skills/push-notifications/SKILL.md
Implement, review, or debug push notifications in iOS/macOS apps — local notifications, remote (APNs) notifications, rich notifications, notification actions, silent pushes, and notification service/content extensions. Use when working with UNUserNotificationCenter, registering for remote notifications, handling notification payloads, setting up notification categories and actions, creating rich notification content, or debugging notification delivery. Also use when working with alerts, badges, sounds, background pushes, or user notification permissions in Swift apps.
npx skillsauth add dpearson2699/swift-ios-skills push-notificationsInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Implement, review, and debug local and remote notifications on iOS/macOS using UserNotifications and APNs. Covers permission flow, token registration, payload structure, foreground handling, notification actions, grouping, and rich notifications. Targets iOS 26+ with Swift 6.3, backward-compatible to iOS 16 unless noted.
Keep adjacent domains separate: Live Activity content-state payloads belong in activitykit; PushKit/VoIP call pushes belong in callkit; App Clip ephemeral notification setup belongs in app-clips; long-running or scheduled background work after a silent push belongs in background-processing.
When reviewing flawed notification proposals, explicitly name the violated contract. APNs token reviews must say token registration is independent from alert authorization, upload on every didRegister callback, avoid local-cache-as-truth logic, never assume token length, and treat Simulator registration failure as expected while noting .apns files or simctl push can simulate delivery. Background-push reviews must say content-available only, apns-push-type: background, apns-priority: 5, Remote notifications background mode, low priority, throttled, not guaranteed, not every few minutes, and bounded didReceiveRemoteNotification returning the correct UIBackgroundFetchResult. Rich-notification reviews must say service extensions require mutable-content: 1 plus an alert payload, silent pushes do not trigger them, attachments are supported on-disk files that the system validates and stores, secrets use Keychain Sharing while App Groups are for shared files/UserDefaults, communication notifications require capability + NSUserActivityTypes + INInteraction donation + content.updating(from:), and every service-extension path including attachment/download failures and serviceExtensionTimeWillExpire() must call the content handler exactly once with original, best-attempt, or updated content.
Request notification authorization before scheduling or displaying user-visible alerts, sounds, or badges. The system prompt appears only once; subsequent calls return the stored decision. APNs token registration is separate: call registerForRemoteNotifications() when the app needs a device token, even if the user hasn't granted alert authorization.
import UserNotifications
@MainActor
func requestNotificationPermission() async -> Bool {
let center = UNUserNotificationCenter.current()
do {
let granted = try await center.requestAuthorization(
options: [.alert, .sound, .badge]
)
return granted
} catch {
print("Authorization request failed: \(error)")
return false
}
}
Always check status before assuming permissions. The user can change settings at any time.
@MainActor
func checkNotificationStatus() async -> UNAuthorizationStatus {
let settings = await UNUserNotificationCenter.current().notificationSettings()
return settings.authorizationStatus
// .notDetermined, .denied, .authorized, .provisional, .ephemeral
}
Provisional notifications deliver quietly to the notification center without interrupting the user. The user can then choose to keep or turn them off. Use for onboarding flows where you want to demonstrate value before asking for full permission.
// Delivers silently -- no permission prompt shown to the user
try await center.requestAuthorization(options: [.alert, .sound, .badge, .provisional])
Critical alerts bypass Do Not Disturb and the mute switch. Requires a special entitlement from Apple (request via developer portal). Use only for health, safety, or security scenarios.
// Requires com.apple.developer.usernotifications.critical-alerts entitlement
try await center.requestAuthorization(
options: [.alert, .sound, .badge, .criticalAlert]
)
When the user has denied notifications, guide them to Settings with UIApplication.openSettingsURLString. Do not repeatedly prompt or nag.
Use UIApplicationDelegateAdaptor to receive the device token in a SwiftUI app. The AppDelegate callbacks are the only way to receive APNs tokens.
@main
struct MyApp: App {
@UIApplicationDelegateAdaptor(AppDelegate.self) var appDelegate
var body: some Scene {
WindowGroup {
ContentView()
}
}
}
class AppDelegate: NSObject, UIApplicationDelegate {
func application(
_ application: UIApplication,
didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [UIApplication.LaunchOptionsKey: Any]? = nil
) -> Bool {
UNUserNotificationCenter.current().delegate = NotificationDelegate.shared
return true
}
func application(
_ application: UIApplication,
didRegisterForRemoteNotificationsWithDeviceToken deviceToken: Data
) {
let token = deviceToken.map { String(format: "%02x", $0) }.joined()
print("APNs token: \(token)")
// Send token to your server
Task { await TokenService.shared.upload(token: token) }
}
func application(
_ application: UIApplication,
didFailToRegisterForRemoteNotificationsWithError error: Error
) {
print("APNs registration failed: \(error.localizedDescription)")
// Simulator can simulate pushes, but it does not register with APNs.
