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Simple state management for Flutter, with caching capability

Watcher State Management #

Overview #

Simple and efficient state management package for Flutter. Acting as a wrapper around Flutter's ValueListenable, it offers a more user-friendly syntax, including the CachedWatcher used to cache watcher values, transforming the complexity of state management into a simpler, cleaner, and more maintainable approach.

Initialization #


final counter = Watcher<int>(0);

// also you can use the `.watcher` extension on any type.
final counter = 0.watcher;
final boolValue = false.watcher;

// Or use the Watcher classes.
final listWatcher = ListWatcher<int>([1, 2, 3]);

// All custom types are also supported.
final userWatcher = User().watcher; // creates a Watcher<User>

Widgets #

WatchValue #

A widget that reacts to changes of value of Watcher instance and any ValueNotifier.

Usage


final isLoading = false.watcher;

@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
  ...
  WatchValue<bool>(
  watcher: isLoading, // Your watcher instance.
  threshold: Duration(milliseconds: 300), // (optional) rebuilds every specific duration.
  watchWhen: (prev, curr) => prev != curr, // (optional) rebuilds only upon condition.
  builder: (context, value) => MyWidget(value
  )
  ,
  )
  ,
  ...
}

Watch #

A widget that reacts to changes of Watcher, ValueNotifier or any Listenable instance such as ScrollController, AnimationController, TextEdititngController etc.

Usage


final scrollController = ScrollController();

@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
  ...
  Watch(
  watcher: scrollController, // any listener instance.
  builder: (context) => MyWidget(isLoading.value), // the builder which reacts to listener changes.
  // threshold and watchWhen named params are also available.
  ),
  ...
}

WatchAll #

A widget that reacts to changes of values of multiple instances of any Listener including Watcher.

Usage


final counter = 0.watcher;
final lastUpdated = DateTime.now().watcher();

@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
  ...
  WatchAll(
  watchers: [
  counter,
  lastUpdated,
  ],
  // threshold and watchWhen named params are also available.
  builder: (context) {
  return Column(
  mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.center,
  children: <Widget>[
  Text('Counter value is $counter'),
  Text('String message is $lastUpdated'),
  ],
  );
  },
  )
  ,
  ...
}

Widgets Extensions: #

You can use the extensions in the Watcher to create any of the Watch widgets quickly and in simpler syntax.

  • Use watcher.watchValue(...) to create WatchValue widget.
  • Use watcher.watch(...) to create Watch widget.
  • Use <Watcher>[].watchAll(...) to create WatchAll widget.

Note that when you use the extension you no longer need to pass the watcher as parameter.

Sample:


final isLoading = false.watcher;

@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
  ...
  isLoading.watchValue(
  builder: (value) => MyWidget
  (
  value
  )
  ,
  )
  ,
  ...
}

CachedWatcher #

CachedWatcher is an abstract class extending the standard Watcher with added local caching capabilities. it is designed to be subclassed for specific data types.

Simple Usage #

In this package there is a good set of extensions and classes that help you create a CachedWatcher<T> in a simple way with built-in types.

// Example: Using a subclass for integers
final counter = IntCachedWatcher(0, 'counter_key'); // with class.
final counter = 0.cachedWatcher('counter_key'); // with extension.

// BoolCachedWatcher, ListCachedWatcher, DateTimeCachedWatcher, and so on for premitive types are supported

Advanced Usage (Custom Types) #

Subclasses can be created for any custom type, providing tailored serialization and deserialization strategies for different kinds of data stored in local cache.

class AuthService extends CachedWatcher<AuthState> {
  AuthService() : super(AuthState.initial, key: 'AuthServiceKey'); // Default key is the type name 'AuthState'

  @override
  AuthState? read(dynamic data) {
    // Implement logic to deserialize data from cache
    // for example return success and assign data to ur token.
  }

  @override
  dynamic write(AuthState value) {
    // Implement logic to serialize value to cache
    // for example write the token when AuthState is success. 
  }
}

Initialization Properties #

  • initialValue: The starting value for the watcher.
  • key (Optional): A unique identifier for the CachedWatcher's stored data, used to save and retrieve the cached value from local storage. Default is the type name

TheCachedWatcher instance can be used with all Watch widgets.

