7

I'm planning on switching from Android and iOS development to Flutter. The thought of only having to maintain one code base is very exciting. At this point I'm still just observing and learning.

One thing that puts me off a little, though, are the huge mountains and valleys in the code indentations when creating widgets. Here is an example taken from this answer:

  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    ThemeData themeData = Theme.of(context);
    return new Scaffold(
      body: new Padding(
        padding: const EdgeInsets.all(10.0),
        child:
        new Column(
          mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.spaceBetween,
          children: <Widget>[
            new Row(
              mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.start,
              children: icons.map((IconData iconData) {
                return new Container(
                  margin: new EdgeInsets.all(10.0),
                  child: new IconButton(
                    icon: new Icon(iconData), onPressed: () {
                    // TODO: Implement
                  }),
                );
              }).toList(),
            ),
            new Expanded(
              child: new Align(
                alignment: FractionalOffset.center,
                child: new AspectRatio(
                  aspectRatio: 1.0,
                  child: new Stack(
                    children: <Widget>[
                      new Positioned.fill(
                        child: new AnimatedBuilder(
                          animation: _controller,
                          builder: (BuildContext context, Widget child) {
                            return new CustomPaint(
                              painter: new ProgressPainter(
                                animation: _controller,
                                color: themeData.indicatorColor,
                                backgroundColor: Colors.white,
                              ),
                            );
                          }
                        ),
                      ),
                      new Align(
                        alignment: FractionalOffset.center,
                        child: new Column(
                          mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.spaceEvenly,
                          crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.center,
                          children: <Widget>[
                            new Text(
                              'Label', style: themeData.textTheme.subhead),
                            new AnimatedBuilder(
                              animation: _controller,
                              builder: (BuildContext context, Widget child) {
                                return new Text(
                                  timeRemaining,
                                  style: themeData.textTheme.display4,
                                );
                              }
                            ),
                            new Text('+1', style: themeData.textTheme.title),
                          ],
                        ),
                      ),
                    ],
                  ),
                ),
              ),
            ),
            new Container(
              margin: new EdgeInsets.all(10.0),
              child: new Row(
                mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.spaceEvenly,
                children: <Widget>[
                  new IconButton(icon: new Icon(Icons.delete), onPressed: () {
                    // TODO: Implement delete
                  }),
                  new FloatingActionButton(
                    child: new AnimatedBuilder(
                      animation: _controller,
                      builder: (BuildContext context, Widget child) {
                        return new Icon(
                          _controller.isAnimating
                            ? Icons.pause
                            : Icons.play_arrow
                        );
                      },
                    ),
                    onPressed: () {
                      if (_controller.isAnimating)
                        _controller.stop();
                      else {
                        _controller.reverse(
                          from: _controller.value == 0.0 ? 1.0 : _controller
                            .value,
                        );
                      }
                    },
                  ),
                  new IconButton(
                    icon: new Icon(Icons.alarm_add), onPressed: () {
                    // TODO: Implement add time
                  }),
                ],
              ),
            ),
          ],
        ),
      ),
    );
  }
}

This seems difficult to read (and therefore maintain) and contrary to principles I've learned about clean code. Most of the dart/flutter code I've seen is pretty similar, but is there a way to break this into smaller pieces or otherwise make it more readable? Or do I just need to get used to this new way of formatting?

1
  • Split the code into methods or extra widgets instead of deep nesting. Jul 8, 2018 at 15:43

1 Answer 1

9

Most answers on SO includes everything in one block because it's easier. But a more ideal way of coding is to extract parts of this big nested block into either widgets or methods.

Flutter provides a few refactors options for such split.

For example in VS code, you can select a part of such block, press ctrl+, or whatever the equivalent is on your computer ; and it'll propose a few options such as :

  • Extract method
  • Extract widget

The cool thing with these options is that they take care of everthing. Including types and parameters.

For example the following :

enter image description here

when using extract widget will convert it automatically to :

enter image description here

2
  • What made you choose VS Code for Flutter development? I've noticed other people have done the same. Is it just the IDE you were used to, or does it have advantages over Android Studio (like the Extract Widget/method options you mentioned)?
    – Suragch
    Jul 9, 2018 at 0:15
  • Personal preference. It doesn't really matter. The integration of flutter on both vscode and Android studio is excellent Jul 9, 2018 at 6:33

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