GgRouter - Easy Routing for Flutter
GgRouter
is a simple and powerful routing package for Flutter. Just define
your nested routes. Add query parameters. Define the route transitions. GgRouter
will do the rest for you:
- GgRouter selects the right widgets for rendering
- GgRouter restores the previous route state.
- GgRouter performs only necessary animations.
- GgRouter parses the URI and applies it to your application state.
- GgRouter synchronizes route tree changes to the browser URI.
Additionally, GgRouter allows you to create index routes, default routes, wildcard routes, assign semantic labels to routes. And finally, it can backup and restore the complete route tree as JSON.
Demo
Klick here to watch a YouTube demo of GgRouter.
Content
- GgRouter - Easy Routing for Flutter
Initialize GgRouter
To initialize GgRouter
, create a MaterialApp.router(...)
instance
and provide it with an instance of GgRouterDelegate
and
GgRouterInformationParser
.
class MyApp extends StatelessWidget {
MyApp({Key? key}) : super(key: key);
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp.router(
routerDelegate: GgRouterDelegate(
child: Scaffold(
body: GgRouterExample(),
),
),
routeInformationParser: GgRouteInformationParser(),
);
}
}
Define routes
Page routes
Use the GgRouter
widget to add routes to your application structure:
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context){
return GgRouter(
{
'sports': _sports,
'transportation': _transportation,
'places': _places
}
);
}
Each of these routes will replace its siblings when being selected.
Popover routes
To show a route in front of existing content, create a popover route:
GgPopoverRoute(
// ...
name: 'popover', // The route which will open the popover
base: _myWidget, // The regular content
popover: _myDialog, // The popover
inAnimation: _rotateIn, // The appearing animation
outAnimation: _rotateOut, // The disappearing animation
),
Nested routes
You can arbitrarily nest these routes. Just place another GgRouter
widget
within one of the routes. Child GgRouter
widgets do not need to be direct
children.
Handling fallbacks
Index route
To define a default route which is shown when none of the routes is selected,
add a route with name '_INDEX_'
:
GgRouter(
{
'_INDEX_': _index,
'sports': _sports,
// ...
}
);
Default route
Chose a default route when no _INDEX
route is defined by using the
defaultRoute
parameter.
GgRouter(
{
'sports': _sports,
// ...
},
defaultRoute: 'sports'
);
Wildcard routes
If you want to handle arbitrary route names, e.g., parsing an ID from the URI,
you can setup a wild card route using *
as route name:
return GgRouter(
{
// ...
'*': _wildCardPage,
},
/// ...
);
To get the name of the actual route, use GgRouter.of(context).routeName
:
Widget _wildCardPage(BuildContext context) {
final routeName = GgRouter.of(context).routeName;
// ... do something with the routeName
}
Navigation
Navigate absolutely
Use GgRouter.of(context).navigateTo('/sports/football')
to absolutely navigate
to the football page, no matter where you currently are in your application.
Navigate relatively
- Use
GgRouter.of(context).navigateTo('./dialog/')
to navigate to the direct child. - Use
GgRouter.of(context).navigateTo('..')
to navigate to the parent. - Use
GgRouter.of(context).navigateTo('../../')
to navigate to the grand parent. - Use
GgRouter.of(context).navigateTo('../transportation/')
to navigate to a sibling.
Navigate to last route
When you switch to a route, you might want to open the child route that was
opened when you left the route the last time. Use the _LAST_
keyword to
activate this route:
GgRouter.of(context).navigateTo('/sports/_LAST_');
Navigation Bars
Navigation buttons and GgRouter
widgets can be used side by side. Navigation
elements can use GgRouter.of(context)
to perform various routing operations:
- Use
GgRouter.of(context).navigateTo('...')
to navigate to a route. - Use
GgRouter.of(context).routeNameOfActiveChild
to find out which child route is currently visible. - Use
GgRouter.of(context).indexOfActiveChild
to find out which of the items in aBottomNavigationBar
need to be styled as visible elements. - Use
GgRouter.of(context).onActiveChildChange
to rebuild the navigation bar, when the visible child changes.
