state_notifier 0.1.0+1 state_notifier: ^0.1.0+1 copied to clipboard
ValueNotifier, but outside Flutter and with some extra perks
example/lib/state_notifier.dart
library state_notifier;
import 'dart:collection';
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
/// A listener that can be added to a [StateNotifier] using
/// [StateNotifier.addListener].
///
/// This callback receives the current [StateNotifier.state] as parameter.
typedef Listener<T> = void Function(T state);
/// A callback that can be used to remove a listener added with
/// [StateNotifier.addListener].
///
/// It is safe to call this callback multiple times.
///
/// Calling this callback multiple times will remove the listener only once,
/// even if [StateNotifier.addListener] was called multiple times with the exact
/// same listener.
typedef RemoveListener = void Function();
/// A callback that can be passed to [StateNotifier.onError].
///
/// This callback should not throw.
///
/// It exists merely for error reporting (mainly `FlutterError.onError`), and
/// should not be used otherwise.\
/// If you need an error status, consider adding an error property on
/// your custom [StateNotifier.state].
typedef ErrorListener = void Function(dynamic error, StackTrace stackTrace);
/// A funtion that allows obtaining other objects.
///
/// This is usually equivalent to `Provider.of`, but with no dependency on Flutter
///
/// May throw a [DependencyNotFoundException].
typedef Locator = T Function<T>();
/// An observable class that stores a single immutable [state].
///
/// This class can be considered as a fork of `ValueNotifier` from Flutter, with
/// subtle API changes.
///
/// # Reading the current [state]:
///
/// The [state] property is protected and should be used only by the subclasses
/// of [StateNotifier].\
/// If you want to obtain the current [state] from outside of [StateNotifier],
/// consider using [addListener] instead.
///
/// All listeners added with [addListener] are called **immediatly** on addition
/// with the current [state] as parameter, or whenever [state] changes.
///
/// # The differences with `ValueNotifier`
///
/// [StateNotifier] is not a one to one reimplementation of `ValueNotifier`.
/// It has a few notable differences:
///
/// - it does not depend on Flutter
/// - both the getter and setter of [state] are protected.
/// - adding and removing listeners is O(1) (vs O(N) for `ValueNotifier`)
/// - there is no `notifyListeners` method.
/// - listeners cannot add more listeners.
/// - calling all listeners is O(N) (vs O(N^2) for `ValueNotifier`)
/// - there is no `removeListener` function.
/// Instead, [addListener] returns a function that allows removing the listener.
/// - error reporting is done through [onError].
/// - [StateNotifier] exposes a [mounted] boolean, to know if [dispose] was
/// called or not.
/// - listeners added with [addListener] receives the current [state] as parameter
/// - calling [addListener] immediatly calls the listener with the current [state].
abstract class StateNotifier<T> {
/// Intiialize [state].
StateNotifier(this._state);
final _listeners = LinkedList<_ListenerEntry<T>>();
/// A callback for error reporting if one of the listeners added with [addListener] throws.
///
/// This callback should not throw.
///
/// It exists merely for error reporting (mainly `FlutterError.onError`), and
/// should not be used otherwise.\
/// If you need an error status, consider adding an error property on
/// your custom [state].
ErrorListener onError;
bool _mounted = true;
/// Wether [dispose] was called or not.
bool get mounted => _mounted;
bool _debugCanAddListeners = true;
bool _debugSetCanAddListeners(bool value) {
assert(() {
_debugCanAddListeners = value;
return true;
}());
return true;
}
bool _debugIsMounted() {
assert(() {
if (!_mounted) {
throw StateError('''
Tried to use $runtimeType after `dispose` was called.
Consider checking `mounted`.
''');
}
return true;
}());
return true;
}
T _state;
/// The current "state" of this [StateNotifier].
///
/// Updating this variable will synchronously call all the listeners.
///
/// Updating the state will throw if at least one listener throws.
@protected
T get state {
assert(_debugIsMounted());
return _state;
}
/// A developmnent-only way to access [state] outside of [StateNotifier].
///
/// The only difference with [state] is that [debugState] is not "protected".\
/// Will not work in release mode.
///
/// This is useful for tests.
T get debugState {
T result;
assert(() {
result = _state;
return true;
}());
return result;
}
@protected
set state(T value) {
assert(_debugIsMounted());
_state = value;
var didThrow = false;
for (final listenerEntry in _listeners) {
try {
listenerEntry.listener(value);
} catch (err, stack) {
didThrow = true;
onError?.call(err, stack);
}
}
if (didThrow) {
throw Error();
}
}
/// If a listener has been added using [addListener] and hasen't been removed yet.
bool get hasListeners {
assert(_debugIsMounted());
return _listeners.isNotEmpty;
}
/// Subscribes to this object.
