flutter_bloc 8.1.6 flutter_bloc: ^8.1.6 copied to clipboard
Flutter Widgets that make it easy to implement the BLoC (Business Logic Component) design pattern. Built to be used with the bloc state management package.
Widgets that make it easy to integrate blocs and cubits into Flutter. Built to work with package:bloc.
Learn more at bloclibrary.dev!
*Note: All widgets exported by the flutter_bloc
package integrate with both Cubit
and Bloc
instances.
Sponsors #
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Usage #
Lets take a look at how to use BlocProvider
to provide a CounterCubit
to a CounterPage
and react to state changes with BlocBuilder
.
counter_cubit.dart #
class CounterCubit extends Cubit<int> {
CounterCubit() : super(0);
void increment() => emit(state + 1);
void decrement() => emit(state - 1);
}
main.dart #
void main() => runApp(CounterApp());
class CounterApp extends StatelessWidget {
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp(
home: BlocProvider(
create: (_) => CounterCubit(),
child: CounterPage(),
),
);
}
}
counter_page.dart #
class CounterPage extends StatelessWidget {
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(title: const Text('Counter')),
body: BlocBuilder<CounterCubit, int>(
builder: (context, count) => Center(child: Text('$count')),
),
floatingActionButton: Column(
crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.end,
mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.end,
children: <Widget>[
FloatingActionButton(
child: const Icon(Icons.add),
onPressed: () => context.read<CounterCubit>().increment(),
),
const SizedBox(height: 4),
FloatingActionButton(
child: const Icon(Icons.remove),
onPressed: () => context.read<CounterCubit>().decrement(),
),
],
),
);
}
}
At this point we have successfully separated our presentational layer from our business logic layer. Notice that the CounterPage
widget knows nothing about what happens when a user taps the buttons. The widget simply notifies the CounterCubit
that the user has pressed either the increment or decrement button.
Bloc Widgets #
BlocBuilder #
BlocBuilder is a Flutter widget which requires a bloc
and a builder
function. BlocBuilder
handles building the widget in response to new states. BlocBuilder
is very similar to StreamBuilder
but has a more simple API to reduce the amount of boilerplate code needed. The builder
function will potentially be called many times and should be a pure function that returns a widget in response to the state.
See BlocListener
if you want to "do" anything in response to state changes such as navigation, showing a dialog, etc...
If the bloc
parameter is omitted, BlocBuilder
will automatically perform a lookup using BlocProvider
and the current BuildContext
.
BlocBuilder<BlocA, BlocAState>(
builder: (context, state) {
// return widget here based on BlocA's state
}
)
Only specify the bloc if you wish to provide a bloc that will be scoped to a single widget and isn't accessible via a parent BlocProvider
and the current BuildContext
.
BlocBuilder<BlocA, BlocAState>(
bloc: blocA, // provide the local bloc instance
builder: (context, state) {
// return widget here based on BlocA's state
}
)
For fine-grained control over when the builder
function is called an optional buildWhen
can be provided. buildWhen
takes the previous bloc state and current bloc state and returns a boolean. If buildWhen
returns true, builder
will be called with state
and the widget will rebuild. If buildWhen
returns false, builder
will not be called with state
and no rebuild will occur.
BlocBuilder<BlocA, BlocAState>(
buildWhen: (previousState, state) {
// return true/false to determine whether or not
// to rebuild the widget with state
},
builder: (context, state) {
// return widget here based on BlocA's state
}
)
BlocSelector #
BlocSelector is a Flutter widget which is analogous to BlocBuilder
but allows developers to filter updates by selecting a new value based on the current bloc state. Unnecessary builds are prevented if the selected value does not change. The selected value must be immutable in order for BlocSelector
to accurately determine whether builder
should be called again.
If the bloc
parameter is omitted, BlocSelector
will automatically perform a lookup using BlocProvider
and the current BuildContext
.
BlocSelector<BlocA, BlocAState, SelectedState>(
selector: (state) {
// return selected state based on the provided state.
},
builder: (context, state) {
// return widget here based on the selected state.
},
)
BlocProvider #
BlocProvider is a Flutter widget which provides a bloc to its children via BlocProvider.of<T>(context)
. It is used as a dependency injection (DI) widget so that a single instance of a bloc can be provided to multiple widgets within a subtree.
In most cases, BlocProvider
should be used to create new blocs which will be made available to the rest of the subtree. In this case, since BlocProvider
is responsible for creating the bloc, it will automatically handle closing it.
BlocProvider(
create: (BuildContext context) => BlocA(),
child: ChildA(),
);
By default, BlocProvider will create the bloc lazily, meaning create
will get executed when the bloc is looked up via BlocProvider.of<BlocA>(context)
.