}
}
Configure delegates and categories at launch. Then request user-notification authorization in context for visible notifications, and register with APNs whenever the app needs a device token. Do not gate APNs registration on .authorized; without alert authorization, remote notifications are delivered silently.
@MainActor
func configureNotifications() async {
let center = UNUserNotificationCenter.current()
let settings = await center.notificationSettings()
if settings.authorizationStatus == .notDetermined {
_ = await requestNotificationPermission()
}
// Needed for APNs token delivery and silent remote notifications.
UIApplication.shared.registerForRemoteNotifications()
}
Device tokens change. Re-send the token to your server every time didRegisterForRemoteNotificationsWithDeviceToken fires, not just the first time. Do not persist tokens locally as a source of truth or assume a fixed token length.
Schedule notifications directly from the device without a server. Useful for reminders, timers, and location-based alerts.
let content = UNMutableNotificationContent()
content.title = "Workout Reminder"
content.subtitle = "Time to move"
content.body = "You have a scheduled workout in 15 minutes."
content.sound = .default
content.badge = NSNumber(value: 1)
content.userInfo = ["workoutId": "abc123"]
content.threadIdentifier = "workouts" // groups in notification center
// Fire after a time interval (minimum 60 seconds for repeating)
let timeTrigger = UNTimeIntervalNotificationTrigger(timeInterval: 300, repeats: false)
// Fire at a specific date/time
var dateComponents = DateComponents()
dateComponents.hour = 8
dateComponents.minute = 30
let calendarTrigger = UNCalendarNotificationTrigger(
dateMatching: dateComponents, repeats: true // daily at 8:30 AM
)
// Fire when entering a geographic region
let region = CLCircularRegion(
center: CLLocationCoordinate2D(latitude: 37.33, longitude: -122.01),
radius: 100,
identifier: "gym"
)
region.notifyOnEntry = true
region.notifyOnExit = false
let locationTrigger = UNLocationNotificationTrigger(region: region, repeats: false)
// Requires "When In Use" location permission at minimum
let request = UNNotificationRequest(
identifier: "workout-reminder-abc123",
content: content,
trigger: timeTrigger
)
let center = UNUserNotificationCenter.current()
try await center.add(request)
// Remove specific pending notifications
center.removePendingNotificationRequests(withIdentifiers: ["workout-reminder-abc123"])
// Remove all pending
center.removeAllPendingNotificationRequests()
// Remove delivered notifications from notification center
center.removeDeliveredNotifications(withIdentifiers: ["workout-reminder-abc123"])
center.removeAllDeliveredNotifications()
// List all pending requests
let pending = await center.pendingNotificationRequests()
{
"aps": {
"alert": {
"title": "New Message",
"subtitle": "From Alice",
"body": "Hey, are you free for lunch?"
},
"badge": 3,
"sound": "default",
"thread-id": "chat-alice",
"category": "MESSAGE_CATEGORY"
},
"messageId": "msg-789",
"senderId": "user-alice"
}
Set content-available: 1 with no alert, sound, or badge. Requires "Background Modes > Remote notifications" plus APNs headers apns-push-type: background and apns-priority: 5. The system treats these as low priority, throttled, and not guaranteed; do not send them every few minutes or rely on them for immediate freshness. In didReceiveRemoteNotification, do bounded work and return a UIBackgroundFetchResult promptly, within the background execution window.
{
"aps": {
"content-available": 1
},
"updateType": "new-data"
}
Handle in AppDelegate:
func application(
_ application: UIApplication,
didReceiveRemoteNotification userInfo: [AnyHashable: Any]
) async -> UIBackgroundFetchResult {
guard let updateType = userInfo["updateType"] as? String else {
return .noData
}
do {
try await DataSyncService.shared.sync(trigger: updateType)
return .newData
} catch {
return .failed
}
}
Set mutable-content: 1 plus an alert dictionary to let a Notification Service Extension modify an alerting remote notification before display. Silent pushes do not trigger the service extension. Use service extensions for bounded work such as downloading supported on-disk attachments, decrypting display text, or configuring communication notifications; call the content handler on every success, failure, and timeout path. For communication notifications, enable the capability, add NSUserActivityTypes, donate the INInteraction, then call content.updating(from:).
