Which is the proper delegate to implement when an application is waking up from being in the background and you want it to prep it to be active?
applicationWillEnterForeground vs applicationDidBecomeActive -- What's the difference?
Which is the proper delegate to implement for when an application is going to sleep and you want to prep it to cleanup and save data?
applicationWillResignActive vs. applicationDidEnterBackground -- What's the difference?
Also, I've noticed that applicationWillResignActive gets called when an incoming SMS or call comes in but the user chooses to click Ok and continue. I don't want my app to take any action in these cases. I just want it to keep running without any intermediate cleanup since the user didn't exit the app. So, I would think it makes more sense to do cleanup work just in applicationDidEnterBackground.
I would appreciate your input on best practices to follow on choosing which delegates to implement for waking up and going to sleep as well as considering events like being interrupted by SMS/calls.
Thanks
When waking up i.e. relaunching an app (either through springboard, app switching or URL) applicationWillEnterForeground:
is called. It is only executed once when the app becomes ready for use, after being put into the background, while applicationDidBecomeActive:
may be called multiple times after launch. This makes applicationWillEnterForeground:
ideal for setup that needs to occur just once after relaunch.
applicationWillEnterForeground:
is called:
- when app is relaunched
- before
applicationDidBecomeActive:
applicationDidBecomeActive:
is called:
- when app is first launched after
application:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:
- after
applicationWillEnterForeground:
if there's no URL to handle. - after
application:handleOpenURL:
is called. - after
applicationWillResignActive:
if user ignores interruption like a phone call or SMS.
applicationWillResignActive:
is called:
- when there is an interruption like a phone call.
- if user takes call
applicationDidEnterBackground:
is called. - if user ignores call
applicationDidBecomeActive:
is called.
- if user takes call
- when the home button is pressed or user switches apps.
- docs say you should
- pause ongoing tasks
- disable timers
- pause a game
- reduce OpenGL frame rates
applicationDidEnterBackground:
is called:
- after
applicationWillResignActive:
- docs say you should:
- release shared resources
- save user data
- invalidate timers
- save app state so you can restore it if app is terminated.
- disable UI updates
- you have 5 seconds to do what you need to and return the method
- if you don't return within ~5 seconds the app is terminated.
- you can ask for more time with
beginBackgroundTaskWithExpirationHandler:
This Apple Document is helpful to your questions. For quick concept, you can see Figure 2-3 in that document. You can also read the comment from the code generated by the XCode Wizard. Listed as follows:
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions
{
// Override point for customization after application launch.
return YES;
}
- (void)applicationWillResignActive:(UIApplication *)application
{
/*
Sent when the application is about to move from active to inactive state.
This can occur for certain types of temporary interruptions (such as an
incoming phone call or SMS message) or when the user quits the application
and it begins the transition to the background state.
Use this method to pause ongoing tasks, disable timers, and throttle down
OpenGL ES frame rates. Games should use this method to pause the game.
*/
}
- (void)applicationDidEnterBackground:(UIApplication *)application
{
/*
Use this method to release shared resources, save user data, invalidate
timers, and store enough application state information to restore your
application to its current state in case it is terminated later.
If your application supports background execution, this method is called
instead of applicationWillTerminate: when the user quits.
*/
}
- (void)applicationWillEnterForeground:(UIApplication *)application
{
/*
Called as part of the transition from the background to the active state;
here you can undo many of the changes made on entering the background.
*/
}
- (void)applicationDidBecomeActive:(UIApplication *)application
{
/*
Restart any tasks that were paused (or not yet started) while the
application was inactive. If the application was previously in the
background, optionally refresh the user interface.
*/
}
- (void)applicationWillTerminate:(UIApplication *)application
{
/*
Called when the application is about to terminate.
Save data if appropriate.
See also applicationDidEnterBackground:.
*/
}
In the above code, only the application launching do you have chance to say YES or NO, others are just notifications. In other words, you have no way to force the users to neglect the incoming call or SMS by the code listing above. Don't know if there is any other workaround.
I was still a bit confused with Dano's answer so I did a little test to get the flow of events in certain scenarios for my reference, but it might be useful to you too. This is for apps that DO NOT use UIApplicationExitsOnSuspend
in their info.plist. This was conducted on an iOS 8 simulator + confirmed with iOS 7 device. Please excuse Xamarin's event handler names. They are very similar.
- Initial and all subsequent launches from a not-running state:
FinishedLaunching
OnActivated
- Interruption (phone call, top slide-down, bottom slide-up):
- Home button double-press listing inactive apps, then reselecting our app:
OnResignActivation
OnActivated
- Home button double-press listing inactive apps, selecting another app, then relaunching our app:
- Home button single press, then relaunch:
- Lock (on/off button), then unlock:
OnResignActivation
DidEnterBackground
WillEnterForeground
OnActivated
- Home button double-press, and terminate our app: (subsequent relaunch is first case)
OnResignActivation
DidEnterBackground
DidEnterBackground (iOS 7 only?)
Yes, DidEnterBackground
is called twice on iOS7 device. Both times UIApplication state is Background. However, iOS 8 simulator does not. This needs testing on iOS 8 device. I will update my answer when I get my hand on it, or someone else could confirm.
applicationWillEnterForeground
is called:
when app is relaunched(comes from background to foreground)
This method is not invoked when app starts for the first time i.e when applicationDidFinishLaunch
is called but only when comes from background
applicationDidBecomeActive
applicationDidBecomeActive
is called
when app is first launched after didFinishLaunching
after applicationWillEnterForeground
if there’s no URL to handle.
after application:handleOpenURL:
is called.
after applicationWillResignActive
if user ignores interruption like a phone call or SMS.
after disappearing of alertView anywhere from the application
applicationWillResignActive is called when system is asking for permissions. (in iOS 10). Just in case someone hit into the same trouble as me...
In iOS 8+ there is a subtle but important difference for taking phone call.
In iOS 7 if user takes phone call both applicationWillResignActive: and applicationDidEnterBackground: are called. But in iOS 8+ only applicationWillResignActive: is called.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3712979/applicationwillenterforeground-vs-applicationdidbecomeactive-applicationwillre