What I am trying to do is, Send user a link in email, and then when user taps on the link. My iOS app should open.
I am giving:
<a href = "myappNAME://profile">
The issue I have been facing that the email link is not even clickable.
I also completed the ios side as well. followed this link
http://skookum.com/blog/open-an-ios-app-from-an-email
Here is how you can do it open your project plist and add a url type(See screenshot).Fill in the required information identifier should be your bundle identifier and for url scheme just put a string say "hello".Build the app,than go to safari and type hello:// this should open the App.And for the link in email should have this scheme and it will open the App.
The reason was email filters, they disable the links like "myapp://" .
So what I have to do is, add a link to another page and from their I added a redirect, and then It worked.
Related
I've found two options to open my app from a Safari web page: a custom URL scheme created in my app project's Info.plist or Apple's Universal Linking. Obviously the custom URL scheme is the easiest one to set up, but the problem I'm having with this is that Safari shows a confirmation window asking "Open myapp?" first and the user has to tap OK before the app actually opens. I want my app to open automatically as the scheme is opened, and I'm being told the only way to do this is through Universal Linking (please correct me if this is not true). If this is true, however, I would like to know if it's possible in any way to put the required apple-app-site-association file on a http:// domain instead of https://? According the official Apple documentation the format of a correct Universal Link starts explicitly with https:// but my domain name can't be loaded on https:// without redirecting a few times and that messes up the web services I've written to execute other tasks in my app. The two main questions I'm left with after this issue:
1) Is it really impossible to work around the confirmation prompt using a custom URL scheme (myscheme://)? If it's not impossible, how can I do this?
2) If I have to use Apple Universal Linking, can I use a http:// domain? If so, how do I do it? Right now if I load up the universal link, it just shows the dictionary inside the apple-app-site-association file, which I'm pretty sure is not supposed to happen. I'm told it's supposed to send a NSUserActivity object to my app delegate. How can I accomplish this with a http:// link?
It is not possible to trigger a custom URI scheme without showing an alert to the user. This used to be possible in iOS 8, but iOS 9 started showing the alert for all apps. And iOS 10.3 has extended that even to the App Store itself. You cannot bypass this. Universal Links were created to replace URI schemes for this behavior, so you do need to use them instead.
From your description, I believe you may be misunderstanding how Universal Links work. To answer the literal questions you asked first, no the Universal Link URL itself does not need to be on the https:// protocol, and yes, the apple-app-site-association must be served over https:// without redirects.
However, it sounds like you're trying to serve the content of the apple-app-site-association file for every Universal Link. That is not the correct implementation — the AASA file is hosted only at https://example.com/apple-app-site-association, and iOS automatically retrieves it when the app is installed. After that, any URL on example.com that matches the criteria in the AASA file will be eligible for Universal Links.
All of that said, you really don't want to built out this system on your own. I suggest looking into Firebase Dynamic Links or Branch.io (full disclosure: I'm on the Branch team).
Is it really impossible to work around the confirmation prompt using a custom URL scheme (myscheme://)? If it's not impossible, how can I do this?
That is possible with some hacky tricks and BAD user experience. It requires user to press "add to home screen" button, so I don't recommend this solution in most cases.
set your app scheme like myapp
create the following html file and put it into the web
window.onload = function() {
if (("standalone" in window.navigator) && window.navigator.standalone) {
window.location.href = 'myapp://open'
}
}
open the html file with safari and "add to home screen"
open the home screen icon and your native app will launch
The point is the meta tag.
<meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes" />
Without this, safari will launch and confirmation prompt will appear.
I'm integrating firebase in application. I created universal link that worked for Android & iOS both.
This worked great. BUT I got scenario where I clicked on goo.gl (PFA) link which was displaying on launched app right-top side. And from then no matter what I do, Deeplink will never launch my application.
I checked to clear history of device-browser but it's same. Any suggestion how to get rid of this issue/feature ??
You're absolutely right: the forward button is horrible UI/UX. It's one of the big flaws with Universal Links identified in this blog post. There is no way to disable the forward button, and once it's triggered, you're screwed.
The easiest way to re-enable Universal Linking behavior after it is turned off is to long-press on the link. Your best bet at getting a clean shot is to paste the Universal Link URL into the stock Notes app and try long-pressing it from there.
Long hold on the url and there will be option to open in app.
Usually when you click the "forward" link to open the universal link in Safari, you can re-open the app by dragging the page down. A bar will appear with your app name and an "OPEN" button. This works as long as you're still in the same URL.
Unfortunately, for Firebase Dynamic Links specifically, the link will redirect you to another domain (for example, from https://z99zz.app.goo.gl/zzzz to https://z99zz-c.app.goo.gl/zzzz) and this breaks this feature. The solution is to either add ?d=1 to the original link (https://z99zz.app.goo.gl/zzzz?d=1, opens a link debug page), or just remove everything after the domain (https://z99zz.app.goo.gl/, opens an error page). Now when it opens in Safari, you can drag down and see the bar.
In addition to imgx64 post. I had a similar problem: Firebase redirected to z99zz-c.app.goo.gl/zzzz and in this case system was not redirected to my app. I added "applinks:mzn3g-c.app.goo.gl" as Associated domain in my target capabilities and this does the trick! Even if you redirected to domain with "-c" suffix iOS can recognize it and will redirect to your app and show suggestion in Safari
My project is in SWIFT
User receives an email with Change Password link and the link is going to be like this http://foobar.com/something/reset_token=barfoo
When user taps on link 'Change Password' it should take him to my iOS app to that particular view controller. I know deeplinking but my URL is going to be like this http://foobar.com/something/reset_token=barfoo and not deeplink://
Please help
If you are targeting iOS9 and newer, you can use Universal links
It allows you to redirect the user to your app from an URL (classic http/s), but he can stay in Safari if he really wants to.
You can found the result in action and a good article about your specific case here:
https://blog.curtisherbert.com/ios-9-universal-links-and-forgotten-passwords/
Hello I have a custom URL to open an app with a link. It works in the browser. But I want to send an email that another user can click the link in the email and the app will be started. Does anybody know a solution?
It is not possible to send an email with the link (myApp://). It always shows the the link as blank text.
Or does anyone know another solution to transfer data between an app to a other users app?
I think you need to write the link in href html tag
i.e. open my app
another solution is to try to add any text after the double slash i.e. myApp://open
My app uses a custom URL scheme so i send a link to my users in an email which when clicked, launches my app installed on their devices. This was working seamlessly till iOS 6 came into picture.
Now when the users click on the link or even type the address manually in the safari they get an error saying "Safari cannot open the page because it is a local file."
Wondering if anyone else encountered the same or if someone has any pointers in this regard !!
Any help much appreciated...
Update: it works if I only give my app's custom url without any parameters.. e.g. if I do "reader-app://" it launches my app but if i do "reader-app://doc=xyz" it doesn't !
try: reader-app://?doc=xyz (add a question mark after //) this way you'll specify a query string. It works for me, but it presents an alertdialog asking the user if she wants to open the url with my application
Try to remove the - sign from reader-app://.
My URL was not working until I removed underscore sings from URL.
Ex:
my_app:// is not working.
myapp:// is working.
That is just a guess.