Reputation: 354
I'm using the following to successfully capture user's location (mobile browser):
<script>
if ( navigator.geolocation ) {
navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition(handlePosition);
}
function handlePosition(pos) {
//this passes lat/long to additional code
}
</script>
This works, but often times the browser will seemingly cache the location data. The page that calls this geolocation code shows information relative to the user's location, so what happens is the user can move (change location), the page is reloaded, but the previous location data is used (showing incorrect data). Sometimes the page will have to be refreshed once or even twice for the page to use new location data.
Does anyone know of any means to force the code to get and use "up to date" location data each time script is executed?
FWIW, I'm experiencing problem in iOS Safari (6.1). Have not been able to test in Android yet.
Thanks for reading and for any help.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 10807
Reputation: 16029
Edit: As Oleksiy has written in his answer, the Geolocation API now supports this. You can add {maximumAge: 0}
as the third option parameter of getCurrentPosition
. There is also a timeout and a high accuracy option available in the PositionOptions as noted in the specification.
Your navigator call would change to the following:
navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition(
handlePosition,
(error)=>{},
{maximumAge:0}
);
No can't be done. You don't have any control over the browser geolocation other than the code in your example. The html5 geo location api is very, very limited and that is a pain. I also had a question whether I could ask it if permission for the domain had already been granted and the answer was also no.
The problem is that the api is implemented in the browser itself and that are just no endpoints for these kind of functions.
What you could do is make an array in js to store previous locations and before you update your view test against that array to see if you got a stale location.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 143
You do have this ability now. getCurrentPosition takes three parameters: success, failure and options
Try this:
<script>
if ( navigator.geolocation ) {
navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition(handlePosition, (error)=>{}, {maximumAge:0});
}
function handlePosition(pos) {
//this passes lat/long to additional code
}
</script>
Upvotes: 4