You can prompt a user to allow or deny desktop notifications from the browser by running:
Notification.requestPermission(callback);
But is it possible to remove that permission by code? We want our users to have the option to toggle notifications. Can this be achieved by JavaScript or do we need to save that option elsewhere?
No, there is no way for your script to programmatically relinquish permission to show notifications. The API specification does not have any permission-related functions aside from
requestPermission
. (Of course, a browser may have an options menu that allows the user to revoke permission for a domain, but that's a browser-level option, not a site-level option. For example, in Chrome, you can see this options menu by clicking the icon in the left of the address bar.)If you don't want to show notifications, simply don't call
new Notification
.You can either wrap all your calls to
new Notification
inside conditions:Or you can rewrite the
Notification
constructor to contain a contiditional and call the originalNotification
as appropriate:If you use vendor-prefixed constructors or functions (e.g.,
webkitNotifications.createNotification
), then you'll need to rewrite each of those as well to be conditional on your options variable.Looking at the documentation on Notification at MDN and WHATWG, there does not seem to be a way to request revocation of permissions. However, you could emulate your own version of the permissions using localStorage to support that missing functionality. Say you have a checkbox that toggles notifications.
You can store your remembered permissions under the
notification-permissions
key in local storage, and update the permission state similar to:You could retrieve the permissions as:
When you want to display a notification, check your permissions: