Determine if the access to photo library is set or not - PHPhotoLibrary
Solution 1:
I know this has already been answered, but just to expand on @Tim answer, here is the code you need (iOS 8 and above):
PHAuthorizationStatus status = [PHPhotoLibrary authorizationStatus];
if (status == PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized) {
// Access has been granted.
}
else if (status == PHAuthorizationStatusDenied) {
// Access has been denied.
}
else if (status == PHAuthorizationStatusNotDetermined) {
// Access has not been determined.
[PHPhotoLibrary requestAuthorization:^(PHAuthorizationStatus status) {
if (status == PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized) {
// Access has been granted.
}
else {
// Access has been denied.
}
}];
}
else if (status == PHAuthorizationStatusRestricted) {
// Restricted access - normally won't happen.
}
Don't forget to #import <Photos/Photos.h>
If you are using Swift 3.0 or higher, you can use the following code:
// Get the current authorization state.
let status = PHPhotoLibrary.authorizationStatus()
if (status == PHAuthorizationStatus.authorized) {
// Access has been granted.
}
else if (status == PHAuthorizationStatus.denied) {
// Access has been denied.
}
else if (status == PHAuthorizationStatus.notDetermined) {
// Access has not been determined.
PHPhotoLibrary.requestAuthorization({ (newStatus) in
if (newStatus == PHAuthorizationStatus.authorized) {
}
else {
}
})
}
else if (status == PHAuthorizationStatus.restricted) {
// Restricted access - normally won't happen.
}
Don't forget to import Photos
Solution 2:
Check +[PHPhotoLibrary authorizationStatus]
– if not set, it will return PHAuthorizationStatusNotDetermined
. (You can then request access using +requestAuthorization:
on the same class.)
Solution 3:
Just as formality, Swift 2.X version:
func checkPhotoLibraryPermission() {
let status = PHPhotoLibrary.authorizationStatus()
switch status {
case .Authorized:
//handle authorized status
case .Denied, .Restricted :
//handle denied status
case .NotDetermined:
// ask for permissions
PHPhotoLibrary.requestAuthorization() { (status) -> Void in
switch status {
case .Authorized:
// as above
case .Denied, .Restricted:
// as above
case .NotDetermined:
// won't happen but still
}
}
}
}
And Swift 3 / Swift 4:
import Photos
func checkPhotoLibraryPermission() {
let status = PHPhotoLibrary.authorizationStatus()
switch status {
case .authorized:
//handle authorized status
case .denied, .restricted :
//handle denied status
case .notDetermined:
// ask for permissions
PHPhotoLibrary.requestAuthorization { status in
switch status {
case .authorized:
// as above
case .denied, .restricted:
// as above
case .notDetermined:
// won't happen but still
}
}
}
}
Solution 4:
Here is a complete guide for iOS 8+ (without ALAssetLibrary):
First, we have to provide the usage description as now it's required by PHPhotoLibrary.
For doing this we must open the file info.plist
, find the key Privacy - Photo Library Usage Description
and provide the value for it. If the key doesn't exist then just create it.
Here is an image for example:
Also make sure that the value of the key Bundle name
is not empty in the info.plist
file.
Now when we have description, we can normally request authorization by calling requestAuthorization
method:
[PHPhotoLibrary requestAuthorization:^(PHAuthorizationStatus status) {
switch (status) {
case PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized:
NSLog(@"PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized");
break;
case PHAuthorizationStatusDenied:
NSLog(@"PHAuthorizationStatusDenied");
break;
case PHAuthorizationStatusNotDetermined:
NSLog(@"PHAuthorizationStatusNotDetermined");
break;
case PHAuthorizationStatusRestricted:
NSLog(@"PHAuthorizationStatusRestricted");
break;
}
}];
NOTE 1: requestAuthorization
actually doesn't show alert on every call. It shows once per some time, saves user's answer and returns it everytime instead of showing alert again. But as it isn't what we need, here is a useful code which always shows alert every time we need permission (with redirection to settings):
- (void)requestAuthorizationWithRedirectionToSettings {
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
PHAuthorizationStatus status = [PHPhotoLibrary authorizationStatus];
if (status == PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized)
{
//We have permission. Do whatever is needed
}
else
{
//No permission. Trying to normally request it
[PHPhotoLibrary requestAuthorization:^(PHAuthorizationStatus status) {
if (status != PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized)
{
//User don't give us permission. Showing alert with redirection to settings
//Getting description string from info.plist file
NSString *accessDescription = [[NSBundle mainBundle] objectForInfoDictionaryKey:@"NSPhotoLibraryUsageDescription"];
UIAlertController * alertController = [UIAlertController alertControllerWithTitle:accessDescription message:@"To give permissions tap on 'Change Settings' button" preferredStyle:UIAlertControllerStyleAlert];
UIAlertAction *cancelAction = [UIAlertAction actionWithTitle:@"Cancel" style:UIAlertActionStyleCancel handler:nil];
[alertController addAction:cancelAction];
UIAlertAction *settingsAction = [UIAlertAction actionWithTitle:@"Change Settings" style:UIAlertActionStyleDefault handler:^(UIAlertAction * _Nonnull action) {
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] openURL:[NSURL URLWithString:UIApplicationOpenSettingsURLString]];
}];
[alertController addAction:settingsAction];
[[UIApplication sharedApplication].keyWindow.rootViewController presentViewController:alertController animated:YES completion:nil];
}
}];
}
});
}
Common problem 1: Some users complain that the app doesn't show an alert after doing the above-mentioned changes in the info.plist
file.
Solution: For testing try to change Bundle Identifier
from the project file to something else, clean and rebuild the app. If it started working then everything is fine, rename it back.
Common Problem 2: There is some specific case when fetch results are not updated (and the views which used images from those fetch requests still empty accordingly) when the app gets permissions to photos, while running as it was promised in the documentation.
Actually it happens when we use WRONG code like this:
- (void)viewDidLoad {
if ([PHPhotoLibrary authorizationStatus] != PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized)
{
//Reloading some view which needs photos
[self reloadCollectionView];
// ...
} else {
[PHPhotoLibrary requestAuthorization:^(PHAuthorizationStatus status) {
if (status == PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized)
[self reloadCollectionView];
// ...
}];
}
// ...
}
In this case, if the user denied giving permissions on viewDidLoad
then jumped to settings, allowed and jumped back to the the app, views will not be refreshed because [self reloadCollectionView]
and fetch requests were not sent.
Solution: We just have to call [self reloadCollectionView]
and do other fetch requests before requiring authorization like this:
- (void)viewDidLoad {
//Reloading some view which needs photos
[self reloadCollectionView];
if ([PHPhotoLibrary authorizationStatus] != PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized)
{
// ...
}
Solution 5:
I did it like this:
- (void)requestPermissions:(GalleryPermissions)block
{
PHAuthorizationStatus status = [PHPhotoLibrary authorizationStatus];
switch (status)
{
case PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized:
block(YES);
break;
case PHAuthorizationStatusNotDetermined:
{
[PHPhotoLibrary requestAuthorization:^(PHAuthorizationStatus authorizationStatus)
{
if (authorizationStatus == PHAuthorizationStatusAuthorized)
{
block(YES);
}
else
{
block(NO);
}
}];
break;
}
default:
block(NO);
break;
}
}
And i send in what I need to do as the block depending on success or failure.