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Scheduling the Delivery of Local Notifications

  Apps can use local notifications to display alerts, play sounds, badge the app’s icon, or a combination of the three. For example, an alarm clock app might use local notifications to play an alarm sound and display an alert to disable the alarm. When a notification is delivered to the user, the user must decide if the information warrants bringing the app back to the foreground. (If the app is already running in the foreground, local notifications are delivered quietly to the app and not to the user.)

  Your own apps can have no more than 128 local notifications active at any given time, any of which can be configured to repeat at a specified interval.

 1 // Listing 3-4  Scheduling an alarm notification
 2 - (void)scheduleAlarmForDate:(NSDate*)theDate
 3 {
 4     UIApplication* app = [UIApplication sharedApplication];
 5     NSArray*    oldNotifications = [app scheduledLocalNotifications];
 6  
 7     // Clear out the old notification before scheduling a new one.
 8     if ([oldNotifications count] > 0)
 9         [app cancelAllLocalNotifications];
10  
11     // Create a new notification.
12     UILocalNotification* alarm = [[UILocalNotification alloc] init];
13     if (alarm)
14     {
15         alarm.fireDate = theDate;
16         alarm.timeZone = [NSTimeZone defaultTimeZone];
17         alarm.repeatInterval = 0;
18         alarm.soundName = @"alarmsound.caf";
19         alarm.alertBody = @"Time to wake up!";
20  
21         [app scheduleLocalNotification:alarm];
22     }
23 }

 

posted on 2014-05-21 15:59  Tekkaman  阅读(327)  评论(0编辑  收藏  举报