kt_dart 0.7.0-dev.2 kt_dart: ^0.7.0-dev.2 copied to clipboard
This project is a port of kotlin-stdlib for Dart/Flutter projects. It includes collections (KtList, KtMap, KtSet) with 150+ methods as well as other useful packages.
kt.dart #
This project is a port of Kotlin's Kotlin Standard library for Dart/Flutter projects. It's a useful addition to dart:core
and includes collections (KtList
, KtMap
, KtSet
) as well as other packages which can improve every Dart/Flutter app.
Motivation #
Dart's dart:core
package provides basic building blocks. But sometimes they are too low level and not as straightforward as Kotlin's kotlin-stdlib
.
Here are a few examples of what this project offers: (click to expand)
Immutable collections by default
dart:core
collections #
Dart's List
is mutable by default. The immutable List.unmodifiable
is the same type, but the mutation methods throw at runtime.
final dartList = [1, 2, 3];
dartList.add(4); // mutation is by default possible
assert(dartList.length == 4);
final immutableDartList = List.unmodifiable(dartList);
immutableDartList.add(5); // throws: Unsupported operation: Cannot add to an unmodifiable list
Dart's mutable List
is indistinguishable from an immutable List
which might cause errors.
void addDevice(List<Widget> widgets, Device device) {
// no way to check whether widgets is mutable or not
// add might or might now throw
widgets.add(_deviceRow());
widgets.add(Divider(height: 1.0));
}
kt.dart
collections #
KtList
and KtMutableList
are two different Types. KtList
is immutable by default and has no mutation methods (such as add
). Methods like map((T)->R)
or plusElement(T)
return a new KtList
leaving the old one unmodified.
final ktList = listOf(1, 2, 3);
// The method 'add' isn't defined for the class 'KtList<int>'.
ktList.add(4); // compilation error
^^^
// Adding an item returns a new KtList
final mutatedList = ktList.plusElement(4);
assert(ktList.size == 3);
assert(mutatedList.size == 4);
KtMutableList
offers mutation methods where the content of that collection can be actually mutated.
I.e. with remove(T)
or add(T)
;
// KtMutableList allow mutation
final mutableKtList = mutableListOf(1, 2, 3);
mutableKtList.add(4); // works!
assert(mutableKtList.size == 4);
All collection types have mutable counterparts:
Immutable | Mutable |
---|---|
KtList |
KtMutableList |
KtSet |
KtMutableSet , KtHashSet , KtLinkedSet |
KtMap |
KtMutableMap , KtHashMap , KtLinkedMap |
KtCollection |
KtMutableCollection and all the above |
KtIterable |
KtMutableIterable and all the above |
Deep equals
dart:core
collections #
Dart's List
works like a Array
in Java. Equals
doesn't compare the items; it only checks the identity.
To compare the contents you have to use helper methods methods from 'package:collection/collection.dart'
.
// Comparing two Dart Lists works only by identity
final a = [1, 2, 3, 4];
final b = [1, 2, 3, 4];
print(a == b); // false, huh?
// Content-based comparisons require unnecessary glue code
Function listEq = const ListEquality().equals;
print(listEq(a, b)); // true
// MapEquality isn't deep by default
final x = {1: ["a", "b", "c"], 2: ["xx", "yy", "zz"]};
final y = {1: ["a", "b", "c"], 2: ["xx", "yy", "zz"]};
Function mapEq = const MapEquality().equals;
print(mapEq(x, y)); // false, wtf?!
Function deepEq = const DeepCollectionEquality().equals;
print(deepEq(x, y)); // true, finally
kt.dart
collections #
KtList
and all other collection types implement equals
by deeply comparing all items.
final a = listOf(1, 2, 3, 4);
final b = listOf(1, 2, 3, 4);
print(a == b); // true, as expected
final x = mapFrom({1: listOf("a", "b", "c"), 2: listOf("xx", "yy", "zz")});
final y = mapFrom({1: listOf("a", "b", "c"), 2: listOf("xx", "yy", "zz")});
print(x == y); // deep equals by default
Common methods
Some of Dart's method names feel unfamiliar. That's because modern languages and frameworks (Kotlin, Swift, TypeScript, ReactiveExtensions) kind of agreed on naming methods when it comes to collections. This makes it easy to switch platforms and discuss implementations with coworkers working with a different language.
expand -> flatMap #
final dList = [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]];
final kList = listOf(listOf(1, 2, 3), listOf(4, 5, 6), listOf(7, 8, 9));
// dart:core
final dFlat = dList.expand((l) => l).toList();
print(dFlat); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
// kt.dart
final kFlat = kList.flatMap((l) => l);
print(kFlat); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
where -> filter #
final dNames = ["Chet", "Tor", "Romain", "Jake", "Dianne"];
final kNames = listFrom(dNames);
// dart:core
final dShortNames = dNames.where((name) => name.length <= 4).toList();
print(dShortNames); // [Chet, Tor, Jake]
// kt.dart
final kShortNames = kNames.filter((name) => name.length <= 4);
print(kShortNames); // [Chet, Tor, Jake]
firstWhere -> first, firstOrNull #
final dNames = ["Chet", "Tor", "Romain", "Jake", "Dianne"];
final kNames = listFrom(dNames);
// dart:core
dNames.firstWhere((name) => name.contains("k")); // Jake
dNames.firstWhere((name) => name.contains("x"), orElse: () => null); // null
dNames.firstWhere((name) => name.contains("x"), orElse: () => "Nobody"); // Nobody
// kt.dart
kNames.first((name) => name.contains("k")); // Jake
kNames.firstOrNull((name) => name.contains("x")); // null
kNames.firstOrNull((name) => name.contains("x")) ?? "Nobody"; // Nobody
Packages #
annotation #
import 'package:kt_dart/annotation.dart';
Annotations such as
@nullable
or@nonNull
giving hints about method return and argument types
collection #
import 'package:kt_dart/collection.dart';
Collection types, such as
KtIterable
,KtCollection
,KtList
,KtSet
,KtMap
with over 150 methods as well as related top-level functions. The collections are immutable by default but offer a mutable counterpart i.e.KtMutableList
.
Planned #
Planned modules for the future are async
, tuples
, comparison
, range
, sequence
, text
License #
Copyright 2019 Pascal Welsch
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.