You can't control the accuracy of the internal MKMapView
location manager (the one used to track the user with the blue dot), but you can create your own and use it to recenter the map. Here is a recipe...
To handle core location permissions
In the Core Location Delegate:
- (void)locationManager:(CLLocationManager *)manager didFailWithError:(NSError *)error
{
if ([CLLocationManager authorizationStatus] == kCLAuthorizationStatusDenied){
NSLog(@"User has denied location services");
} else {
NSLog(@"Location manager did fail with error: %@", error.localizedFailureReason);
}
}
Right before setting up the location manager:
if (![CLLocationManager locationServicesEnabled]){
NSLog(@"location services are disabled"];
return;
}
if ([CLLocationManager authorizationStatus] == kCLAuthorizationStatusDenied){
NSLog(@"location services are blocked by the user");
return;
}
if ([CLLocationManager authorizationStatus] == kCLAuthorizationStatusAuthorized){
NSLog(@"location services are enabled");
}
if ([CLLocationManager authorizationStatus] == kCLAuthorizationStatusNotDetermined){
NSLog(@"about to show a dialog requesting permission");
}
To setup core location
self.locationManager = [CLLocationManager new];
self.locationManager.purpose = @"Tracking your movements on the map.";
self.locationManager.delegate = self;
/* Pinpoint our location with the following accuracy:
*
* kCLLocationAccuracyBestForNavigation highest + sensor data
* kCLLocationAccuracyBest highest
* kCLLocationAccuracyNearestTenMeters 10 meters
* kCLLocationAccuracyHundredMeters 100 meters
* kCLLocationAccuracyKilometer 1000 meters
* kCLLocationAccuracyThreeKilometers 3000 meters
*/
self.locationManager.desiredAccuracy = kCLLocationAccuracyNearestTenMeters;
/* Notify changes when device has moved x meters.
* Default value is kCLDistanceFilterNone: all movements are reported.
*/
self.locationManager.distanceFilter = 10.0f;
/* Notify heading changes when heading is > 5.
* Default value is kCLHeadingFilterNone: all movements are reported.
*/
self.locationManager.headingFilter = 5;
// update location
if ([CLLocationManager locationServicesEnabled]){
[self.locationManager startUpdatingLocation];
}
To recenter the map with our location manager
- (void)locationManager:(CLLocationManager *)manager
didUpdateToLocation:(CLLocation *)newLocation
fromLocation:(CLLocation *)oldLocation
{
MKCoordinateRegion region = { { 0.0f, 0.0f }, { 0.0f, 0.0f } };
region.center = newLocation.coordinate;
region.span.longitudeDelta = 0.15f;
region.span.latitudeDelta = 0.15f;
[self.mapView setRegion:region animated:YES];
}
Put that on the delegate. MKMapView doesn't have a distance or accuracy filter, only the CLLocationManager does. What MKMapView has is a region span around a point, in the example above 0.15 degrees (0.15*111 Km).
Things that I tried and didn't work
The documentation doesn't tell where MKMapView
is getting its updates from. I tried
- (void)locationManager:(CLLocationManager *)manager
didUpdateToLocation:(CLLocation *)newLocation
fromLocation:(CLLocation *)oldLocation {
NSLog(@"newLocation %@", newLocation.timestamp);
NSLog(@"last map location %@", [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@",[[[self.mapView userLocation] location] timestamp]]);
}
and I'm getting different values on each. It looks as if MKMapView
uses its own CLLocationManager
, which means you can't set its accuracy. You can't add your delegate for the CLLocationManager
of the MKMapView
either.
My impression is that the only way to set the accuracy is setting show user position to NO and create a custom annotation with a blue dot, which means recentering the map manually as posted. You can get the blue dot graphic from the SDK with the github project artwork-extractor.
I don't know if I'm missing something or this part of MKMapView
just sucks.