself with it. Just assume your notification was successful. If the user has explicitly disabled your notifications, then he/she probably had good reason to do so, and your application should not care whether the notification was displayed or not
I'm trying to show a notification-type heads-up but I could not. What I tried
final Notification.Builder notif = new Builder(getApplicationContext())
.setContentTitle(getString(R.string.title))
.setContentText(getString(R.string.text))
// .setTicker(getString(R.string.tick)) removed, seems to not show at all
// .setWhen(System.currentTimeMillis()) removed, match default
// .setContentIntent(contentIntent) removed, I don't neet it
.setColor(Color.parseColor(getString(R.color.yellow))) //ok
.setSmallIcon(R.drawable.ic_small) //ok
.setLargeIcon(BitmapFactory.decodeResource(getResources(), R.drawable.ic_launcher))
// .setCategory(Notification.CATEGORY_CALL) does not seem to make a difference
.setPriority(Notification.PRIORITY_MAX); //does not seem to make a difference
// .setVisibility(Notification.VISIBILITY_PRIVATE); //does not seem to make a difference
mNotificationManager.notify(Constants.NOTIFICATION_ID, notif.build());
The notification is shown only as an icon in the bar.
I'm using API 21 on API 21 emulator (not L preview)
I have tried:
android:Theme.Holo.NoActionBar,
android:Theme.Holo.NoActionBar.Fullscreen
and NotificationCompat.Builder
SDK examples are not available. does anyone know how to do it?
I made it working by adding:
.setDefaults(Notification.DEFAULT_VIBRATE)
is this the best way?
According to Notifications, you are required to set a vibrate or ringtone to make Heads-up work. However, here's a quick hack that doesn't require VIBRATE permission to produce a head-up notification:
notificationBuilder.setPriority(Notification.PRIORITY_HIGH);
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= 21) notificationBuilder.setVibrate(new long[0]);
EDIT:
Don't abuse heads-up notification. See here for when to use heads-up notification:
MAX: For critical and urgent notifications that alert the user to a condition that is time-critical or needs to be resolved before they can continue with a particular task.
HIGH: Primarily for important communication, such as messages or chat events with content that is particularly interesting for the user. High-priority notifications trigger the heads-up notification display.
According to Google:
https://developer.android.com/design/patterns/notifications.html
If a notification's priority is flagged as High, Max, or full-screen, it gets a heads-up notification.
So the following code should generate an heads-up notification:
.setPriority(Notification.PRIORITY_MAX)
Should be enough. But apparently the .setDefaults(Notification.DEFAULT_VIBRATE) has to be set also. Hopefully Google will fix this in their final release of Android 5.0.
Not sure if bug or feature...
All my apps doesn´t show the Notification, for example i have a Nexus 6 with Android 5.1.1, but i think this is an issuse since Android 5.0, i had to set:
.setPriority(Notification.PRIORITY_HIGH)
Correctly set and manage notification priority
Android supports a priority flag for notifications. This flag allows you to influence where your notification appears, relative to other notifications, and helps ensure that users always see their most important notifications first. You can choose from the following priority levels when posting a notification:
MAX Use for critical and urgent notifications that alert the user to a condition that is time-critical or needs to be resolved before
they can continue with a particular task.
HIGH Use primarily for important communication, such as message or chat events with content that is particularly interesting for the
user. High-priority notifications trigger the heads-up notification
display.
DEFAULT Use for all notifications that don't fall into any of the other priorities described here and if the application does not
prioritize its own notifications
LOW Use for notifications that you want the user to be informed about, but that are less urgent. Low-priority notifications tend to
show up at the bottom of the list, which makes them a good choice for
things like public or undirected social updates: The user has asked to
be notified about them, but these notifications should never take
precedence over urgent or direct communication.
MIN Use for contextual or background information such as weather information or contextual location information. Minimum-priority
notifications do not appear in the status bar. The user discovers them
on expanding the notification shade.
To set the priority, use the setPriority function (introduced in API 16) alongwith setDefaults (added in API 11) of Notification Builder. Choose the priority DEFAULT, HIGH, LOW, MAX, MIN as per the requirement of your app. Defaults can also be chosen here.
A small snippet:
notification = NotificationBuilder(service)
notification.setPriority(Notification.PRIORITY_MAX)
notification.setDefaults(Notification.DEFAULT_ALL)
Please check that your phone is not in “silent” or “do not disturb” mode. I spent day before I found it. I just leave this comment for those who get the same problem and found this question.
