Reputation: 5306
I am developing a react-native messaging app with Expo. Every time a user receives a new message, I send a notification from my server.
Is there any way to not display the notification if the app is currently open?
Right now I am using this as soon as the notification is received:
Notifications.dismissNotificationAsync(notification.notificationId);
But there is a 0.5 second delay where the notification has time to appear in the tray and trigger a sound before it gets dismissed. I would like to not show it at all.
Upvotes: 16
Views: 14689
Reputation: 420
When a notification is received while the app is running, using setNotificationHandler
you can set a callback that will decide whether the notification should be shown to the user or not.
Notifications.setNotificationHandler({
handleNotification: async () => ({
shouldShowAlert: true,
shouldPlaySound: false,
shouldSetBadge: false,
}),
});
When a notification is received, handleNotification
is called with the incoming notification as an argument. The function should respond with a behavior object within 3 seconds, otherwise the notification will be discarded. If the notification is handled successfully, handleSuccess
is called with the identifier of the notification, otherwise (or on timeout) handleError
will be called.
The default behavior when the handler is not set or does not respond in time is not to show the notification.
If you don't use setNotificaitonHandler, the new notifications will not be displayed while the app is in foreground.
So you can simply set setNotificationHandler
to null
when your app is initialized.
Notifications.setNotificationHandler(null);
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 278
The answer is yes to your question
Is there any way to not display the notification if the app is currently open?
The default behavior of Notification in Expo is not to show notification if the App is in foreground. You must have implemented Notifications.setNotificationHandler
similar to the following code -
// *** DON'T USE THE FOLLOWING CODE IF YOU DON'T WANT NOTIFICATION TO BE DISPLAYED
// WHILE THE APP IS IN FOREGROUND! ***
// --------------------------------------------------
// Sets the handler function responsible for deciding
// what to do with a notification that is received when the app is in foreground
/*
Notifications.setNotificationHandler({
handleNotification: async () => ({
shouldShowAlert: true,
shouldPlaySound: true,
shouldSetBadge: false,
}),
});
*/
If you don't use setNotificaitonHandler, the new notifications will not be displayed while the app is in foreground.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 1747
I assume you setup a simple FCM - Firebase cloud messaging And use that to push messages to the client? The official Expo guide has a section for receiving-push-notifications
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 474
Use below code snippet. It works on press notification.
_handleNotification = async (notification) => {
const {origin} = notification;
if (origin === ‘selected’) {
this.setState({notification: notification});
}
//OR
if (AppState.currentState !== 'active') {
this.setState({notification: notification});
}
}
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 10194
This is the actual workflow of FCM (weird can be called as a common issue) that it'll handle the notifications by itself when the application is in the foreground.
The solution which i did for my project was to create a custom notification JSON rather than using their default template which won't be parsed by FCM.
{
"hello":" custom key and value",
"message":{
"SampleKey":"Sample data",
"data":{
"SampleKey" : "Sampledata",
"SampleKey2" : "great match!"},
}}
In console you can add your own custom JSON objects, and when you get the notification parse the notification by using these objects, then you will be able to override that issue.
You can also add a channel for the request to categorize your notifications
this.createNotificationListeners = firebase.notifications()
.onNotification((notification) => {
let{ hello,data,message} = notification;
});
Upvotes: -3