# org.apache.cordova.device-motion This plugin provides access to the device's accelerometer. The accelerometer is a motion sensor that detects the change (_delta_) in movement relative to the current device orientation, in three dimensions along the _x_, _y_, and _z_ axis. ## Installation cordova plugin add org.apache.cordova.device-motion ## Supported Platforms - Amazon Fire OS - Android - BlackBerry 10 - Firefox OS - iOS - Tizen - Windows Phone 7 and 8 - Windows 8 ## Methods - navigator.accelerometer.getCurrentAcceleration - navigator.accelerometer.watchAcceleration - navigator.accelerometer.clearWatch ## Objects - Acceleration ## navigator.accelerometer.getCurrentAcceleration Get the current acceleration along the _x_, _y_, and _z_ axes. These acceleration values are returned to the `accelerometerSuccess` callback function. navigator.accelerometer.getCurrentAcceleration(accelerometerSuccess, accelerometerError); ### Example function onSuccess(acceleration) { alert('Acceleration X: ' + acceleration.x + '\n' + 'Acceleration Y: ' + acceleration.y + '\n' + 'Acceleration Z: ' + acceleration.z + '\n' + 'Timestamp: ' + acceleration.timestamp + '\n'); }; function onError() { alert('onError!'); }; navigator.accelerometer.getCurrentAcceleration(onSuccess, onError); ### iOS Quirks - iOS doesn't recognize the concept of getting the current acceleration at any given point. - You must watch the acceleration and capture the data at given time intervals. - Thus, the `getCurrentAcceleration` function yields the last value reported from a `watchAccelerometer` call. ## navigator.accelerometer.watchAcceleration Retrieves the device's current `Acceleration` at a regular interval, executing the `accelerometerSuccess` callback function each time. Specify the interval in milliseconds via the `acceleratorOptions` object's `frequency` parameter. The returned watch ID references the accelerometer's watch interval, and can be used with `navigator.accelerometer.clearWatch` to stop watching the accelerometer. var watchID = navigator.accelerometer.watchAcceleration(accelerometerSuccess, accelerometerError, [accelerometerOptions]); - __accelerometerOptions__: An object with the following optional keys: - __frequency__: How often to retrieve the `Acceleration` in milliseconds. _(Number)_ (Default: 10000) ### Example function onSuccess(acceleration) { alert('Acceleration X: ' + acceleration.x + '\n' + 'Acceleration Y: ' + acceleration.y + '\n' + 'Acceleration Z: ' + acceleration.z + '\n' + 'Timestamp: ' + acceleration.timestamp + '\n'); }; function onError() { alert('onError!'); }; var options = { frequency: 3000 }; // Update every 3 seconds var watchID = navigator.accelerometer.watchAcceleration(onSuccess, onError, options); ### iOS Quirks The API calls the success callback function at the interval requested, but restricts the range of requests to the device between 40ms and 1000ms. For example, if you request an interval of 3 seconds, (3000ms), the API requests data from the device every 1 second, but only executes the success callback every 3 seconds. ## navigator.accelerometer.clearWatch Stop watching the `Acceleration` referenced by the `watchID` parameter. navigator.accelerometer.clearWatch(watchID); - __watchID__: The ID returned by `navigator.accelerometer.watchAcceleration`. ### Example var watchID = navigator.accelerometer.watchAcceleration(onSuccess, onError, options); // ... later on ... navigator.accelerometer.clearWatch(watchID); ## Acceleration Contains `Accelerometer` data captured at a specific point in time. Acceleration values include the effect of gravity (9.81 m/s^2), so that when a device lies flat and facing up, _x_, _y_, and _z_ values returned should be `0`, `0`, and `9.81`. ### Properties - __x__: Amount of acceleration on the x-axis. (in m/s^2) _(Number)_ - __y__: Amount of acceleration on the y-axis. (in m/s^2) _(Number)_ - __z__: Amount of acceleration on the z-axis. (in m/s^2) _(Number)_ - __timestamp__: Creation timestamp in milliseconds. _(DOMTimeStamp)_