Should set high priority and use ringtones or vibrations.
notificationBuilder.setDefaults(Notification.DEFAULT_ALL);
notificationBuilder.setPriority(Notification.PRIORITY_HIGH);
Ref: https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/notifiers/notifications.html#Heads-up
Heads-up Notifications
With Android 5.0 (API level 21), notifications can appear in a small
floating window (also called a heads-up notification) when the device
is active (that is, the device is unlocked and its screen is on).
These notifications appear similar to the compact form of your
notification, except that the heads-up notification also shows action
buttons. Users can act on, or dismiss, a heads-up notification without
leaving the current app.
Examples of conditions that may trigger heads-up notifications
include:
The user's activity is in fullscreen mode (the app uses fullScreenIntent), or
The notification has high priority and uses ringtones or vibrations
For devices running Android 8.0 (API level 26) and higher the notification channel requires high importance
new NotificationChannel("ID", "Channel Name", NotificationManager.IMPORTANCE_HIGH);
Add this line in your code to display heads up notification it's only working for Lollipop version
notificationBuilder.setPriority(Notification.PRIORITY_HIGH);
You don't need to set vibrate. You only need to set sound. It's less intrusive. I don't get any sound on mine, but the notification displays on top. Make sure you use PRIORITY_HIGH and DEFAULT_SOUND.
NotificationChannel channel = null;
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.O) {
channel = new NotificationChannel("my_channel_01",
"Channel human readable title",
NotificationManager.IMPORTANCE_HIGH);
mNotificationManager.createNotificationChannel(channel);
}
Notification notification =
new NotificationCompat.Builder(this, "notify_001")
.setSmallIcon(R.drawable.ic_check)
.setContentTitle("My notification")
.setContentText("Hello World!")
.setPriority(Notification.PRIORITY_HIGH)
.setDefaults(NotificationCompat.DEFAULT_SOUND)
.setChannelId("my_channel_01").build();
mNotificationManager = (NotificationManager) mContext.getSystemService(Context.NOTIFICATION_SERVICE);
mNotificationManager.notify(0, notification);
From reading about wearable-notifications documentation, it doesn't seem possible to programmatically stop my app's notifications from appearing on the connected wearable device. I can add an my app to 'muted' apps' list using the Android Wear app on the handheld; however, I would like to do this using code. Please let me know if you've figured this out.
Additionally, is it possible to show a completely different notification on the phone and on the wearable, instead of just having a different set of notification actions on the wearable?
Thank you for your responses!
Using setLocalOnly(true), it is possible to display the notification only on phone. This, in effect, programmatically mutes your app - your app's notifications do not appear on the connected devices.
To create completely different notifications for phone and wearable, we can write a companion wearable app that displays the custom notification. The phone notification is then stopped from appearing on wearable using setLocalOnly(). I haven't tried the 'stacking' mentioned by Maciej Ciemięga yet.
(Added this as an answer for the benefit of those who might miss the comments on the accepted answer.)
First question:
I'm afraid muting apps from code is not possible.
Second question:
It is possible to show different notifications on phone and watch.
You can do it by implementing a wearable application and show local (setLocalOnly()) notifications separately on watch and phone (+ sync them with the phone using DataApi).
Alternatively you can make use of group feature of Android Wear framework. It's basically created to post many (grouped) notifications on wearable device and one summary notification on phone. But using this mechanism you can also post one (summary) notification on your phone and second notification only on wear.
final NotificationManagerCompat notificationManager = NotificationManagerCompat.from(this);
// This notification will be shown only on phone
final NotificationCompat.Builder phoneNotificationBuilder = new NotificationCompat.Builder(this)
.setSmallIcon(R.drawable.ic_launcher)
.setContentTitle("Title phone")
.setContentText("Text phone")
.setGroup("GROUP")
.setGroupSummary(true);
// This notification will be shown only on watch
final NotificationCompat.Builder wearableNotificationBuilder = new NotificationCompat.Builder(this)
.setSmallIcon(R.drawable.ic_launcher)
.setContentTitle("Title wearable")
.setContentText("Text wearable")
.setGroup("GROUP")
.setGroupSummary(false);
notificationManager.notify(0, phoneNotificationBuilder.build());
notificationManager.notify(1, wearableNotificationBuilder.build());
This way you can create "stack" with one notification only (+ summary notification of course). The stack with one notification will appear only on watch and the summary notification will appear only on phone - so this is what you want to achieve:)
Please read more about grouping (stacking) notifications here:
https://developer.android.com/training/wearables/notifications/stacks.html