45
Android L Notifications There is something more to it www.letsnurture.com a task or assignment.

Android L Notifications

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Android L Notifications

Android L Notifications

There is something more to it

www.letsnurture.com

a task or assignment.

Page 2: Android L Notifications

Notifications• The notification system allows users to keep

informed about relevant and timely events in your app, such as new chat messages from a friend or a calendar event.

• Think of notifications as a news channel that alerts the user to important events as they happen or a log that chronicles events while the user is not paying attention—and one that is synced as appropriate across all their Android devices.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 3: Android L Notifications

New in Android 5.0In Android 5.0, notifications receive important updates: structurally, visually, and functionally:• Notifications have undergone visual changes consistent with the new

material design theme.

• Notifications are now available on the device lock screen, while sensitive content can still be hidden behind it.

• High-priority notifications received while the device is in use now use a new format called heads-up notifications.

• Cloud-synced notifications: Dismissing a notification on one of your Android devices dismisses it on the others, as well.

Note: Notification design in this version of Android is a significant departure from that of previous versions. For information about notification design in previous versions, see Notifications in Android 4.4 and lower.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 4: Android L Notifications

Anatomy of a NotificationThis section goes over basic parts of a notification and how they can appear on different types of devices.• Base layout

• At a minimum, all notifications consist of a base layout, including:

• The notification's icon. The icon symbolizes the originating app. It may also potentially indicate notification type if the app generates more than one type.

• A notification title and additional text.

• A timestamp.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 5: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Notifications created with Notification.Builder for previous platform versions look and work the same in Android 5.0, with only minor stylistic changes that the system handles for you.

Base layout of a handheld notification (left) and the same notification on Wear (right), with a user photo and a notification icon

Page 6: Android L Notifications

Expanded layouts

• You can choose how much detail your app's notifications should provide. They can show the first few lines of a message or show a larger image preview.

• The additional information provides the user with more context, and—in some cases—may allow the user to read a message in its entirety.

• The user can pinch-zoom or perform a single-finger glide to toggle between compact and expanded layouts.

• For single-event notifications, Android provides three expanded layout templates (text, inbox, and image) for you to use in your application. The following images show you how single-event notifications look on handhelds (left) and wearables (right).

www.letsnurture.com

Page 7: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Page 8: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Page 9: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Page 10: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Actions

Android supports optional actions that are displayed at the bottom of the notification.

With actions, users can handle the most common tasks for a particular notification from within the notification shade without having to open the originating application. This speeds up interaction and, in conjunction with swipe-to-dismiss, helps users focus on notifications that matter to them

Page 11: Android L Notifications

Be judicious with how many actions you include with a notification. The more actions you include, the more cognitive complexity you create. Limit yourself to the smallest number of actions possible by only including the most imminently important and meaningful actions.

• Good candidates for actions on notifications are actions that:

• Are essential, frequent, and typical for the content type you're displaying

• Allow the user to accomplish tasks quickly

Avoid actions that are:

• Ambiguous

• The same as the default action of the notification (such as "Read" or "Open")

• You can specify a maximum of three actions, each consisting of an action icon and name. Adding actions to a simple base layout makes the notification expandable, even if the notification doesn't have an expanded layout. Since actions are only shown for expanded notifications and are otherwise hidden, make sure that any action a user can invoke from a notification is available from within the associated application, as well.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 12: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

When a high-priority notification arrives (see

right), it is presented to users for a short period

of time with an expanded layout exposing

possible actions.

After this period of time, the notification

retreats to the notification shade. If a

notification's priority is flagged as High, Max, or

full-screen, it gets a heads-up notification.

Good examples of heads-up notifications

•Incoming phone call when using a device

•Alarm when using a device

•New SMS message

•Low battery

Heads-up Notification

Page 13: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Guidelines

Make it personal

For notifications of items sent by another person (such as a message or status update), include that person's image using setLargeIcon(). Also attach information about the person to the notification's metadata (see EXTRA_PEOPLE).

Your notification's main icon is still shown, so the user can associate it with the icon visible in the status bar.

Notification that shows the person who triggered it and the content they sent.

Page 14: Android L Notifications

Navigate to the right place

• When the user touches the body of a notification (outside of the action buttons), open your app to the place where the user can view and act upon the data referenced in the notification.

