10

Coming from python, i know i can easily accomplish that :

def someFunc(*args):
    for i in args:
        print i

That way i can give 100 args with ease.

How to do something like that on Dart ?

Thx.

1

3 Answers 3

19

There is no real vararg support in Dart. There was, but it has been removed. As Fox32 said, you can do this with noSuchMethod. But, if there is no real need to call the method like method(param1, param2, param3), you could just skip this step and define a Map or List as parameter. Dart supports literals for both types, so the syntax is also short and clear:

void method1(List params) {
  params.forEach((value) => print(value));
}

void method2(Map params) {
  params.forEach((key, value) => print("$key -- $value"));
}

void main() {
  method1(["hello", "world", 123]);
  method2({"name":"John","someNumber":4711});
}
3

You can use the noSuchMethod method on a class (Probably in combination with the call() method, but i haven't tried that). But it seems like you loose some checking features of the dart editor when using this (at least for me).

The method has a Invocation instance as a parameter that contains the method name and all unnamed parameters as a list and all named parameters as a hashmap.

See here for more details about noSuchMethod and call(). But the link contains outdated informations that do not apply for Milestone 4, see here for the changes.

Something like this:

typedef dynamic FunctionWithArguments(List<dynamic> positionalArguments, Map<Symbol, dynamic> namedArguments);

class MyFunction
{
  final FunctionWithArguments function;

  MyFunction(this.function);

  dynamic noSuchMethod(Invocation invocation) {
    if(invocation.isMethod && invocation.memberName == const Symbol('call')) {
      return function(invocation.positionalArguments, invocation.namedArguments);
    }

    return;
  }
}

Usage:

class AClass {
  final aMethod = new MyFunction((p, n) {
    for(var a in p) {
      print(a);
    }
  });
}


var b = new AClass();

b.aMethod(12, 324, 324);
0

Dart does indirectly support var-args as long as you as you aren't too much into syntactic brevity.

void testFunction([List<dynamic> args=[]])
{
  for(dynamic arg:args)
  {
    // Handle each arg...
  }
}

testFunction([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]);
testFunction();
testFunction([0, 1, 2]);

Note: You can do the same thing with named parameters, but you'll have to handle things internally, just in case if the user (of that function; which could be you) decides to not pass any value to that named parameter.

1
  • It's true that Dart's lightweight list literal syntax makes the lack of varargs less painful that it would otherwise be, but think it's a bit of a stretch to claim support here - kinda the entire point of varargs is syntactic sugar to support variable number of arguments without having to wrap it in a collection.
    – Matt R
    Sep 8, 2020 at 14:04

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