flutter_reactive_widget 1.0.6 flutter_reactive_widget: ^1.0.6 copied to clipboard
Simple reactive state management for Flutter.
ReactiveWidget
and ReactiveValue
for Flutter #
The simplest possible state management / reactive state tracking for Flutter, reducing boilerplate compared to all the insanely complex state management approaches in common use.
Usage #
Declare your state using ReactiveValue<T>
(which extends ValueNotifier<T>
):
final counter = ReactiveValue<int>(0);
Then simply wrap any code that needs to react to changes in counter.value
in a ReactiveWidget
(which accepts a zero-arg lambda to be called by the ReactiveWidget
's build
method).
If counter.value
is read while the ReactiveWidget
's build()
method is running, then the ReactiveWidget
will start listening for changes to counter.value
. (This listener is automatically removed if the widget is disposed.)
ReactiveWidget(
() => Text('${counter.value}'),
),
Any event handler that modifies counter.value
will now trigger the ReactiveWidget
to be re-built with the new value, by scheduling setState
to be called on the ReactiveWidget
in a post-frame callback.
counter.value
can be modifed from anywhere -- the update does not need to be wrapped in a ReactiveWidget
:
IconButton(
icon: const Icon(Icons.plus_one),
onPressed: () {
counter.value++;
},
),
Building a reactive UI couldn't be simpler than this!
Adding the library dependency #
flutter_reactive_widget
is hosted on pub.dev.
To be able to import the library, you need to add a dependency upon it in pubspec.yaml
, then run flutter pub get
:
dependencies:
flutter:
sdk: flutter
flutter_reactive_widget: ^1.0.6
Import the library in your code:
import 'package:flutter_reactive_widget/flutter_reactive_widget.dart';
PersistentReactiveValue
subclass #
ReactiveValue
resets to its initial value every time the app is restarted. You can also persist values across app restarts by using PersistentReactiveValue
rather than ReactiveValue
.
First in main
, you need to initialize WidgetsFlutterBinding
and then you need to call await initPersistentReactiveValue()
(defined in flutter_reactive_widget.dart
), which starts SharedPreferences
and loads any persisted values from the backing store.
main() async {
// Both of the following lines are needed, in this order
WidgetsFlutterBinding.ensureInitialized();
await initPersistentReactiveValue();
// Then run the app
runApp(App());
}
Then you can use PersistentReactiveValue
rather than ReactiveValue
:
final counter = PersistentReactiveValue<int>(
/* key */ 'counter', /* defaultValue */ 0);
counter.value
will be set to the default value 0
if it has never been set before, but if it has been set before in a previous run of the app, the previous value will be recovered from SharedPreferences
, using the key 'counter'
.
Whenever counter.value
is set in future, not only is any wrapping ReactiveWidget
updated, but the new value is asynchronously written through to the SharedPreferences
persistence cache, using the same key.
PersistentReactiveNullableValue
subclass #
Note that for PersistentReactiveValue<T>
, T
cannot be a nullable type (T?
), since null values cannot be distinguished from a value not being present in SharedPreferences
.
If you want to be able to "store" null values in SharedPreferences (which amounts to removing the key from SharedPreferences
if you try to set a null value), then use PersistentReactiveNullableValue<T?>
. For this class, defaultValue
is optional.
ValidatingReactiveValue
subclass #
The ValidatingReactiveValue
subclass of ReactiveValue
has an additional field, validationError
, which is itself a ReactiveValue<String?>
. This field is updated whenever the ValidatingReactiveValue
's value changes, by calling the validate
function that is passed into the ValidatingReactiveValue
constructor. For example:
final age = ValidatingReactiveValue<int?>(null,
(a) => a == null ? 'Please specify age' : null);
// You can now listen to either `age.validationError` or `age.value` in a `ReactiveWidget`.
Manually notifying listeners of deeper changes to value #
If you create final set = ReactiveValue<Set<String>>({});
and then you call set.value.add('abc')
, set
's listeners will not be notified of the change, because the reference to the set itself (i.e. set.value
) has not changed. You can manually call listeners in this case by doing something like:
_addFlag(bool flag) {
bool changed = flag ? set.value.add('flag') : set.value.remove('flag');
if (changed) {
set.notifyListeners();
}
}
Removing ReactiveValue
listeners in StatefulWidget
s' State.dispose()
method #
If you are instantiating a ReactiveValue
in a field of a StatefulWidget
's State<T>
object, make sure your State<T>
's dispose()
method calls the ReactiveValue
's dispose()
method to remove all listeners when the widget is disposed, in order to prevent memory leaks.
Lifecycle, and where to store state #
If you want a ReactiveValue
's to exist for the lifetime of the app, there are good suggestions in this Medium post about how to use GetIt
to organize state in your application. Applying that idea to flutter_reactive_widget
:
main.dart
Call setUpGetIt()
from main
:
import 'package:my_app/pages/home_page.dart';
import './service_locator.dart';
main() async {
WidgetsFlutterBinding.ensureInitialized();
await initPersistentReactiveValue();
// Register state singletons (defined in service_locator.dart)
setUpGetIt();
runApp(HomePage());
}
service_locator.dart
Register all your state-containing classes as singletons using GetIt
, with one state class per page (i.e. create home_page_state.dart
for page home_page.dart
):
import 'package:my_app/pages/home_page_state.dart';
import 'package:get_it/get_it.dart';
final getIt = GetIt.instance;
void setUpGetIt() {
getIt.registerLazySingleton<HomePageState>(() => HomePageState());
}
pages/home_page_state.dart
Define each state class:
import 'package:flutter_reactive_widget/flutter_reactive_widget.dart';
/// The persistent state of [HomePage]
class HomePageState {
final count = PersistentReactiveValue<int>('count', 0);
}
pages/home_page.dart
Get the state singleton class instance(s) you need to read state from, using GetIt.instance<T>()
(or getIt<T>
, if you import service_locator.dart
):
import 'package:my_app/pages/home_page_state.dart';
import 'package:flutter_reactive_widget/flutter_reactive_widget.dart';
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
import './service_locator.dart';
// Get the state of the page
final _homePageState = getIt<HomePageState>();
class HomePage extends StatelessWidget {
const HomePage({Key? key}) : super(key: key);
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: const Text('HomeView'),
centerTitle: true,
),
body: Column(
crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.center,
children: [
ReactiveWidget(
() => Text(
'${_homePageState.count.value}',
style: const TextStyle(fontSize: 20),
),
),
IconButton(
icon: const Icon(Icons.plus_one),
onPressed: () {
_homePageState.count.value++;
},
),
],
),
);
}
}
Author #
flutter_reactive_widget
was written by Luke Hutchison, and is released under the MIT license.