• In most cases, this will be the detailed view of a single data item such as a message, but it might also be a summary view if the notification is stacked.

• If your app takes the user anywhere below your app's top level, insert navigation into your app's back stack so that the user can press the system back button to return to the top level.

• For more information, see Navigation into Your App via Home Screen Widgets and Notifications in the Navigation design pattern.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 15: Android L Notifications

Correctly set and manage notification priority

• Android supports a priority flag for notifications.

• This flag allows you to influence where your notification appears, relative to other notifications, and helps ensure that users always see their most important notifications first.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 16: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Priority Use

MAX Use for critical and urgent notifications that alert the user to a condition that is time-critical or needs to be resolved before they can continue with a particular task.

HIGH Use primarily for important communication, such as message or chat events with content that is particularly interesting for the user. High-priority notifications trigger the heads-up notification display.

DEFAULT Use for all notifications that don't fall into any of the other priorities described here.

LOW Use for notifications that you want the user to be informed about, but that are less urgent. Low-priority notifications tend to show up at the bottom of the list, which makes them a good choice for things like public or undirected social updates: The user has asked to be notified about them, but these notifications should never take precedence over urgent or direct communication.

MIN Use for contextual or background information such as weather information or contextual location information. Minimum-priority notifications do not appear in the status bar. The user discovers them on expanding the notification shade.

Page 17: Android L Notifications

How to choose an appropriate priority

DEFAULT, HIGH, and MAX are interruptive priority levels, and risk interrupting the user in mid-activity. To avoid annoying your app's users, reserve interruptive priority levels for notifications that:• Involve another person• Are time-sensitive• Might immediately change the user's behavior in the real world

Notifications set to LOW and MIN can still be valuable for the user: Many, if not most, notifications just don't need to command the user's immediate attention, or vibrate the user's wrist, yet contain information that the user will find valuable when they choose to look for notifications.

Criteria for LOW and MIN priority notifications include:• Don't involve other people• Aren't time sensitive• Contain content the user might be interested in but could choose to

browse at their leisurewww.letsnurture.com

Page 18: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Page 19: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

CATEGORY_CALL Incoming call (voice or video) or similar synchronous communication request

CATEGORY_MESSAGE Incoming direct message (SMS, instant message, etc.)

CATEGORY_EMAIL Asynchronous bulk message (email)

CATEGORY_EVENT Calendar event

CATEGORY_PROMO Promotion or advertisement

CATEGORY_ALARM Alarm or timer

CATEGORY_PROGRESS Progress of a long-running background operation

CATEGORY_SOCIAL Social network or sharing update

CATEGORY_ERROR Error in background operation or authentication status

CATEGORY_TRANSPORT Media transport control for playback

CATEGORY_SYSTEM System or device status update. Reserved for system use.

CATEGORY_SERVICE Indication of running background service

CATEGORY_RECOMMENDATION A specific, timely recommendation for a single thing. For example, a news app might want to recommend a news story it believes the user will want to read next.

CATEGORY_STATUS Ongoing information about device or contextual status

Set a notification category

If your notification falls into one of the predefined categories (see below), assign

it accordingly.

Aspects of the system UI such as the notification shade (or any other notification

listener) may use this information to make ranking and filtering decisions.

Page 20: Android L Notifications

Summarize your notifications

• If a notification of a certain type is already pending when your app tries to send a new notification of the same type, combine them into a single summary notification for the app. Do not create a new object.

• A summary notification builds a summary description and allows the user to understand how many notifications of a particular kind are pending.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 21: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Don’ts Dos

Page 22: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

You can provide more detail

about the individual

notifications that make up a

summary by using the

expanded digest layout.

This approach allows users

to gain a better sense of

which notifications are

pending and if they are

interesting enough to read

in detail within the associated app.

Page 23: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Make notifications optional

Users should always be in control of

notifications.

Allow the user to disable your app's

notifications or change their alert

properties, such as alert sound and

whether to use vibration, by adding a

notification settings item to your application

settings.

Use distinct icons

By glancing at the notification area, the

user should be able to discern what kinds

of notifications are currently pending.

Page 24: Android L Notifications

Do• Look at the notification icons Android apps already provide and create notification

icons for your app that are sufficiently distinct in appearance.

Do• Use the proper notification icon style for small icons, and the Material Light action

bar icon stylefor your action icons.

Do• Keep your icons visually simple, avoiding excessive detail that is hard to discern.

