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PlatformAndroid

Create and handle your own custom Tile in Android Quick Settings

Apparence.io Quick Settings header

Quick Settings #

This Flutter plugin lets you create and react to your own custom tile in the Android Quick Settings panel.

⚠️ This plugin features only work on Android ⚠️ On other platforms, it does nothing.

All of the following features are available directly from your Dart code:

  • Ask the user to add your custom tile
  • Handle clicks on your tile even when your app has been killed
  • React to user addition or removal of your tile

Using this plugin below Android 7.0 will have no effect.

Find more about the native Quick Settings API on the official documentation.

Native to Dart communication in an Android Service has been heavily inspired by firebase_messaging.

Installation #

Start by adding this plugin to your pubspec.yaml:

flutter pub add quick_settings

You must set minSdkVersion to 21 or more in your android/build.gradle:

android {
    defaultConfig {
        minSdkVersion 21
    }
}

ℹ️ If you encounter conflicts with kotlin sdlib, here is a couple things you can do to fix them:

  • migrate to kotlin 1.8.0+
buildscript {
    ext.kotlin_version = '1.8.0'
}
  • migrate to kotlin-stdlib instead of kotlin-stdlib-jdk7 or kotlin-stdlib-jdk8 in your android/app/build.gradle file
dependencies {
    implementation "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-stdlib:$kotlin_version"
}

Find more about this issue here.

Usage #

A good place to setup quick_settings is in your main() function:

void main() {
  WidgetsFlutterBinding.ensureInitialized();
  QuickSettings.setup(
    onTileClicked: onTileClicked,
    onTileAdded: onTileAdded,
    onTileRemoved: onTileRemoved,
  );

  runApp(const MyApp());
}

The callbacks onTileClicked, onTileAdded and onTileRemoved must be defined as top-level functions. ⚠️ They should also be annotated with @pragma("vm:entry-point") to avoid being tree-shaken by the Dart compiler in release mode. See more details here.

After being setup, these callbacks will be called even if your app is not running.

If none of them is provided, your Tile and its associated service are disabled.

onTileClicked is triggered when your tile is clicked:

onTileClicked example

onTileAdded is triggered when your tile is added to the active Quick Settings tiles:

onTileAdded example

It can either be triggered by the user when they interact with the system UI like above, or from a call to QuickSettings.addTileToQuickSettings() in your app.

onTileRemoved is triggered when your tile is removed from the active Quick Settings tiles:

onTileRemoved example

Let's see details on each of these callbacks.

Tile clicks #

Clicks are handled with an OnTileClicked callback defined as below:

typedef OnTileClicked = Tile? Function(Tile tile);

The tile passed as parameter can let you decide what action to do depending on its TileStatus for instance. Here is a concrete implementation:

Tile onTileClicked(Tile tile) {
  final oldStatus = tile.tileStatus;
  if (oldStatus == TileStatus.active) {
    // 1.
    tile.label = "Alarm OFF";
    tile.tileStatus = TileStatus.inactive;
    tile.subtitle = "6:30 AM";
    tile.drawableName = "alarm_off";
    AlarmManager.instance.unscheduleAlarm();
  } else {
    // 2.
    tile.label = "Alarm ON";
    tile.tileStatus = TileStatus.active;
    tile.subtitle = "6:30 AM";
    tile.drawableName = "alarm_check";
    AlarmManager.instance.scheduleAlarm();
  }
  // 3.
  return tile;
}

The above implementation use the TileStatus to make different actions:

  1. Tile has been clicked while it was active. Since it's a toggle, we set it to inactive with the appropriate values. In this case, we disable the alarm.
  2. Tile has been clicked while it was inactive. We set it to active with the appropriate values and we enable the alarm.
  3. Return the update tile. You can also return null if you don't want to update it.

⚠️ onTileClicked should be a top-level function annotated with @pragma("vm:entry-point").