To override this behavior and force create
to be run immediately, lazy
can be set to false
.
BlocProvider(
lazy: false,
create: (BuildContext context) => BlocA(),
child: ChildA(),
);
In some cases, BlocProvider
can be used to provide an existing bloc to a new portion of the widget tree. This will be most commonly used when an existing bloc
needs to be made available to a new route. In this case, BlocProvider
will not automatically close the bloc since it did not create it.
BlocProvider.value(
value: BlocProvider.of<BlocA>(context),
child: ScreenA(),
);
then from either ChildA
, or ScreenA
we can retrieve BlocA
with:
// with extensions
context.read<BlocA>();
// without extensions
BlocProvider.of<BlocA>(context);
The above snippets result in a one time lookup and the widget will not be notified of changes. To retrieve the instance and subscribe to subsequent state changes use:
// with extensions
context.watch<BlocA>();
// without extensions
BlocProvider.of<BlocA>(context, listen: true);
In addition, context.select
can be used to retrieve part of a state and react to changes only when the selected part changes.
final isPositive = context.select((CounterBloc b) => b.state >= 0);
The snippet above will only rebuild if the state of the CounterBloc
changes from positive to negative or vice versa and is functionally identical to using a BlocSelector
.
MultiBlocProvider #
MultiBlocProvider is a Flutter widget that merges multiple BlocProvider
widgets into one.
MultiBlocProvider
improves the readability and eliminates the need to nest multiple BlocProviders
.
By using MultiBlocProvider
we can go from:
BlocProvider<BlocA>(
create: (BuildContext context) => BlocA(),
child: BlocProvider<BlocB>(
create: (BuildContext context) => BlocB(),
child: BlocProvider<BlocC>(
create: (BuildContext context) => BlocC(),
child: ChildA(),
)
)
)
to:
MultiBlocProvider(
providers: [
BlocProvider<BlocA>(
create: (BuildContext context) => BlocA(),
),
BlocProvider<BlocB>(
create: (BuildContext context) => BlocB(),
),
BlocProvider<BlocC>(
create: (BuildContext context) => BlocC(),
),
],
child: ChildA(),
)
BlocListener #
BlocListener is a Flutter widget which takes a BlocWidgetListener
and an optional bloc
and invokes the listener
in response to state changes in the bloc. It should be used for functionality that needs to occur once per state change such as navigation, showing a SnackBar
, showing a Dialog
, etc...
listener
is only called once for each state change (NOT including the initial state) unlike builder
in BlocBuilder
and is a void
function.
If the bloc parameter is omitted, BlocListener
will automatically perform a lookup using BlocProvider
and the current BuildContext
.
BlocListener<BlocA, BlocAState>(
listener: (context, state) {
// do stuff here based on BlocA's state
},
child: Container(),
)
Only specify the bloc if you wish to provide a bloc that is otherwise not accessible via BlocProvider
and the current BuildContext
.
BlocListener<BlocA, BlocAState>(
bloc: blocA,
listener: (context, state) {
// do stuff here based on BlocA's state
}
)
For fine-grained control over when the listener
function is called an optional listenWhen
can be provided. listenWhen
takes the previous bloc state and current bloc state and returns a boolean. If listenWhen
returns true, listener
will be called with state
. If listenWhen
returns false, listener
will not be called with state
.
BlocListener<BlocA, BlocAState>(
listenWhen: (previousState, state) {
// return true/false to determine whether or not
// to call listener with state
},
listener: (context, state) {
// do stuff here based on BlocA's state
},
child: Container(),
)
MultiBlocListener #
MultiBlocListener is a Flutter widget that merges multiple BlocListener
widgets into one.
MultiBlocListener
improves the readability and eliminates the need to nest multiple BlocListeners
.
By using MultiBlocListener
we can go from:
BlocListener<BlocA, BlocAState>(
listener: (context, state) {},
child: BlocListener<BlocB, BlocBState>(
listener: (context, state) {},
child: BlocListener<BlocC, BlocCState>(
listener: (context, state) {},
child: ChildA(),
),
),
)
to:
MultiBlocListener(
listeners: [
BlocListener<BlocA, BlocAState>(
listener: (context, state) {},
),
BlocListener<BlocB, BlocBState>(
listener: (context, state) {},
),
BlocListener<BlocC, BlocCState>(
listener: (context, state) {},
),
],
child: ChildA(),
)
BlocConsumer #
BlocConsumer exposes a builder
and listener
in order react to new states. BlocConsumer
is analogous to a nested BlocListener
and BlocBuilder
but reduces the amount of boilerplate needed. BlocConsumer
should only be used when it is necessary to both rebuild UI and execute other reactions to state changes in the bloc
. BlocConsumer
takes a required BlocWidgetBuilder
and BlocWidgetListener
and an optional bloc
, BlocBuilderCondition
, and BlocListenerCondition
.
