54

I declare one global variable in the entire app - SharedPreferences prefs, and initialize it in main method.

However, SharedPreferences initialization returns a Future - hence I tried awaiting for it to be resolved in main closure of the app:

SharedPreferences prefs;

void main() async {
  prefs = await SharedPreferences.getInstance();

  runApp(MyApp());
}

And it worked well. I currently use this method in my 2 apps in production, and it just occurred to me that making main method asynchronous might not be right.

In the end I have 2 questions:

  • How does main method gets invoked and how it works in general in Dart / Flutter?
  • Will making main method of the app asynchronous bring unexpected behaviour? (it hasn't so far)

2 Answers 2

50

How does main method gets invoked and how it works in general in Dart / Flutter?

The Dart VM (or the runtime in AOT mode) looks for and executes a function named main. After main returns, the VM will wait for pending asynchronous operations to complete before exiting. The Asynchronous programming article on the official Dart website has an example that demonstrates this:

  1. When main() has finished executing, the asynchronous functions can resume execution. First, the future returned by gatherNewsReports() completes. Then printDailyNewsDigest() continues executing, printing the news.
  2. When the printDailyNewsDigest() function body finishes executing, the future that it originally returned completes, and the app exits.

(Note that the exit function will cause immediate termination without any waiting.)


Will making main method of the app asynchronous bring unexpected behaviour? (it hasn't so far)

No. First, you should keep in mind that the async keyword is not what makes a function asynchronous. The async keyword simply enables the use of the await keyword (which itself is syntactic sugar for registering a Future.then callback) and (mostly) requires that the function be declared to return a Future. (I say "mostly" because returning void instead of Future<void> is allowed, although dartanalyzer will complain about that too if the avoid_void_async lint is enabled.)

Your application will inherently be asynchronous once you invoke any asynchronous function. When you invoke an asynchronous function, you either:

  • Wait for it to complete (via await or Future.then). The caller is then asynchronous too.
  • The asynchronous operation is unawaited ("fire-and-forget"). But this still means that main can return with asynchronous operations still pending.

Either way, your application must wait before terminating (assuming that it didn't encounter abnormal termination from an uncaught exception or exit).

Since your main function uses await, you don't even have a choice about marking it async.

3
  • 3
    Good piece of information. As my app grows, I've found myself needing to make asynchronous calls from the main method. Nothing bad happened but I always wondered if it would break something somewhere along the line. Jul 6, 2020 at 15:31
  • The official document provide example changing main method to async method.Working with futures: async and await
    – Kexi He
    Dec 18, 2021 at 1:20
  • @KexiHe That doesn't conflict with anything that I wrote. I never said that main shouldn't be marked async or shouldn't return a Future.
    – jamesdlin
    Dec 18, 2021 at 1:25
6

Good one from @jamesdlin .

A literal answer for your question

How does main method gets invoked and how it works in general in Dart / Flutter?

For Android apps, Dart entry point is invoked via DartExecutor. You can take a look at here: DartExecutor class

There is a brief document, how you can manually do what FlutterApplication does for you: wiki/Experimental:-Launch-Flutter-with-non-main-entrypoint

Classes you want to look for, if you want to dig deeper: FlutterApplication, FlutterActivity, FlutterMain .

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.