{
"aps": {
"alert": { "title": "Photo", "body": "Alice sent a photo" },
"mutable-content": 1
},
"imageUrl": "https://example.com/photo.jpg"
}
Use localization keys so the notification displays in the user's language:
{
"aps": {
"alert": {
"title-loc-key": "NEW_MESSAGE_TITLE",
"loc-key": "NEW_MESSAGE_BODY",
"loc-args": ["Alice"]
}
}
}
Implement the delegate to control foreground display and handle user taps. Set the delegate as early as possible -- in application(_:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:) or App.init.
@MainActor
final class NotificationDelegate: NSObject, UNUserNotificationCenterDelegate {
static let shared = NotificationDelegate()
// Called when notification arrives while app is in FOREGROUND
func userNotificationCenter(
_ center: UNUserNotificationCenter,
willPresent notification: UNNotification
) async -> UNNotificationPresentationOptions {
// Return which presentation elements to show
// Without this, foreground notifications are silently suppressed
return [.banner, .sound, .badge]
}
// Called when user TAPS the notification
func userNotificationCenter(
_ center: UNUserNotificationCenter,
didReceive response: UNNotificationResponse
) async {
let userInfo = response.notification.request.content.userInfo
let actionIdentifier = response.actionIdentifier
switch actionIdentifier {
case UNNotificationDefaultActionIdentifier:
// User tapped the notification body
await handleNotificationTap(userInfo: userInfo)
case UNNotificationDismissActionIdentifier:
// User dismissed the notification
break
default:
// Custom action button tapped
await handleCustomAction(actionIdentifier, userInfo: userInfo)
}
}
}
Route notification taps to the correct screen using a shared @Observable router. The delegate writes a pending destination; the SwiftUI view observes and consumes it.
@Observable @MainActor
final class DeepLinkRouter {
static let shared = DeepLinkRouter()
var pendingDestination: AppDestination?
}
// In NotificationDelegate:
func handleNotificationTap(userInfo: [AnyHashable: Any]) async {
guard let id = userInfo["messageId"] as? String else { return }
DeepLinkRouter.shared.pendingDestination = .chat(id: id)
}
// In SwiftUI -- observe and consume:
.onChange(of: router.pendingDestination) { _, destination in
if let destination {
path.append(destination)
router.pendingDestination = nil
}
}
See references/notification-patterns.md for the full deep-linking handler with tab switching.
Define interactive actions that appear as buttons on the notification. Register categories at launch.
func registerNotificationCategories() {
let replyAction = UNTextInputNotificationAction(
identifier: "REPLY_ACTION",
title: "Reply",
options: [],
textInputButtonTitle: "Send",
textInputPlaceholder: "Type a reply..."
)
let likeAction = UNNotificationAction(
identifier: "LIKE_ACTION",
title: "Like",
options: []
)
let deleteAction = UNNotificationAction(
identifier: "DELETE_ACTION",
title: "Delete",
options: [.destructive, .authenticationRequired]
)
let messageCategory = UNNotificationCategory(
identifier: "MESSAGE_CATEGORY",
actions: [replyAction, likeAction, deleteAction],
intentIdentifiers: [],
options: [.customDismissAction] // fires didReceive on dismiss too
)
UNUserNotificationCenter.current().setNotificationCategories([messageCategory])
}
func handleCustomAction(_ identifier: String, userInfo: [AnyHashable: Any]) async {
switch identifier {
case "REPLY_ACTION":
// response is UNTextInputNotificationResponse for text input actions
break
case "LIKE_ACTION":
guard let messageId = userInfo["messageId"] as? String else { return }
await MessageService.shared.likeMessage(id: messageId)
case "DELETE_ACTION":
guard let messageId = userInfo["messageId"] as? String else { return }
await MessageService.shared.deleteMessage(id: messageId)
default:
break
}
}
Action options:
.authenticationRequired -- device must be unlocked to perform the action.destructive -- displayed in red; use for delete/remove actions.foreground -- launches the app to the foreground when tappedGroup related notifications with threadIdentifier (or thread-id in the APNs payload). Each unique thread becomes a separate group in Notification Center.
content.threadIdentifier = "chat-alice" // all messages from Alice group together
content.summaryArgument = "Alice"
content.summaryArgumentCount = 3 // "3 more notifications from Alice"
Customize the summary format string in the category:
let category = UNNotificationCategory(
identifier: "MESSAGE_CATEGORY",
actions: [replyAction],
intentIdentifiers: [],
categorySummaryFormat: "%u more messages from %@",
options: []
)
DON'T: Gate APNs token registration on alert authorization when the app needs silent pushes or server token binding.
