Posted by Ritesh Nayak M, Product Manager Last year at I/O we launched the Awareness API, a simple yet powerful API that let developers use signals such as Location, Weather, Time and User Activity to build contextually relevant app experiences. Available via Google Play services, the Awareness API offers two ways to take advantage of context signals within your app. The Snapshot API lets your app request information about the user's current context, while the Fence API lets your app react to changes in user's context, and when it matches a certain set of conditions. For example, "tell me whenever the user is walking and their headph one is plugged in". Until now, you could specify a time fence on the Awareness APIs but were restricted to using absolute/canonical representation of time. Based on developer feedback, we realized that the flexibility of the API in regards to building time fences did not support higher level abstractions people use when they think and talk about time. "This weekend", "on the next holiday", "after sunset", are all very common and colloquial ways of expressing time. That's why we're adding Semantic time support to these APIs starting today For e.g., if you were building a fitness app and wanted a way to prompt users everyday morning to start their routine, or if you're a reading app that wants to turn on night mode after dusk; you would have to query a 3p API for sunrise/sunset information at the user location and then write up an Awareness fence with those canonical time values. With our latest update, you can use our TIME_INSTANT_SUNRISE and TIME_INSTANT_SUNSET constants and let the platform manage all the complexity for you. Let's look at an example. Suppose you're building a fitness app which prompts users on Tuesday, and Thursday around sunrise to begin their morning work out. You can set up this triggering using the following lines of code. // A sun-state-based fence that is TRUE only on Tuesday and Thursday during Sunrise AwarenessFence.and( TimeFence.aroundTimeInstant(TimeFence.TIME_INSTANT_SUNRISE, -10 * ONE_MINUTE_MILLIS, 5 * ONE_MINUTE_MILLIS), AwarenessFence.or( TimeFence.inIntervalOfDay(TimeFence.DAY_OF_WEEK_TUESDAY, 0, ONE_DAY_MILLIS), TimeFence.inIntervalOfDay(TimeFence.DAY_OF_WEEK_THURSDAY, 0, ONE_DAY_MILLIS)));
One of our favorite semantic time featur es is public holidays. Every country and regions within it have different holidays. Assume you were a local hiking & adventure app that wants to show users activities they can indulge in on a holiday that falls on a Friday or a Monday. You can use a combination of Days and Holiday flags to identify this state for all your users around the world. You can do this with just 3 lines of code and have this work in any part of the world. // A local-time fence that is TRUE only on public holidays in the // device locale that fall on Fridays or Mondays. AwarenessFence.and( TimeFence.inTimeInterval(TimeFence.TIME_INTERVAL_HOLIDAY), AwarenessFence.or( TimeFence.inIntervalOfDay(TimeFence.DAY_OF_WEEK_FRIDAY, 9 * ONE_HOUR_MILLIS, 11 * ONE_HOUR_MILLIS), TimeFence.inIntervalOfDay(TimeFence.DAY_OF_WEEK_MONDAY, 9 * ONE_HOUR_MILLIS, 11 * ONE_HOUR_MILLIS)));
In both exampl e cases, Awareness does the heavy lifting of localizing time and holidays based on the device locale settings. We're excited to see what problems you'll solve using this powerful API. Please join our mailing list to get updates about this and other Context APIs at Google. Android Match
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