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Flutter Cookbook

You're reading from   Flutter Cookbook Over 100 proven techniques and solutions for app development with Flutter 2.2 and Dart

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838823382
Length 646 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Simone Alessandria Simone Alessandria
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Simone Alessandria
Brian Kayfitz Brian Kayfitz
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Brian Kayfitz
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Flutter 2. Dart: A Language You Already Know FREE CHAPTER 3. Introduction to Widgets 4. Mastering Layout and Taming the Widget Tree 5. Adding Interactivity and Navigation to Your App 6. Basic State Management 7. The Future is Now: Introduction to Asynchronous Programming 8. Data Persistence and Communicating with the Internet 9. Advanced State Management with Streams 10. Using Flutter Packages 11. Adding Animations to Your App 12. Using Firebase 13. Machine Learning with Firebase ML Kit 14. Distributing Your Mobile App 15. Flutter Web and Desktop 16. About Packt

Using a Future

When you write your code, you generally expect your instructions to run sequentially, one line after the other. For instance, let's say you write the following:

int x = 5;
int y = x * 2;

You expect the value of y to be equal to 10 because the instruction int x = 5 completes before the next line. In other words, the second line waits for the first instruction to complete before being executed.

In most cases, this pattern works perfectly, but in some cases, and specifically, when you need to run instructions that take longer to complete, this is not the recommended approach, as your app would be unresponsive until the task is completed. That's why in almost all modern programming languages, including Dart, you can perform asynchronous operations.

Asynchronous operations do not stop the main line of execution, and therefore they allow the execution of other tasks before completing.

Consider the following diagram:

In the diagram, you can see how the main execution...

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