If the bloc
parameter is omitted, BlocConsumer
will automatically perform a lookup using
BlocProvider
and the current BuildContext
.
BlocConsumer<BlocA, BlocAState>(
listener: (context, state) {
// do stuff here based on BlocA's state
},
builder: (context, state) {
// return widget here based on BlocA's state
}
)
An optional listenWhen
and buildWhen
can be implemented for more granular control over when listener
and builder
are called. The listenWhen
and buildWhen
will be invoked on each bloc
state
change. They each take the previous state
and current state
and must return a bool
which determines whether or not the builder
and/or listener
function will be invoked. The previous state
will be initialized to the state
of the bloc
when the BlocConsumer
is initialized. listenWhen
and buildWhen
are optional and if they aren't implemented, they will default to true
.
BlocConsumer<BlocA, BlocAState>(
listenWhen: (previous, current) {
// return true/false to determine whether or not
// to invoke listener with state
},
listener: (context, state) {
// do stuff here based on BlocA's state
},
buildWhen: (previous, current) {
// return true/false to determine whether or not
// to rebuild the widget with state
},
builder: (context, state) {
// return widget here based on BlocA's state
}
)
RepositoryProvider #
RepositoryProvider is a Flutter widget which provides a repository to its children via RepositoryProvider.of<T>(context)
. It is used as a dependency injection (DI) widget so that a single instance of a repository can be provided to multiple widgets within a subtree. BlocProvider
should be used to provide blocs whereas RepositoryProvider
should only be used for repositories.
RepositoryProvider(
create: (context) => RepositoryA(),
child: ChildA(),
);
then from ChildA
we can retrieve the Repository
instance with:
// with extensions
context.read<RepositoryA>();
// without extensions
RepositoryProvider.of<RepositoryA>(context)
MultiRepositoryProvider #
MultiRepositoryProvider is a Flutter widget that merges multiple RepositoryProvider
widgets into one.
MultiRepositoryProvider
improves the readability and eliminates the need to nest multiple RepositoryProvider
.
By using MultiRepositoryProvider
we can go from:
RepositoryProvider<RepositoryA>(
create: (context) => RepositoryA(),
child: RepositoryProvider<RepositoryB>(
create: (context) => RepositoryB(),
child: RepositoryProvider<RepositoryC>(
create: (context) => RepositoryC(),
child: ChildA(),
)
)
)
to:
MultiRepositoryProvider(
providers: [
RepositoryProvider<RepositoryA>(
create: (context) => RepositoryA(),
),
RepositoryProvider<RepositoryB>(
create: (context) => RepositoryB(),
),
RepositoryProvider<RepositoryC>(
create: (context) => RepositoryC(),
),
],
child: ChildA(),
)
Gallery #
Examples #
- Counter - an example of how to create a
CounterBloc
to implement the classic Flutter Counter app. - Form Validation - an example of how to use the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages to implement form validation. - Bloc with Stream - an example of how to hook up a
bloc
to aStream
and update the UI in response to data from theStream
. - Complex List - an example of how to manage a list of items and asynchronously delete items one at a time using
bloc
andflutter_bloc
. - Infinite List - an example of how to use the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages to implement an infinite scrolling list. - Login Flow - an example of how to use the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages to implement a Login Flow. - Firebase Login - an example of how to use the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages to implement login via Firebase. - Github Search - an example of how to create a Github Search Application using the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages. - Weather - an example of how to create a Weather Application using the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages. The app uses aRefreshIndicator
to implement "pull-to-refresh" as well as dynamic theming. - Todos - an example of how to create a Todos Application using the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages. - Timer - an example of how to create a Timer using the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages. - Shopping Cart - an example of how to create a Shopping Cart Application using the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages based on flutter samples. - Dynamic Form - an example of how to use the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages to implement a dynamic form which pulls data from a repository. - Wizard - an example of how to build a multi-step wizard using the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages. - Fluttersaurus - an example of how to use the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages to create a thesuarus app -- made for Bytconf Flutter 2020. - I/O Photo Booth - an example of how to use the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages to create a virtual photo booth web app -- made for Google I/O 2021. - I/O Pinball - an example of how to use the
bloc
andflutter_bloc
packages to create a pinball web app -- made for Google I/O 2022.
Dart Versions #
- Dart 2: >= 2.12