URI query params
Define query params
Use GgRouteParams
to define a list of query params that are shown in the URI.
GgRouteParams(
params: {
'a': GgRouteParam<bool>(seed: false),
'b': GgRouteParam<int>(seed: 5),
'c': GgRouteParam<String>(seed: 'hello'),
},
child: // ...
}
The param names a
, b
, and c
must only be used one time in a route path.
Different route paths can define the same parameter names. When switching a
route, also the route parameters will change.
Access query params
To use the value of a query param in a widget, use these method:
- Use
GgRouter.of(context).param('a')?.value
to get or set the value of the query parama
. - Use
GgRouter.of(context).param('a')?.stream
to observe value changes of query parama
.
Animations
Animate route transitions
GgRouter
offers a simple way to animate route transitions. Use inAnimation
and outAnimation
to define animations that are applied to the appearing and
the disappearing route:
builder: (context) {
return GgRouter(
// ...
inAnimation: (context, animation, child)
=> Transform.scale(scale: animation.value, child: child),
outAnimation: (context, animation, child)
=> Transform.scale(scale: 1.0 - animation.value, child: child),
);
},
With the possibility to define separate in and out animations, you can create advanced transitions. E.g., move an appearing widget in from the left side and out from the right side.
Route specific animations
To find out which route is currently fading in or fading out, use the following methods within your animation callback:
GgRouter.of(context).indexOfChildAnimatingOut
GgRouter.of(context).nameOfChildAnimatingOut
GgRouter.of(context).indexOfChildAnimatingIn
GgRouter.of(context).nameOfChildAnimatingIn
Widget _moveOut(
BuildContext context,
Animation animation,
Widget child,
) {
final w = MediaQuery.of(context).size.width;
final h = MediaQuery.of(context).size.height;
final index = GgRouter.of(context).indexOfChildAnimatingOut;
final toRight = Offset(w * (animation.value), 0);
final toBottom = Offset(0, h * (animation.value));
final toLeft = Offset(w * (-animation.value), 0);
Offset offset = index == 0
? toLeft
: index == 1
? toBottom
: toRight;
return Transform.translate(
offset: offset,
child: child,
);
}
More stuff
Save and restore route state
GgRouter
constructor offers a saveState
and restorState
callback:
saveState
will be called with a JSON string when the route state changes.restoreState
will be called at the very first beginning and allows you to restore a previously defined state.
Rebuild widget on route changes
If you want to rebuild a widget each time the active route is changing,
use GgRouteChangeBuilder
.
int buildNumber;
final widget = GgRouter.root(
child: GgRouteChangeBuilder(
key: key, builder: (_) => Text('${buildNumber++}')),
node: rootNode,
);
Add semantic labels to routes
The semanticLabels
constructor parameter of GgRouter
allows you to specify a
semantic label for each route:
@override
GgRouter(
// ...
semanticLabels: {
'sports': 'Navigate to sports page',
'transportation': 'Navigate to transportations page',
'places': 'Navigate to places page',
}
);
To retrieve the semantic label for a given route, use GgRouter
's the
semanticLabelForPath(...)
property:
final semanticLabel = GgRouter.of(context).semanticLabelForPath(route);
By doing so, you can now assign semantic labels to buttons that perform route operations.
If you need to specify a semantic label for a child router in advance, you
can use GgRouter.of(context).setSemanticLabelForPath(path, label)
.
Error handling
If you open a URI in the browser that is not defined using GgRouter(...)
, an
error is thrown. To handle that error, assign an error handler to
GgRouter.of(context).errorHandler
.
Example
An example demonstrating all of the features above can be found in example/main.dart
.
Features and bugs
Please file feature requests and bugs at GitHub.