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The scenario is as follows. I have an already deployed app being used by people. I am considering implementing some experimental Bluetooth Low Energy features, but before I do, I want to conduct an "in the wild" survey of the number of users who already have Bluetooth turned on/leave Bluetooth on all the time. So, I would just like to check this in the background and send back to a server statistics on number of users with Bluetooth already on, without ever actually using Bluetooth communications.

I have successfully instantiated a CBCentralManager in my app and can retrieve the Bluetooth status both immediately after instantiation and when the Bluetooth state updates via centralManagerDidUpdateState:. So that is all good. The problem I am having is that if the state is CBCentralManagerStatePoweredOff, then the device brings up an alert prompting the user to "Turn On Bluetooth to Allow [app name] to Connect to Accessories". It is this prompt I am trying to avoid. At this stage I just wish to survey the number of users who leave Bluetooth On - I don't wish to use the Bluetooth connection.

So, is there a way to check the Bluetooth status without prompting the user if you don't intend on using the Bluetooth connection?

Bryce Thomas
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2 Answers2

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iOS 7 has a new options parameter in the create of CBCentralManager to turn this off, named CBCentralManagerOptionShowPowerAlertKey

I'd love a solution for earlier iOS.

O'Rooney
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PatchyFog
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    Nice find. Are you referring to `CBCentralManagerOptionShowPowerAlertKey`? If you decide to expand your answer to specify which call this is passed to/link to further info I'll mark this the accepted answer. Otherwise I'll do an edit on this answer when I get a chance to look at it again in more detail. – Bryce Thomas Oct 15 '13 at 03:15
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    Yes, use CBCentralManagerOptionShowPowerAlertKey, try myCentralManager = [[CBCentralManager alloc] initWithDelegate:self queue:nil options:@{CBCentralManagerOptionShowPowerAlertKey:[NSNumber numberWithBool:NO]}]; – Kwok Pan Fung Oct 17 '13 at 16:27
  • Possible **SWIFT 5** answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/72205073/4543645 – Boris Nikolic May 11 '22 at 17:15
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You can use the following when you initialise the CBCentralManager.

NSDictionary *options = @{CBCentralManagerOptionShowPowerAlertKey: @NO};
self.manager = [[CBCentralManager alloc] initWithDelegate:self queue:nil options:options];

I may have not explained it correctly, please right into the comment if there's any concern.

Ky -
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Anas Azeem
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