Prior to iOS 4.0, CoreLocation
was reporting altitude correctly, now it always reports as 0 ft.
-(void)locationManager:(CLLocationManager *)manager didUpdateToLocation:(CLLocation*)newLocation fromLocation:(CLLocation *)oldLocation
{
NSString *tLatitude = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%3.5f", newLocation.coordinate.latitude];
NSString *tLongitude = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%3.5f", newLocation.coordinate.longitude];
/* the following returns 0 */
NSString *tAltitude = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%i", newLocation.altitude];
/* theres more code, but it's not relevant,
and this worked prior to iOS 4.0*/
[manager stopUpdatingLocation];
}
Not working on Device nor Simulator, does anyone else experience this issue?
If you're using startMonitoringSignificantLocationChanges
, which was a feature new to iOS 4.0, then you will not get altitude updates. This low-power mode only uses cell towers to figure out a user's location, and this method not report altitude.
More generally, the iPhone has three ways of figuring out your location -- cell towers, wi-fi, and GPS. You will only get altitude when the GPS is being used. So even if you set your desiredAccuracy
setting to be really precise to force the device to use GPS, if a user is indoors the iPhone probably won't be able to get a GPS signal and will fallback to cell or wi-fi. In that case, you won't get an altitude. Also consider users who are on an iPod Touch -- it only has the ability to get a location via wi-fi, and thus also won't report an altitude.
Two things you could try. First of all, try setting the location manager's desiredAccuracy
to kCLLocationAccuracyBest
.
If that doesn't work, try removing [manager stopUpdatingLocation];
, and put a NSLog
in the didUpdateToLocation
with the altitude. Sometimes it needs to narrow down for a bit before it displays the altitude.
From the Core Location Data Types Reference:
The CLLocationDistance
data type (the data type for altitude) is a double
. The formatter you are using for your stringWithFormat
is an integer
. You need to cast your altitude to an integer
, first, or use a double
(%f) formatter.
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