Flutter-view is a tool that makes writing reactive Flutter layouts a breeze. It lets you use Pug and Sass (or HTML and CSS if you prefer) to generate the Flutter Dart code that renders the views in your app.
You use it by running the flutter-view
command in your terminal to let it monitor your project. When it detects changes in a Pug, HTML, Sass or CSS file, it automatically generates or updates a matching Dart file.
NOTE: From 2.0 on, Flutter-view generates null-safe code (Dart 2.12 and forward). Use an older version if you use an older version of Dart.
In standard Flutter Dart code, the "state" of your application is mixed in with the presentation. This can make it hard to structure your code well.
Flutter-view is about creating views, which are functions that return a widget tree for presenting something. These functions act a bit like components. Flutter-view uses Pug to make layouts more terse and Sass to let you style faster and more easily. The state part comes into play when you make your view reactive. You can pass models (or streams) into your views. When these models change, the views automatically adapt.
A single flutter-view generates a Dart function that usually returns a widget tree. You use Pug to create a view, which gets transformed into HTML and then Dart code automatically:
Pug:
hello(flutter-view)
.greeting Hello world!
Generated (internal) HTML:
<hello flutter-view>
<div class="greeting">
Hello world!
</div>
</hello>
Generated Dart:
Container Hello() {
return Container(
child: Text("Hello world!")
);
}
This generated function can be used like any other Dart code, and will return the code that gives the greeting.
You can add Sass with CSS rules to style your view. Flutter-view contains plugins that take your CSS properties and convert them into code. For our example, you can easily add a text color, background color, some font properties, and add padding:
Pug:
hello(flutter-view)
.greeting Hello world!
Sass:
.greeting
color: red
background-color: grey[200]
text-transform: uppercase
padding: 10 20
Generated Dart:
Hello() {
return DefaultTextStyle.merge(
style: TextStyle(
color: Colors.red
),
child: Container(
decoration: BoxDecoration(
color: Colors.grey[200]
),
padding: EdgeInsets.only(
top: 10,
right: 20,
bottom: 10,
left: 20
),
child: Text("Hello world!".toUpperCase),
)
);
}
Flutter-view supports many CSS properties, and makes it easy to change styles and immediately see the effect. Since single CSS rules can apply to many elements, small CSS changes may have big code effects.
You can also fully leverage both Pug and Sass mixin and function support, allowing for some powerful patters, such as different styling based on running Android or iOS.
Flutter-view does not force you into any particular Reactive model. For example it works well with streams. However, it comes with native ScopedModel support and a small Dart support library for terse reactive coding:
user.dart:
class User extends Model {
User({this.name, this.age});
String name;
int age;
}
hello.pug:
hello(flutter-view :user)
reactive(watch='user')
.greeting Hello ${user.name}!
generated hello.dart:
Widget Hello({user}) {
return ReactiveWidget(
watch: user as Listenable,
builder: (context, $) {
return Container(
child: Text("Hello ${user.name}!")
)
},
);
}
The view now takes a User as a parameter and watches it for changes. Now when we change the the user name and call user.notifyListeners()
, the view will automatically update.
- Flutter
- A working Typescipt installation (install using npm install -g typescript)
In your terminal of choice type:
npm install -g flutter-view
Only necessary if you want to modify flutter-view yourself.
Steps to build the project locally:
- clone this repository
- change to the project directory
- npm install
- tsc
- npm link
Typing flutter-view in any directory should now work.
In a terminal, go into the directory of your Flutter project, and type flutter-view -w lib. This should start the tool watching on your lib directory.
In general, use is as follows:
> flutter-view [-w] <directory>
You can use the following flags:
-V, --version output the version number
-w, --watch Watch for changes
-c, --config <file> Optional config file to use (default: flutter-view.json)
-h, --help output usage information
For a guide and reference to the pug and sass styles, check the online documentation