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Cross-Platform UIs with Flutter

You're reading from   Cross-Platform UIs with Flutter Unlock the ability to create native multiplatform UIs using a single code base with Flutter 3

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801810494
Length 260 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Ryan Edge Ryan Edge
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Ryan Edge
Alberto Miola Alberto Miola
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Alberto Miola
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Counter App with History Tracking to Establish Fundamentals 2. Building a Race Standings App FREE CHAPTER 3. Building a Todo Application Using Inherited Widgets and Provider 4. Building a Native Settings Application Using Material and Cupertino Widgets 5. Exploring Navigation and Routing with a Hacker News Clone 6. Building a Simple Contact Application with Forms and Gesturess 7. Building an Animated Excuses Application 8. Build an Adaptive, Responsive Note-Taking Application with Flutter and Dart Frog 9. Writing Tests and Setting Up GitHub Actions 10. Index 11. Other Books You May Enjoy

Sharing dependencies in a Flutter application

As mentioned previously, one common pattern for sharing information in a Flutter application is to pass information down as a property from the top down from parent to child, and through each nested child until you reach the widget that depends on that information. We will refer to this process as property forwarding.

While this strategy is certainly fine in limited instances, it is not ideal when sharing information in several components or several nested tree layers. It is also not efficient because if it’s not handled properly, a state change in one of the properties can potentially trigger a rebuild of large portions of the widget tree.

Let’s look at the following diagram to get a better understanding of this problem:

Figure 3.1 – A Flutter application widget tree

Here, we have several nested layers of widgets. At the top level, our App widget contains some business data that a descendant...

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