K kuosda Active Member Licensed User Longtime User Jan 9, 2020 #1 1. Can I hide notifications? 2. For the actual machine `` #StartAtBoot: True '' does not work, but the Android X86 simulator is OK, and the test code is attached "My ip ": FTP Server "User": FTP User "PassWord ": FTP Password Attachments TestSercice.zip 16.9 KB · Views: 103 notifications.jpg 416.4 KB · Views: 115 Screenshot_20200109-092009.jpg 115.2 KB · Views: 110
1. Can I hide notifications? 2. For the actual machine `` #StartAtBoot: True '' does not work, but the Android X86 simulator is OK, and the test code is attached "My ip ": FTP Server "User": FTP User "PassWord ": FTP Password
Erel B4X founder Staff member Licensed User Longtime User Jan 9, 2020 #2 If you want the service to keep running in the background then it must be a foreground service => foreground services show a notification. Upvote 0
If you want the service to keep running in the background then it must be a foreground service => foreground services show a notification.
K kuosda Active Member Licensed User Longtime User Jan 9, 2020 #3 Use "#StartAtBoot: True" to install it on the real machine. It cannot run after restarting. The Android version is shown in the figure. Upvote 0
Use "#StartAtBoot: True" to install it on the real machine. It cannot run after restarting. The Android version is shown in the figure.
Erel B4X founder Staff member Licensed User Longtime User Jan 9, 2020 #4 Where does the "start_sticky" come from? You should never use it. Start with this example: Background location tracking Upvote 0
Where does the "start_sticky" come from? You should never use it. Start with this example: Background location tracking