1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2<!--
3 Copyright 2013 The Android Open Source Project
4
5 Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
6 you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
7 You may obtain a copy of the License at
8
9     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
10
11 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
12 distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
13 WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
14 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
15 limitations under the License.
16-->
17
18
19
20<sample>
21    <name>Geofencing</name>
22    <group>Wearable</group>
23    <package>com.example.android.wearable.geofencing</package>
24
25    <minSdk>18</minSdk>
26    <targetSdkVersion>22</targetSdkVersion>
27    <targetSdkVersionWear>22</targetSdkVersionWear>
28
29    <dependency>com.google.android.gms:play-services-location</dependency>
30
31    <wearable>
32        <has_handheld_app>true</has_handheld_app>
33    </wearable>
34
35    <strings>
36        <intro>
37            <![CDATA[
38            When a user enters the vicinity of the Android building (B44) or the Yerba Buena
39            Gardens near the Moscone center in San Francisco, a notification silently appears on his/her
40            wearable with an option to check in. This notification automatically disappears when he/she leaves
41            the area, and reappears the next time he/she is at one of these locations.
42            ]]>
43        </intro>
44    </strings>
45
46    <template src="base"/>
47    <template src="Wear"/>
48
49    <metadata>
50        <status>DEPRECATED</status>
51        <categories>Wearable, Sensors</categories>
52        <technologies>Android</technologies>
53        <languages>Java</languages>
54        <solutions>Mobile</solutions>
55        <level>ADVANCED</level>
56        <icon>screenshots/icon-web.png</icon>
57        <screenshots>
58            <img>screenshots/android_building_check_in.png</img>
59        </screenshots>
60        <api_refs>
61            <android>com.google.android.gms.location.Geofence</android>
62        </api_refs>
63        <description>
64<![CDATA[
65When the user enters the vicinity of the Android building (B44) or the Yerba Buena
66Gardens near the Moscone center in San Francisco, a notification silently appears on their
67wearable with an option to check in. This notification automatically disappears when they leave
68the area, and reappears the next time they are at one of these locations.
69]]>
70        </description>
71        <intro>
72<![CDATA[
73Geofencing combines awareness of the user's current location with awareness of
74nearby features, defined as the user's proximity to locations that may be of
75interest. To mark a location of interest, you specify its latitude and longitude.
76To adjust the proximity for the location, you add a radius. The latitude,
77longitude, and radius define a geofence. You can have multiple active
78geofences at one time.
79
80To use geofencing, start by defining the geofences you want to monitor.
81Although you usually store geofence data in a local database or download
82it from the network, you need to send a geofence to Location Services as
83an instance of [Geofence][2], which you create with `Geofence.Builder`. Each
84Geofence object contains the following information:
85
861. Latitude, longitude, and radius
872. Expiration time
883. Transition type
894. Geofence ID
90
91Read more about geofences in [Creating and Monitoring Geofences][1].
92
93[1]:http://developer.android.com/training/location/geofencing.html
94[2]:http://developer.android.com/reference/com/google/android/gms/location/Geofence.html
95]]>
96        </intro>
97    </metadata>
98</sample>
99