Don't• Place any additional alpha (dimming or fading) into your small icons and action

icons; they can have anti-aliased edges, but because Android uses these icons as masks (that is, only the alpha channel is used), the image should generally be drawn at full opacity.

Don't• Use color to distinguish your app from others. Notification icons should only be a

white-on-transparent background image.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 25: Android L Notifications

Pulse the notification LED appropriately• Many Android devices contain a notification LED, which

is used to keep the user informed about events while the screen is off.

• Notifications with a priority level of MAX, HIGH, or DEFAULT should cause the LED to glow, while those with lower priority (LOW and MIN) should not.

• The user's control over notifications should extend to the LED.

• When you use DEFAULT_LIGHTS, the LED will glow white. Your notifications shouldn't use a different color unless the user has explicitly customized it.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 26: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Building Notifications That Users Care About

To create an app that users love, it is important to design your notifications carefully.

Notifications embody your app's voice, and contribute to your app's personality.

Unwanted or unimportant notifications can annoy the user or make them resent how much attention the app wants from them, so use notifications judiciously.

.

Page 27: Android L Notifications

When to display a notification

• To create an application that people enjoy using, it's important to recognize that the user's attention and focus is a resource that must be protected.

• While Android's notification system has been designed to minimize the impact of notifications on the user's attention, it is still important to be aware of the fact that notifications are interrupting the user's task flow.

• As you plan your notifications, ask yourself if they are important enough to warrant an interruption.

• If you are unsure, allow the user to opt into a notification using your apps notification settings, or adjust the notifications priority flag to LOW or MIN to avoid distracting the user while they are doing something else

www.letsnurture.com

Page 28: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Examples of time-sensitive notification

While well-behaved apps generally only speak when spoken to, a few cases do merit an app's interrupting the user with an unprompted notification.

Use notifications primarily for time-sensitive events, especially if these synchronous events involve other people.

For instance, an incoming chat is a real-time and synchronous form of communication: Another user actively waiting on your response.

Calendar events are another good example of when to use a notification and grab the user's attention, because the event is imminent, and calendar events often involve other people.

Page 29: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Page 30: Android L Notifications

When not to display a notification

In many other cases, notifications aren't appropriate:

• Avoid notifying the user of information that is not directed specifically at them, or information that is not truly time-sensitive.

• For instance, the asynchronous and undirected updates flowing through a social network generally do not warrant a real-time interruption. For the users who do care about them, allow them to opt-in.

• Don't create a notification if the relevant new information is currently on screen.

• Instead, use the UI of the application itself to notify the user of new information directly in context. For instance, a chat application should not create system notifications while the user is actively chatting with another user.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 31: Android L Notifications

• Don't interrupt the user for low-level technical operations, like saving or syncing information, or updating an application if the app or system can resolve the issue without involving the user.

• Don't interrupt the user to inform them of an error if it is possible for the application to recover from the error on its own without the user taking any action.

• Don't create notifications that have no true notification content and merely advertise your app. A notification should provide useful, timely, new information and should not be used merely to launch an app.

• Don't create superfluous notifications just to get your brand in front of users. Such notifications frustrate and likely alienate your audience. The best way to provide small amounts of updated information and keep them engaged with your app is to develop a widget that they can choose to place on their home screen.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 32: Android L Notifications

Interacting with Notifications

• Notifications are indicated by icons in the status bar, and can be accessed by opening the notification drawer.

• Touching a notification opens the associated app to detailed content that matches the notification.

• Swiping left or right on a notification removes it from the drawer.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 33: Android L Notifications

Ongoing notifications

• Ongoing notification due to music playback

• Ongoing notifications keep users informed about an ongoing process in the background. For example, music players announce the currently playing track in the notification system and continue to do so until the user stops the playback.

• Ongoing notifications can also show the user feedback for longer tasks like downloading a file, or encoding a video. A user cannot manually remove an ongoingnotification from the notification drawer.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 34: Android L Notifications

Ongoing notification due to music playback

www.letsnurture.com

Page 35: Android L Notifications

Media playback

• In Android 5.0, the lock screen doesn't show transport controls for the deprecated RemoteControlClient class.

• But it does show notifications, so each app's playback notification is now the primary way for users to control playback from a locked state.