Utilities #

  • updateIf: Update the value conditionally.

    intWatcher.updateIf((val) => val < 10, 5);
    
  • onChange: Perform action on value change.

    stringWatcher.onChange((val) => print(val));
    // it returns call back that disposes the listener do not forget to call it in your close/dispose methods.
    
  • stream: Convert Watcher changes into a stream.

    final streamWatcher = watcherInstance.stream;
    streamWatcher.listen((value) {
      // Handle the stream of changes
    });
    
  • debounce: Debounce value changes.

    numWatcher.debounce(Duration(seconds: 1), (val) => print(val));
    
  • map: Transform the value to another type.

    final stringWatcher = intWatcher.map((val) => val.toString());
    
  • combineWith: Combine with another Watcher.

    final combinedWatcher = intWatcher.combineWith(stringWatcher, (int a, String b) => '$a and $b');
    

Supports for built-in types #

Watcher has built support for all built in types such is IntWatcher for int , ListWatcher for List , and MapWatcher for Map, etc... Allowing direct manipulation of values in a more natural and concise way, mirroring the operations you'd typically perform on the data types themselves. Here are some samples:

BoolWatcher #

  • toggle: Toggle the value of Watcher<bool>.

  • symbols: The built in | & ^ are supported.

    boolWatcher.toggle(); // Toggles the boolean value
    

ListWatcher, and SetWatcher #

  • addAll: Add multiple items to Watcher<List<E>>.

  • remove: Remove an item from the list.

  • clear: Clear all items in the list.

  • and all List built-in functions are supported

    listWatcher.addAll([4, 5]);
    listWatcher.remove(item);
    listWatcher.clear();
    for(final item in listWatcher)
    // and so on.
    

Num/Int/DoubleWatcher #

  • increment: Increment the value of Watcher<num>.

  • decrement: Decrement the value.

  • and all Num built-in functions are supported

    numWatcher.increment();
    numWatcher.decrement();
    numWatcher.abs();
    numWatcher.toDouble();
    numWatcher.toInt();
    // and so on.
    

MapWatcher #

  • putIfAbsent: Add a key-value pair if the key is not already in the map.

  • remove: Remove a key-value pair.

  • and all Map built-in functions are supported

    mapWatcher.putIfAbsent(key, () => value);
    mapWatcher.remove(key);
    mapWathcer.keys.map((e) => ...);
    // and so on.
    

UriWatcher #

  • updatePath: Update the path of Watcher<Uri>.

  • and all Uri built-in functions are supported

    uriWatcher.updatePath(newPath); // Updates the URI path
    uriWatcher.replace(scheme: newScheme);
    // and so on.
    

Full Counter Example #

import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
import 'package:flutter_watcher/flutter_watcher.dart';

main() => runApp(MyCounter());

class MyCounter extends StatelessWidget {
  MyCounter({super.key});

  final counter = 0.watcher;

  @override
  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    return MaterialApp(
      title: 'Watch Counter',
      home: Scaffold(
        appBar: AppBar(title: const Text('Watch Counter')),
        body: Center(
          child: WatchValue<int>(
            watcher: counter,
            builder: (context, value) {
              return Text('Counter: $value');
            },
          ),
        ),
        floatingActionButton: FloatingActionButton(
          onPressed: () => counter.increment(),
          child: const Icon(Icons.add),
        ),
      ),
    );
  }
}

FAQ #

Why should I use Watcher:

While there is a great state management available I can recommend to use watcher in some cases:

  • If your app is simple and won't require complex state management solution watcher is a good choice.
  • If you already use strong state management, but you want to manage a specific (simple) feature or component in your app Watcher can help with that. Sometimes when you use BLoC its just not convenient to emit new state for the sake to toggle a switcher in the screen.
  • If you want to use singletons, watcher instances in a singleton class is a great choice, for example you can use CachedWatcher with user settings, or Themes, etc.

Does it offer any dependency injection?

No, the flutter watcher package designed to be simple, you can use it with Provider if you wish to make your watcher instance available in your widget tree.

Are there any examples that demonstrate the use of the package?

I am planning to publish a documentation website soon with useful examples and detailed documentation.

Contributions #

Contributions to this package are welcome. If you have any suggestions, issues, or feature requests, please create a pull request in the repository.

License #

flutter_watcher is available under the BSD 3-Clause License.

Support #

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Simple state management for Flutter, with caching capability

Repository (GitHub)
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License

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Dependencies

flutter, flutter_helper_utils, hive, hive_flutter

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