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README.md


title: Dialogs

description: Use native dialog UI elements

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cordova-plugin-dialogs

This plugin provides access to some native dialog UI elements via a global navigator.notification object.

Although the object is attached to the global scoped navigator, it is not available until after the deviceready event.

document.addEventListener("deviceready", onDeviceReady, false);
function onDeviceReady() {
    console.log(navigator.notification);
}

Report issues on the Apache Cordova issue tracker

Installation

cordova plugin add cordova-plugin-dialogs

Methods

  • navigator.notification.alert
  • navigator.notification.confirm
  • navigator.notification.prompt
  • navigator.notification.beep

navigator.notification.alert

Shows a custom alert or dialog box. Most Cordova implementations use a native dialog box for this feature, but some platforms use the browser's alert function, which is typically less customizable.

navigator.notification.alert(message, alertCallback, [title], [buttonName])
  • message: Dialog message. (String)

  • alertCallback: Callback to invoke when alert dialog is dismissed. (Function)

  • title: Dialog title. (String) (Optional, defaults to Alert)

  • buttonName: Button name. (String) (Optional, defaults to OK)

Example

function alertDismissed() {
    // do something
}

navigator.notification.alert(
    'You are the winner!',  // message
    alertDismissed,         // callback
    'Game Over',            // title
    'Done'                  // buttonName
);

Supported Platforms

  • Amazon Fire OS
  • Android
  • BlackBerry 10
  • Browser
  • Firefox OS
  • iOS
  • Tizen
  • Windows Phone 7 and 8
  • Windows 8
  • Windows

Windows Phone 7 and 8 Quirks

  • There is no built-in browser alert, but you can bind one as follows to call alert() in the global scope:

    window.alert = navigator.notification.alert;
    
  • Both alert and confirm are non-blocking calls, results of which are only available asynchronously.

Firefox OS Quirks:

Both native-blocking window.alert() and non-blocking navigator.notification.alert() are available.

BlackBerry 10 Quirks

navigator.notification.alert('text', callback, 'title', 'text') callback parameter is passed the number 1.

navigator.notification.confirm

Displays a customizable confirmation dialog box.

navigator.notification.confirm(message, confirmCallback, [title], [buttonLabels])
  • message: Dialog message. (String)

  • confirmCallback: Callback to invoke with index of button pressed (1, 2, or 3) or when the dialog is dismissed without a button press (0). (Function)

  • title: Dialog title. (String) (Optional, defaults to Confirm)

  • buttonLabels: Array of strings specifying button labels. (Array) (Optional, defaults to [OK,Cancel])

confirmCallback

The confirmCallback executes when the user presses one of the buttons in the confirmation dialog box.

The callback takes the argument buttonIndex (Number), which is the index of the pressed button. Note that the index uses one-based indexing, so the value is 1, 2, 3, etc.

Example

function onConfirm(buttonIndex) {
    alert('You selected button ' + buttonIndex);
}

navigator.notification.confirm(
    'You are the winner!', // message
     onConfirm,            // callback to invoke with index of button pressed
    'Game Over',           // title
    ['Restart','Exit']     // buttonLabels
);

Supported Platforms

  • Amazon Fire OS
  • Android
  • BlackBerry 10
  • Browser
  • Firefox OS
  • iOS
  • Tizen
  • Windows Phone 7 and 8
  • Windows 8
  • Windows

Windows Phone 7 and 8 Quirks

  • There is no built-in browser function for window.confirm, but you can bind it by assigning:

    window.confirm = navigator.notification.confirm;
    
  • Calls to alert and confirm are non-blocking, so the result is only available asynchronously.

Windows Quirks

  • On Windows8/8.1 it is not possible to add more than three buttons to MessageDialog instance.

  • On Windows Phone 8.1 it's not possible to show dialog with more than two buttons.

Firefox OS Quirks:

Both native-blocking window.confirm() and non-blocking navigator.notification.confirm() are available.

navigator.notification.prompt

Displays a native dialog box that is more customizable than the browser's prompt function.

navigator.notification.prompt(message, promptCallback, [title], [buttonLabels], [defaultText])
  • message: Dialog message. (String)

  • promptCallback: Callback to invoke with index of button pressed (1, 2, or 3) or when the dialog is dismissed without a button press (0). (Function)

  • title: Dialog title (String) (Optional, defaults to Prompt)

  • buttonLabels: Array of strings specifying button labels (Array) (Optional, defaults to ["OK","Cancel"])

  • defaultText: Default textbox input value (String) (Optional, Default: empty string)

promptCallback

The promptCallback executes when the user presses one of the buttons in the prompt dialog box. The results object passed to the callback contains the following properties:

  • buttonIndex: The index of the pressed button. (Number) Note that the index uses one-based indexing, so the value is 1, 2, 3, etc.

  • input1: The text entered in the prompt dialog box. (String)

Example

function onPrompt(results) {
    alert("You selected button number " + results.buttonIndex + " and entered " + results.input1);
}

navigator.notification.prompt(
    'Please enter your name',  // message
    onPrompt,                  // callback to invoke
    'Registration',            // title
    ['Ok','Exit'],             // buttonLabels
    'Jane Doe'                 // defaultText
);

Supported Platforms

  • Amazon Fire OS
  • Android
  • Browser
  • Firefox OS
  • iOS
  • Windows Phone 7 and 8
  • Windows 8
  • Windows

Android Quirks

  • Android supports a maximum of three buttons, and ignores any more than that.

  • On Android 3.0 and later, buttons are displayed in reverse order for devices that use the Holo theme.

Windows Quirks

  • On Windows prompt dialog is html-based due to lack of such native api.

Firefox OS Quirks:

Both native-blocking window.prompt() and non-blocking navigator.notification.prompt() are available.

navigator.notification.beep

The device plays a beep sound.

navigator.notification.beep(times);
  • times: The number of times to repeat the beep. (Number)

Example

// Beep twice!
navigator.notification.beep(2);

Supported Platforms

  • Amazon Fire OS
  • Android
  • BlackBerry 10
  • Browser
  • iOS
  • Tizen
  • Windows Phone 7 and 8
  • Windows 8

Amazon Fire OS Quirks

  • Amazon Fire OS plays the default Notification Sound specified under the Settings/Display & Sound panel.

Android Quirks

  • Android plays the default Notification ringtone specified under the Settings/Sound & Display panel.

Windows Phone 7 and 8 Quirks

  • Relies on a generic beep file from the Cordova distribution.

Tizen Quirks

  • Tizen implements beeps by playing an audio file via the media API.

  • The beep file must be short, must be located in a sounds subdirectory of the application's root directory, and must be named beep.wav.