• This behavior gives apps more control over which buttons to show, and in what way, while providing a consistent experience for the user whether or not the screen is locked.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 36: Android L Notifications

Dialogs and toasts

• Your app should not create a dialog or toast if it is not currently on screen.

• A dialog or toast should only be displayed as an immediate response to the user taking an action inside of your app.

• For further guidance on the use of dialogs and toasts, refer to Confirming & Acknowledging.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 37: Android L Notifications

Ranking and ordering• Notifications are news, and so are essentially shown in reverse-chronological

order, with special consideration given to the app's stated notification priority.

• Notifications are a key part of the lock screen, and are featured prominently every time the device display comes on. Space on the lock screen is tight, so it is more important than ever to identify the most urgent or relevant notifications.

• For this reason, Android has a more sophisticated sorting algorithm for notifications, taking into account:

• The timestamp and application's stated priority.

• Whether the notification has recently disturbed the user with sound or vibration. (That is, if the phone just made a noise, and the user wants to know "What just happened?", the lock screen should answer that at a glance.)

• Any people attached to the notification using EXTRA_PEOPLE, and, in particular, whether they are starred contacts.

• To best take advantage of this sorting, focus on the user experience you want to create, rather than aiming for any particular spot on the list.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 38: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Gmail notifications are default priority, so they normally sort below messages

from an instant messaging app like Hangouts, but get a temporary bump

when new messages come in.

Page 39: Android L Notifications

On the lock screen

• Because notifications are visible on the lock screen, user privacy is an especially important consideration.

• Notifications often contain sensitive information, and should not necessarily be visible to anyone who picks up the device and turns on the display.

• For devices that have a secure lock screen (PIN, pattern, or password), the interface has public and private parts.

• The public interface can be displayed on a secure lock screen and therefore seen by anyone. The private interface is the world behind that lock screen, and is only revealed once the user has signed into the device.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 40: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

User control over information displayed on the secure lock screen

Notifications on the lock screen, with contents revealed after the user unlocks the device.

When setting up a secure lock screen, the user can choose to conceal sensitive details from the secure lock screen.

In this case the System UI considers the notification's visibility level to figure out what can safely be shown.

Page 41: Android L Notifications

• To control the visibility level, callNotification.Builder.setVisibility(), and specify one of these values:

• VISIBILITY_PUBLIC. Shows the notification's full content. This is the system default if visibility is left unspecified.

• VISIBILITY_PRIVATE. On the lock screen, shows basic information about the existence of this notification, including its icon and the name of the app that posted it.

• The rest of the notification's details are not displayed. A couple of good points to keep in mind are as follows:– If you want to provide a different public version of your notification for the system to display

on a secure lock screen, supply a replacement Notification object in theNotification.publicVersion field.

– This setting gives your app an opportunity to create a redacted version of the content that is still useful but does not reveal personal information. Consider the example of an SMS app whose notifications include the text of the SMS and the sender's name and contact icon. This notification should beVISIBILITY_PRIVATE, but publicVersion could still contain useful information like "3 new messages" without any other identifying details.

• Notification.VISIBILITY_SECRET. Shows only the most minimal information, excluding even the notification's icon.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 42: Android L Notifications

Notifications on Android Wear

• Notifications and their actions are bridged over to Wear devices by default.

• Developers can control which notifications bridge from the phone to the watch, and vice-versa. Developers can also control which actions bridge, as well.

• If your app includes actions that can't be accomplished with a single tap, either hide these actions on your Wear notification or consider hooking them up to a Wear app, thus allowing the user to finish the action on their watch.

www.letsnurture.com

Page 43: Android L Notifications

www.letsnurture.com

Bridge

New instant messagesSingle-tap actions such as +1, Like, Heart

Don't bridgeNotifications of newly arrived podcastsActions that map to features that aren't possible on the watch

Page 44: Android L Notifications

Unique actions to define for Wear

• There are some actions that you can perform only on Wear. These include the following:

• Quick lists of canned responses such as "Be right back"

• Open on the phone

• A "Comment" or "Reply" action that brings up the speech input screen

• Actions that launch Wear-specific apps

www.letsnurture.com

Page 45: Android L Notifications

Follow us on https://www.facebook.com/LetsNurture

https://twitter.com/letsnurture

http://www.linkedin.com/company/letsnurture

Mail Us [email protected]

www.letsnurture.com | www.letsnurture.co.uk