Tile added #

You can react when the user adds your Tile to Quick Settings with the following callback:

typedef OnTileAdded = Tile? Function(Tile tile);

In our example, we will use it to enable the alarm:

Tile onTileAdded(Tile tile) {
  tile.label = "Alarm ON";
  tile.tileStatus = TileStatus.active;
  tile.subtitle = "6:30 AM";
  tile.drawableName = "alarm_check";
  AlarmManager.instance.scheduleAlarm();
  return tile;
}

In a more realistic scenario, you would probably fetch the current status of the alarm and update the Tile with either an active status if it is set or an inactive status otherwise. You could also display the current hour of the alarm.

⚠️ onTileAdded should be a top-level function annotated with @pragma("vm:entry-point").

Tile removed #

You also get an occasion to react to Tile removal. However, you can't return an updated Tile as with the other callbacks since it can't be updated at that moment. Here is the callback definition:

typedef OnTileRemoved = void Function();

In our example, we disable the alarm:

void onTileRemoved() {
  print("Tile removed");
  AlarmManager.instance.unscheduleAlarm();
}

In a more realistic scenario, you could schedule a notification, stop an ongoing chronometer or log the event to an analytics service.

⚠️ onTileRemoved should be a top-level function annotated with @pragma("vm:entry-point").

Customizing your Tile #

In Dart, a Tile has the following properties:

Name Android version Description
label 7+ Label of your tile. It is always displayed to the user.
tileStatus 7+ Can be one of the following: active, inactive or unavailable. When a tile is unavailable, it can't be clicked.
contentDescription 7+ Content description for the tile.
stateDescription 11+ State description for the tile.
drawableName 7+ Your native Android drawable name. This icon is expected to be white on alpha, and may be tinted by the system to match it's theme.
subtitle 10+ Subtitle for the tile. It might be visible to the user when the Quick Settings panel is fully open.

contentDescription and stateDescription don't have much documentation on the official documentation but it seems to be related to accessibility.

The drawableName should be a native Android drawable name. You can find several of them in the example project.

Drawable example

In the example project, you could use "alarm", "alarm_check", "alarm_off" or "quick_settings_base_icon" as your drawableName for example.

Adding your tile to the Quick Settings panel programmatically #

Starting from Android 13, you can ask the user to add your Tile to the Quick Settings. You can do it in Flutter with the following:

QuickSettings.addTileToQuickSettings(
    label: "Alarm Toggle",
    drawableName: "alarm",
);

It will prompt below dialog:

Add Tile dialog

If the user already has the Tile, this method has no effect. The system might automatically deny if the user has already denied it several times. Before Android 13, this has no effect.

QuickSettings.addTileToQuickSettings() returns an AddTileResult with a success parameter, but it is not reliable since the Android implementation's callback is not. It will be mostly useful to know if your drawable has been correctly parsed by the plugin or not.

Customizing the default tile in the system UI #

Your Tile will appear in the list of Quick Settings tiles with the following default appearance:

Default Tile appearance

There are 3 elements displayed: a title, a subtitle and an icon.

To customize the title, you must override quick_settings_base_label in your Android resources. If you don't have one, create the file /android/app/src/main/res/values/strings.xml and add the quick_settings_base_label String:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>
    <!-- Other resources -->
    <string name="quick_settings_base_label">QS Example</string>
</resources>

The subtitle is the android:label from your application's manifest. You can find it at /android/app/src/main/AndroidManifest.xml.

<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    package="io.apparence.quick_settings_example">
   <application
        android:label="Quick Settings Example (app label)"
        android:name="${applicationName}"
        android:icon="@mipmap/ic_launcher">
        <!-- Other elements -->
    </application>
</manifest>

The default icon can also be overridden by providing your own drawable with the name quick_settings_base_icon.xml as it is done in the example project.

Default drawable

Here is the customized appearance:

Customized appearance

Roadmap #

If you are using this plugin and would like something added, please create an issue.

Apparence.io

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Create and handle your own custom Tile in Android Quick Settings

Repository (GitHub)
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Documentation

API reference

License

MIT (license)

Dependencies

flutter, plugin_platform_interface

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