Ensure all visual gaps between your widgets are consistent, adapted to the axis direction, and respond to screen size!

Core Features

Provides a Gutter and Margin that correspond to Material Design's Responsive Layout system.

Gutters and margins:

  1. Create a vertical gap in vertical layouts (Column, vertical Scrollable, etc) and a horizontal gap in horizontal layouts (Row, horizontal Scrollable, etc).
  2. Size the gap according to the current screen size and Material Design's corresponding breakpoint definition (small gap on small screens, larger gap on large screens)

GutterSmall, GutterTiny and GutterLarge all provide gaps that are factors of the base gutter size for situations where larger or smaller gaps are more appropriate.

For more flexibility, you can also use the provided extension on BuildContext to reference the gutter and margin sizes directly (context.gutter, context.margin) or create a Gap with a manually set size.

You can us Gutter with other packages using GutterConfiguration and widgetToAxis (see example).

Supported Widgets

Flutter Gutter's widgets traverse up the widget tree until they find an ancestor that meets one of the following conditions:

  1. GutterConfiguration.maybeOf(context).customWidgetToAxis(widget) returns a non-null Axis (this is a custom function that lets you extend Flutter Gutter to support arbitrary widgets).
  2. widget is a scrollable with a defined axis.
  3. widget has an Axis direction attribute (for example, Flutter Gutter supports Boxy's widgets automatically).

Note that case 3 means that ANY widget with an axis is supported, however this is a dynamic check which means that the Dart compiler will not be able to tree shake out any axis attributes on any widget. This may increase your app's bundle size by a very small amount.

I have a Github issue against Flutter to add an explicit axis scope to Flutter which would resolve this limitation. If you like using Flutter Gutter and want to see it improved, please upvote the linked issue.

Example

Without flutter_gutter you have to manually specify the axis direction (by using height or width) and specify size of the gap yourself:

return Column(
  children: [
    const Text('I hate using sized box.'),
    SizedBox(height: 10),
    const Text('If only there were a better way...'),
  ],
);

With flutter_gutter the Gutter widget identifies that it's in a vertical layout (Column) and automatically creates a vertical gap. It also looks up the screen size and sizes the gap accordingly so you don't have to specify a gap size manually:

return Column(
  children: [
    const Text('I hate using sized box.'),
    Gutter(),
    const Text('And now I don\'t have to!'),
  ],
);

To use the material break point values directly, use the extension on context:

return Padding(
  padding: EdgeInsets.only(left: context.gutter, right: context.gutterSmall),
  child: Text('This is the margin size on this device: ${context.margin}'),
);

To use Gutter with custom widgets that don't expose an axis argument, use GutterConfiguration:

return GutterConfiguration(
  data: GutterConfigurationData(
    widgetToAxis: (widget) {
      if (widget is BoxyFlex) {
        // Boxy widgets expose their axes via `BoxyFlex.direction`.
        return widget.direction;
      }
      return null;
    },
  ),
  child: MyCustomColumn(
    chilren: [
      const Text('This widget wasn\'t supported by `Gutter` ).'),
      Gutter(),
      const Text('But with `GutterConfiguration` I can make Gutter work with any widget!'),
    ],
  ),
);

Why not just use the existing Gap package?

Gap and Flutter Gutter are very similar, but Flutter Gutter does a few extra things Gap does not:

  1. Auto sizes gap spacing according to the Material breakpoints system (see "Core Features" above).
  2. Detects the axis of ANY widget that exposes an Axis direction attribute or getter (see "Supported Widgets" above).
  3. Allows you to add support for arbitrary widgets using GutterConfiguration and widgetToAxis.

Personally, I especially appreciate feature 1 as it makes it easier for me to add spacing and ensures that spacing and padding in different parts of my app are consistently sized. However, if none of the above features are important to you, you'll likely prefer the Gap package!

Libraries

flutter_gutter