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Flutter for Beginners

You're reading from   Flutter for Beginners An introductory guide to building cross-platform mobile applications with Flutter 2.5 and Dart

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2021
Last Updated in Oct 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800565999
Length 370 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Thomas Bailey Thomas Bailey
Author Profile Icon Thomas Bailey
Thomas Bailey
Alessandro Biessek Alessandro Biessek
Author Profile Icon Alessandro Biessek
Alessandro Biessek
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction to Flutter and Dart
2. Chapter 1: An Introduction to Flutter FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: An Introduction to Dart 4. Chapter 3: Flutter versus Other Frameworks 5. Chapter 4: Dart Classes and Constructs 6. Section 2: The Flutter User Interface – Everything Is a Widget
7. Chapter 5: Widgets – Building Layouts in Flutter 8. Chapter 6: Handling User Input and Gestures 9. Chapter 7: Routing – Navigating between Screens 10. Section 3: Developing Fully Featured Apps
11. Chapter 8: Plugins – What Are They and How Do I Use Them? 12. Chapter 9: Popular Third-Party Plugins 13. Chapter 10: Using Widget Manipulations and Animations 14. Section 4: Testing and App Release
15. Chapter 11: Testing and Debugging 16. Chapter 12: Releasing Your App to the World 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Widget testing

Getting the right mix of tests is important so that you can test your app optimally without reducing iteration and development velocity. Writing unit tests for well-defined library functions makes sense, but when it comes to user interactions, you often want to iterate and understand user interactions before settling on a design, which then may change as fashion or best practices change. Therefore, your test itself should be more high-level, looking at components rather than specific functions. One example of this is widget tests, and Flutter helps us to write widget tests to test that widgets work as expected.

Widget tests are used to validate widgets in an isolated way. They look very similar to unit tests but focus on widgets. The main goal is to check widget interactions and whether widgets visually match expectations. As widgets live in the widget tree inside the Flutter context, widget tests require the framework environment to be executed. That is why Flutter...

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