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Simple direct Service Locator that allows to decouple the interface from a concrete implementation and to access the concrete implementation from everywhere in your App"

get_it #

IMPORTANT: You have to use Dart2 to use this component #

You can find here a detailed blog post on how to use GetIt

This is a simple Service Locator for Dart and Flutter projects highly inspired by Splat.

If you are not familiar with the concept of Service Locators, its a way to decouple the interface (abstract base class) from a concrete implementation and at the same time allows to access the concrete implementation from everywhere in your App over the interface. I can only highly recommend to read this classic article by from Martin Fowler Inversion of Control Containers and the Dependency Injection pattern

Accessing an object from anywhere in an App especially can be done by other ways too but:

  • If you use a Singleton you cannot easily switch the implementation to another like a mock version for unit tests
  • IoC containers for Dependency Injections offer a similar functionality but with the cost of slow start-up time and less readability because you don't know where the magically injected object come from. As most IoC libs rely on reflection they cannot be used with Flutter.

Typical usage:

  • Accessing service objects like REST API clients, databases so that they easily can be mocked.
  • Accessing View/AppModels from Flutter Views
  • Because interface and implementations are decoupled you could also register Flutter Views with different implementations and decide at start-up which one you want to use e.g. depending on screen resolutions

Extremely important if you use GetIt: ALWAYS use the same style to import your project files either as relative paths OR as package which I recommend. DON'T mix them because currently Dart treats types imported in different ways as two different types although both reference the same file.

Getting Started #

Most Service Locator libraries are implemented either as Singletons or static classes depending on the features of the programming languages so that they can be easily accessed. As Dart supports global (or euphemistic ambient) variables I decided after some discussions with Simon Lightfoot and Brian Egan to use just a simple class (so that you can if you really need even create more than one Locator although I would not advise to do that in most cases).

So to use GetIt you only have to declare an instance of it in your App, typically as global variable.

GetIt getIt = new GetIt();

You can use any name you want which makes Brian happy ;-)

Before you can access your objects you have to register them within GetIt typically direct in your start-up code.

getIt.registerSingleton<AppModel>(new AppModelImplementation());
getIt.registerLazySingleton<RESTAPI>(() =>new RestAPIImplementation());

AppModel and RESTAPI are both abstract base classes in this example

To access the registered objects call get<Type>() on your GetItinstance

var myAppModel = getIt.get<AppModel>();

Alternatively as GetIt is a callable class depending on the name you choose for your GetItinstance you can use the shorter version:

var myAppModel = getIt<AppModel>();

Different ways of registration #

Although I always would recommend using an abstract base class as registration type so that you can vary the implementations you don't have to do this. You can also register concrete types.

GetIt offers different ways how objects are registered that effect the lifetime of this objects.

Factory #

void registerFactory<T>(FactoryFunc<T> func)

You have to pass a factory function func that returns an instance of an implementation of T. Each time you call get<T>() you will get a new instance returned.

Singleton && LazySingleton #

void registerSingleton<T>(T instance) 

You have to pass an instance of T or a derived class of T that you will always get returned on a call to get<T>().

As creating this instance can be time consuming at app start-up you can shift the creation to the time the object is the first time requested with:

void registerLazySingleton<T>(FactoryFunc<T> func)

You have to pass a factory function func that returns an instance of an implementation of T. Only the first time you call get<T>() this factory function will be called to create a new instance. After that you will always get the same instance returned.

Overwriting registrations #

If you try to register a type more than once you will get an assertion in debug mode because normally this is not needed and not advised and probably a bug. If you really have to overwrite a registration, then you can by setting the property `allowReassignment==true`` .

Resetting GetIt #

  /// Clears all registered types. Handy when writing unit tests
  void reset()

Acknowledgements #

Many thanks to the insightful discussions on the API with Brian Egan and Simon Lightfoot

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Simple direct Service Locator that allows to decouple the interface from a concrete implementation and to access the concrete implementation from everywhere in your App"

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