///
/// The [listener] callback will be called immediatly on addition and
/// synchronously whenever [state] changes.
///
/// To remove this [listener], call the function returned by [addListener]:
///
/// ```dart
/// StateNotifier<Model> example;
/// final removeListener = example.addListener((value) => ...);
/// removeListener();
/// ```
///
/// Listeners cannot add other listeners.
///
/// Adding and removing listeners is O(1).
RemoveListener addListener(Listener<T> listener) {
assert(() {
if (!_debugCanAddListeners) {
throw ConcurrentModificationError();
}
return true;
}());
assert(_debugIsMounted());
final listenerEntry = _ListenerEntry(listener);
_listeners.add(listenerEntry);
try {
assert(_debugSetCanAddListeners(false));
listener(state);
} catch (err, stack) {
listenerEntry.unlink();
onError?.call(err, stack);
rethrow;
} finally {
assert(_debugSetCanAddListeners(true));
}
return () {
if (listenerEntry.list != null) {
listenerEntry.unlink();
}
};
}
/// Frees all the resources associated to this object.
///
/// This marks the object as no longer usable and will make all methods/properties
/// besides [mounted] inaccessible.
@mustCallSuper
void dispose() {
assert(_debugIsMounted());
_listeners.clear();
_mounted = false;
}
}
class _ListenerEntry<T> extends LinkedListEntry<_ListenerEntry<T>> {
_ListenerEntry(this.listener);
final Listener<T> listener;
}
/// A mixin that adds service location capability to an object.
///
/// This makes the object aware of things like `Provider.of` or `GetIt`, without
/// actually depending on those.\
/// It also provides testing utilities to be able to mock dependencies.
///
/// In the context of Flutter + `provider`, adding that mixin to an object
/// makes it impossible to shared one instance across multiple "providers".
///
/// This mix-in does not do anything by itself.\
/// It is simply an interface for 3rd party libraries such as provider to implement
/// the logic.
///
/// See also:
///
/// - [read], to read objects
/// - [debugMockDependency], to mock dependencies returned by [read]
/// - [update], a new life-cycle to synchronize this object with external objects.
/// - [debugUpdate], a method to test [update].
mixin LocatorMixin {
// ignore: prefer_function_declarations_over_variables
Locator _locator = <T>() => throw DependencyNotFoundException<T>();
/// A function that allows obtaining other objects.
///
/// It is typically equivalent to `Provider.of(context, listen: false)` when
/// using `provider`, but it could also be `GetIt.get` for example.
///
/// **DON'T** modify [read] manually.\
/// The only reason why [read] is not `final` is so that it can be
/// initialized by providers from `flutter_notifier`.
///
/// May throw a [DependencyNotFoundException] if the looked-up type is not found.
@protected
Locator get read {
assert(_debugIsNotifierMounted());
return _locator;
}
set read(Locator read) {
assert(_debugIsNotifierMounted());
_locator = read;
}
bool _debugIsNotifierMounted() {
assert(() {
if (this is StateNotifier) {
final instance = this as StateNotifier;
assert(instance._debugIsMounted());
}
return true;
}());
return true;
}
/// Overrides [read] to mock its behavior in development.
///
/// This does nothing in release mode and is useful only for test purpose.
///
/// A typical usage would be:
///
/// ```dart
/// class MyServiceMock extends Mock implements MyService {}
///
/// test('mock dependency', () {
/// final myStateNotifier = MyStateNotifier();
/// myStateNotifier.debugMockDependency<MyService>(MyServiceMock());
/// });
/// ```
void debugMockDependency<Dependency>(Dependency value) {
assert(_debugIsNotifierMounted());
assert(() {
final previousLocator = read;
read = <Target>() {
assert(_debugIsNotifierMounted());
if (Dependency == Target) {
return value as Target;
}
return previousLocator<Target>();
};
return true;
}());
}
/// A life-cycle that allows listening to updates on another object.
///
/// This is equivalent to what "ProxyProviders" do using `provider`, but
/// implemented with no dependency on Flutter.
///
/// The property [read] is not accessible while inside the body of [update].
/// Use the parameter passed to [update] instead, which will not just read the
/// object but also watch for changes.
@protected
void update(Locator watch) {}
/// A test utility to mock the test the behavior of your [update] method.
///
/// This calls [update] with [read] disabled.
void debugUpdate() {
assert(() {
final locator = read;
read = <T>() => throw StateError('Cannot use `read` inside `update`');
try {
update(locator);
} finally {
read = locator;
}
return true;
}());
}
}
/// Thrown when tried to call [LocatorMixin.read<T>()], but the [T] was not found.s
class DependencyNotFoundException<T> implements Exception {}