DO: Request authorization for alerts/sounds/badges, and register with APNs whenever a device token is needed.
DON'T: Convert device token with String(data: deviceToken, encoding: .utf8).
DO: Use hex: deviceToken.map { String(format: "%02x", $0) }.joined().
DON'T: Promise every-few-minutes silent refresh or immediate background delivery.
DO: Say background pushes are low priority, throttled, not guaranteed, limited to a few per hour in practice, and require bounded didReceiveRemoteNotification work that returns the correct UIBackgroundFetchResult.
DON'T: Expect a silent push to run a Notification Service Extension, or leave the extension without calling its content handler.
DO: Use mutable-content: 1 with an alert payload, supported on-disk attachments that the system validates and stores, INInteraction donation plus content.updating(from:) for communication notifications, and original or best-attempt content on every success, failure, and timeout path.
DON'T: Forget foreground handling. Without willPresent, notifications are silently suppressed.
DO: Implement willPresent and return .banner, .sound, .badge.
DON'T: Set delegate too late or register from SwiftUI views without AppDelegate adaptor.
DO: Set delegate in App.init; use UIApplicationDelegateAdaptor for APNs.
DON'T: Upload APNs tokens only when they "change" or assume a fixed token length. DO: Upload on every didRegister callback and treat the token as opaque data converted to hex.
DON'T: Put Live Activity, VoIP, or App Clip-specific notification rules here. DO: Route those to activitykit, callkit, and app-clips.
UNUserNotificationCenterDelegate set in App.init or application(_:didFinishLaunching:)willPresent) and tap (didReceive) handling implementedcontent-available: 1, no alert/sound/badge, apns-push-type: background, apns-priority: 5, Background Modes > Remote notifications, throttling caveats, and correct UIBackgroundFetchResultdevelopment
Implement, review, or improve data visualizations using Swift Charts. Use when building bar, line, area, point, pie, donut, or iOS 26 3D charts; when adding chart selection, scrolling, annotations, axes, scales, legends, or foregroundStyle grouping; when plotting functions with BarPlot, LinePlot, AreaPlot, PointPlot, Chart3D, or SurfacePlot; or when creating heat maps, Gantt charts, grouped bars, sparklines, threshold lines, or spatial visualizations.
data-ai
Select, implement, or migrate between app architecture patterns for Apple platform apps. Use when choosing between MV (Model-View with @Observable), MVVM, MVI, TCA (The Composable Architecture), Clean Architecture, VIPER, or Coordinator patterns; when evaluating architecture fit for a feature's complexity; when migrating from one pattern to another; or when reviewing whether an app's current architecture is appropriate. Scoped to Apple-platform patterns using Swift 6.3, SwiftUI, and UIKit.
development
Apply Swift API Design Guidelines to name, label, and document Swift APIs. Covers argument label rules (prepositional phrase rule, grammatical phrase rule, first-label omission), mutating/nonmutating pair naming (-ed/-ing participle pattern, form- prefix, sort/sorted, formUnion/union), side-effect naming (noun for pure, verb for mutating), documentation comment structure (summary by declaration kind, O(1) complexity rule), clarity at call site, role-based naming, protocol naming (-able/-ible/-ing), default arguments over method families, casing conventions, and terminology. Use when designing new Swift APIs, reviewing naming and argument labels, writing documentation comments, or refactoring for call site clarity.
development
Implement, review, or improve in-app purchases and subscriptions using StoreKit 2. Use when building paywalls with SubscriptionStoreView or ProductView, processing transactions with Product and Transaction APIs, verifying entitlements, handling purchase flows (consumable, non-consumable, auto-renewable), implementing offer codes or promotional/win-back/introductory offers, managing subscription status and renewal state, setting up StoreKit testing with configuration files, or integrating Family Sharing, Ask to Buy, refund handling, and billing retry logic.