resume
The event fires when an application is retrieved from the background.
document.addEventListener("resume", yourCallbackFunction, false);
Details
The resume event fires when the native platform pulls the
application out from the background.
Applications typically should use document.addEventListener to
attach an event listener once the [deviceready](events.deviceready.html) event fires.
Supported Platforms
- Amazon Fire OS
- Android
- BlackBerry 10
- iOS
- Windows Phone 8
- Windows 8
Quick Example
document.addEventListener("resume", onResume, false);
function onResume() {
// Handle the resume event
}
Full Example
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Resume Example</title>
<script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8" src="cordova.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8">
// Wait for device API libraries to load
//
function onLoad() {
document.addEventListener("deviceready", onDeviceReady, false);
}
// device APIs are available
//
function onDeviceReady() {
document.addEventListener("resume", onResume, false);
}
// Handle the resume event
//
function onResume() {
}
</script>
</head>
<body onload="onLoad()">
</body>
</html>
iOS Quirks
Any interactive functions called from a pause event handler execute
later when the app resumes, as signaled by the resume event. These
include alerts, console.log(), and any calls from plugins or the
Cordova API, which go through Objective-C.
-
active event
The iOS-specific
activeevent is available as an alternative toresume, and detects when users disable the Lock button to unlock the device with the app running in the foreground. If the app (and device) is enabled for multi-tasking, this is paired with a subsequentresumeevent, but only under iOS 5. In effect, all locked apps in iOS 5 that have multi-tasking enabled are pushed to the background. For apps to remain running when locked under iOS 5, disable the app's multi-tasking by setting UIApplicationExitsOnSuspend toYES. To run when locked on iOS 4, this setting does not matter. -
resume event
When called from a
resumeevent handler, interactive functions such asalert()need to be wrapped in asetTimeout()call with a timeout value of zero, or else the app hangs. For example:document.addEventListener("resume", onResume, false); function onResume() { setTimeout(function() { // TODO: do your thing! }, 0); }