SingleChildScrollView class
A box in which a single widget can be scrolled.
This widget is useful when you have a single box that will normally be entirely visible, for example a clock face in a time picker, but you need to make sure it can be scrolled if the container gets too small in one axis (the scroll direction).
It is also useful if you need to shrink-wrap in both axes (the main
scrolling direction as well as the cross axis), as one might see in a dialog
or pop-up menu. In that case, you might pair the SingleChildScrollView
with a ListBody
child.
When you have a list of children and do not require cross-axis
shrink-wrapping behavior, for example a scrolling list that is always the
width of the screen, consider ListView
, which is vastly more efficient
than a SingleChildScrollView containing a ListBody
or Column with
many children.
Sample code: Using SingleChildScrollView with a Column
Sometimes a layout is designed around the flexible properties of a Column, but there is the concern that in some cases, there might not be enough room to see the entire contents. This could be because some devices have unusually small screens, or because the application can be used in landscape mode where the aspect ratio isn't what was originally envisioned, or because the application is being shown in a small window in split-screen mode. In any case, as a result, it might make sense to wrap the layout in a SingleChildScrollView.
Doing so, however, usually results in a conflict between the Column, which typically tries to grow as big as it can, and the SingleChildScrollView, which provides its children with an infinite amount of space.
To resolve this apparent conflict, there are a couple of techniques, as
discussed below. These techniques should only be used when the content is
normally expected to fit on the screen, so that the lazy instantiation of a
sliver-based ListView
or CustomScrollView
is not expected to provide any
performance benefit. If the viewport is expected to usually contain content
beyond the dimensions of the screen, then SingleChildScrollView would be
very expensive (in which case ListView
may be a better choice than
Column).
Centering, spacing, or aligning fixed-height content
If the content has fixed (or intrinsic) dimensions but needs to be spaced out, centered, or otherwise positioned using the Flex layout model of a Column, the following technique can be used to provide the Column with a minimum dimension while allowing it to shrink-wrap the contents when there isn't enough room to apply these spacing or alignment needs.
A LayoutBuilder
is used to obtain the size of the viewport (implicitly via
the constraints that the SingleChildScrollView sees, since viewports
typically grow to fit their maximum height constraint). Then, inside the
scroll view, a ConstrainedBox
is used to set the minimum height of the
Column.
The Column has no Expanded children, so rather than take on the infinite
height from its BoxConstraints.maxHeight, (the viewport provides no maximum height
constraint), it automatically tries to shrink to fit its children. It cannot
be smaller than its BoxConstraints.minHeight, though, and It therefore
becomes the bigger of the minimum height provided by the
ConstrainedBox
and the sum of the heights of the children.
If the children aren't enough to fit that minimum size, the Column ends up with some remaining space to allocate as specified by its Column.mainAxisAlignment argument.
{@tool dartpad} In this example, the children are spaced out equally, unless there's no more room, in which case they stack vertically and scroll.
When using this technique, Expanded and Flexible are not useful, because in both cases the "available space" is infinite (since this is in a viewport). The next section describes a technique for providing a maximum height constraint.
** See code in examples/api/lib/widgets/single_child_scroll_view/single_child_scroll_view.0.dart ** {@end-tool}
Expanding content to fit the viewport
The following example builds on the previous one. In addition to providing a
minimum dimension for the child Column, an IntrinsicHeight
widget is used
to force the column to be exactly as big as its contents. This constraint
combines with the ConstrainedBox
constraints discussed previously to ensure
that the column becomes either as big as viewport, or as big as the contents,
whichever is biggest.
Both constraints must be used to get the desired effect. If only the
IntrinsicHeight
was specified, then the column would not grow to fit the
entire viewport when its children were smaller than the whole screen. If only
the size of the viewport was used, then the Column would overflow if the
children were bigger than the viewport.
The widget that is to grow to fit the remaining space so provided is wrapped in an Expanded widget.
This technique is quite expensive, as it more or less requires that the contents of the viewport be laid out twice (once to find their intrinsic dimensions, and once to actually lay them out). The number of widgets within the column should therefore be kept small. Alternatively, subsets of the children that have known dimensions can be wrapped in a SizedBox that has tight vertical constraints, so that the intrinsic sizing algorithm can short-circuit the computation when it reaches those parts of the subtree.
{@tool dartpad} In this example, the column becomes either as big as viewport, or as big as the contents, whichever is biggest.
** See code in examples/api/lib/widgets/single_child_scroll_view/single_child_scroll_view.1.dart ** {@end-tool}
See also:
ListView
, which handles multiple children in a scrolling list.GridView
, which handles multiple children in a scrolling grid.PageView
, for a scrollable that works page by page.Scrollable
, which handles arbitrary scrolling effects.
Constructors
- SingleChildScrollView.new({Key? key, Axis scrollDirection = Axis.vertical, bool reverse = false, EdgeInsetsGeometry? padding, bool? primary, Widget? child, DragStartBehavior dragStartBehavior = DragStartBehavior.start, Clip clipBehavior = Clip.hardEdge, String? restorationId, ScrollViewKeyboardDismissBehavior keyboardDismissBehavior = ScrollViewKeyboardDismissBehavior.manual})
-
Creates a box in which a single widget can be scrolled.
const
Properties
- child → Widget?
-
The widget that scrolls.
final
- clipBehavior → Clip
-
Defaults to Clip.hardEdge.
final
- dragStartBehavior → DragStartBehavior
-
final
- hashCode → int
-
The hash code for this object.
no setterinherited
- key → Key?
-
finalinherited
- keyboardDismissBehavior → ScrollViewKeyboardDismissBehavior
-
final
- padding → EdgeInsetsGeometry?
-
The amount of space by which to inset the child.
final
- primary → bool?
-
final
- restorationId → String?
-
final
- reverse → bool
-
Whether the scroll view scrolls in the reading direction.
final
- runtimeType → Type
-
A representation of the runtime type of the object.
no setterinherited
- scrollDirection → Axis
-
final
Methods
-
createRenderObject(
) → RenderObject< SingleChildScrollView> -
override
-
noSuchMethod(
Invocation invocation) → dynamic -
Invoked when a nonexistent method or property is accessed.
inherited
-
toString(
) → String -
A string representation of this object.
inherited
Operators
-
operator ==(
Object other) → bool -
The equality operator.
inherited