Force IOS/android user to check the notification - android

I am developing a IOS/android app which will used by our vendors, the app will send notifications to the vendors timely, i wonder if there is a way that the vendor MUST click "accept" or "read" for every notification, even he/she disable the notification permission for this app.
so, all of my perpose is the vendor must ready the notification and the server side should be able to know who is not read. the vendors should not has an execuse that he/she do not get a notice while the policy changed.

There is no way to 'force' a user to open a notification, but if you use a Push Notification service (AppBoy, etc) most of them have metrics and can track who has opened the notifications. So if your vendor comes back and says they never got it, you can say yes you did, and which device they opened it on. You could then continually send notifications to those who haven't opened it until they do.
This won't work if they have notifications disabled, though. No way to get past that without building a messaging system into your app.

Related

Is it possible to turn on and off different notifications for different things in one app? (iOS, Android)

For notifications for Android/iOS is it possible to turn on and off different notifications for different things in one app?
For example, we send notifications to the user using OneSignal service.
The first one if the user has not visited the application for a long time and another notification when there is a promotion in the store. So we have two different notifications.
Is it possible for the user to be able to turn off one of these notifications (manually in the app settings) and the other to work, or we can only turn off notifications completely?
Yes, they're called Notification Channels in Android. For every notification, you set a notification channel it belongs to. That way, the user can enable/disable specific channels.

Send notification to user when app full close

It is necessary that even after the application is completely turned off by the user, notifications come from the node server. Tried to do through Broadcastreceiver and Service, but they only output if the app is in the background. I'm considering The firebase messages option, but I can't fully understand if it will work when the application is completely turned off. If there are options as it is possible to make it on another, prompt, please, in what direction to go.
When the user did not force stop(Settings -> app -> Force stop) the app, FCM will work.
It means, Firebase Cloud Messaging will work after user close the app
normally

Know if the app received the notification from server side

I'm building a newspaper-like app and I would like to know how many people received the article's push notification vs how many actually read it.
I was thinking to implement a way in which when the notification is received the app wakes up and send a request to the server saying "Hi I'm _____, I've received the notification of the article ____" and store it in the database. Then afterwards if the user click on the notification and goes to read the article I send another request saying "Hi I'm ____ and I've read the article _____" and I also store it on the database. Afterwards with some queries I'm able to understand the percentage read/received.
I don't understand if it's even possible to wake up the app even if it was not opened by the user in a while and send a request to the server (for background is meant that the application is not launched or that is in the cache ?).
I would like to achieve what they did with Whatsapp:
I receive a new message on Whatsapp
I don't open the app
I go to WhatsApp Web
I open the conversation on WhatsApp Web
The badge and the notification on the phone goes away because I read it somewhere else
I think that that feature is achieved with silent push notifications that just update the app badge and clear the read notification.
Thats a very nice question on how to implement such silent notifications. There are few variables here that we need to consider and deal them in a different way.
Push notifications sent to the users - Some of them would have received it, Some may not have received it at all.
Pushing multiple notifications to the same user in a small amount of time - It becomes difficult here to track the exact notification user opened the app. Because user might have read all the news that received notifications in a single attempt.
The actual content displayed to the user in the app - User might have opened the app because of notifications. Some times he might have seen the notifications and then opened the app directly without interacting with the notifications.
So this is how the implementation can be.
Implement push notifications for the app
User receives the push notifications and the notification badge shows Number (1).
Now when the user views the same news story in any other medium (Your own Mac App or PC app). Server is notified of the users action and the news he/she/whoever just read.
Now the server knows it has sent a notification and it is not read. When you receive the read notification, you can send a remote notification that can be handled by the app in background and update the badge.
Check out this link for more details on how to handle notifications in various modes.
Apple documentation also can be referred here for background mode - remote-notification.
So you will be making your app run in background with certain settings to respond to silent notifications and update the badge just like WhatsApp. I hope this helps.
I've already implemented such thing in one of my app, and it's actually tricky.
You'll have a lot of use cases to handle.
First thing (but you seem to already know it): Apple does not provide
any callback to say : "this notification was sent"
Second thing : when your app is killed (not even in background), nothing at all can be done with your notification, meaning your app won't be able to wake up and read the notification, and therefor do something. The only thing you can do is changing the badge number, even if your app is killed.
Third thing : when your app is in background, you can wake up your app during 30sec. During that time you can send a request to the server, but if it takes too long, the process will be killed by the OS.
Saying that, here is a quick explanation of how you could implement the system:
You'll need on the server side to save in your data base any notifications that were sent. As soon as they are sent, save them as "pending"
On the app side: if your app is in background, as soon as the notification is received, you can wake up your app to send a request to the server. Then in your data base, your notification status will change to "receive" or "notified". If your app was killed, when the user launch your app, send a request to the server to ask for all notification in "pending" state, that way your app will be up to date, as well as your badge number.
If the user click on the notification, this will open your app directly on the article, that way you'll be able to send a request and say to your server that the article was received and read.
If the user read your article on the web side, send a notification. Set the notification badge number with the number of actual "pending" notification in your data base.
Hope this will help you in addition of the answer of #Prav :)
try this Notification Listner service https://github.com/kpbird/NotificationListenerService-Example.
Reply from Apple Developer Technical Support:
Hello Matteo,
Thank you for contacting Apple Developer Technical Support (DTS). Our engineers have reviewed your request and have concluded that there is no supported way to achieve the desired functionality given the currently shipping system configurations.
So at the end of the games IT'S NOT POSSIBLE
You want to sync your app with web app or website than once you send notification to application than set notification to particular ID.If user read that message from your web then send push notification again with different message and handle in service or broadcast receiver after that cancel notification if received message contains different message.you can also use Notification Listener.Refer thislink
Refer this link for ios.
Hi #Smile Applications after reading your question I would suggest you see OneSignal website. OneSignal will allow you to send notifications to your subscribed users. It will also show you how many users are using your app and how many of them have received your notifications. If you want to send notifications and track them from the app itself you can use their API. It is easy and I have implemented this in Android and soon will be implementing in IOS.
Now the second part of your question about knowing how to track how many users have read/opened your notification and on which activity they are on you can use Google Analytics. It will allow you to see from which part of the world your users are using your app and which activities of your app are being opened most. It is also easy and I have implemented this also in Android and soon will be implementing in IOS too.

How does eBay, mail, and other apps send alerts if not running?

We have several apps on our android devices that signal notifications even when the device is off. An example, if we are watching an eBay auction on our PC, and we have the eBay APP on the device, even if the device is off, we get a "chime" and a notification on the top of the display about the auction. Another example, GasBuddy will chime a notification when gas prices are going up in our area.
How do these apps do this, even with the app actually not running?
- Are they "automatically" running in the background?
- Are they periodically, every few minutes as an example for the auction purpose, automatically logging into the internet and checking for an update?
- Is somehow the "service" such as eBay or GasBuddy "pushing" some sort of signal to the device?
- Do they have "another" app running in the background looking for notifications?
They use the concept of Push Notifications. You can use Google Cloud Messaging(GCM) for push notifications.
In short how it works is, the app when launched for the very first time, or when the user logs in, registers an id with the server. The server then at a later time sends a signal to the device (using that id) using push notifications. You need to handle those push notifications in your android app.

How to tell app was started by tapping push message notification

I have a Worklight app that receives push notifications from the server. A notification means there are new messages for the current user from other users. A user would read them by visiting a messages page within the app and then proceeding to a particular conversation page.
I would like to differentiate in the code between user intentions. The app would:
If the user started the app normally (not by tapping a new notification), present the user with the regular app home screen.
If the user started/resumed the app by tapping a notification, present the user with the messages page.
If received while the app is on foreground, only update the on-screen message count (regardless of which page is active).
The question is: is there a reliable means to differentiate between the above conditions?
In another thread, I saw a suggestion to remember the timestamp of a resume event and an onReadyToSubscribe event and assume we were asleep/inactive if notification arrives e.g. just a second after this. This would enable me to differentiate between 2 and 3.
However, 1 is not covered by this. I.e. if there have been new messages, but the user started the app normally, the app would have no means of knowing this and would think it was started by tapping a notification. This way, the user intended to see app home screen, but we transfer him to the messages page.
Is there a reliable way around this for both iOS and Android?
Worklight vesion 6.2.0.00-20140922-2259.
In a pure Native application, you can know "where from the user opened the app", meaning whether it was by tapping on a received notification or by tapping the application icon.
In a Worklight-based Hybrid application, and if using only the JavaScript API, this is not feasible because all paths arrive to the same destination which is the pushNotificationReceived function. So whether you tapped a notification or the app icon or brought the app to the foreground, the aforementioned function will be invoked.
The solution may be to base your implementation on the following Knowledge Center documentation topic: Using native and JavaScript push APIs in the same app.
This way, using a combination of native code and JS code, you could handle the scenario where a notification was received but the user decided to tap the application icon rather than the notification.
An end-to-end example would to somewhat involved to implement, but if you'll follow the code examples in the documentation topic, you should get there...

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