32

I'm trying to listen to a variable change to execute some code. So the variable is a bool named reset. I want to execute something (say reset the animation controller) once the animation ends OR a button (from another widget) is pressed. Executing something when the animation ends works as once it ends AnimationStatus.dismissed will be its state and the listener will be called. This then allows me to use a callback function onCountdownexpire in order to set the variable reset accordingly and based on what it is set, execute some code in the if(widget.reset) block. So there is no need to listen for this case.

Problem:

However, lets say a button is pressed (in another widget) and I set the variable reset to true. I want the animation to stop and reset. I cannot now depend on the AnimationStatus listener as it only executes when there is a state change. I want it to reset during its state. So I have to somehow listen to the variable widget.reset.

I have done some research on this and found out that ValueNotifier might be a way to go but there are not a lot of examples on how to go about using it. Like how do I go about listening to it ?

Code:

class Countdown extends StatefulWidget {

  final VoidCallback onCountdownExpire;
  bool reset;
  Countdown(this.onCountdownExpire);

  @override
  CountdownState createState() => CountdownState();
}

class CountdownState extends State<Countdown> with TickerProviderStateMixin {
  AnimationController controller;

  String get timerString {
    Duration duration = controller.duration * controller.value;
    return '${duration.inMinutes}:${(duration.inSeconds % 60).toString()}';
  }

  @override
  void initState() {
    super.initState();
    controller = AnimationController(
      vsync: this,
      duration: Duration(seconds: 2),
    )..addStatusListener((AnimationStatus status){
        if (status == AnimationStatus.dismissed) {
          debugPrint("Animation.dismissed");
          widget.onCountdownExpire();
          if (widget.reset) {
            widget.reset = false;
            controller.reverse(from: 1.0);
          } 
        }
    });
    controller.reverse(from: 1.0);
  }
  ... // omitted code
}

What I have tried but it does not seem to be working as expected:

class Countdown extends StatefulWidget {

  final VoidCallback onCountdownExpire;
  Countdown(this.onCountdownExpire);
  ValueNotifier reset = ValueNotifier(false);

  @override
  CountdownState createState() => CountdownState();
}

class CountdownState extends State<Countdown> with TickerProviderStateMixin {
  AnimationController controller;

  @override
  void initState() {

    widget.reset.addListener(() {
      debugPrint("value notifier is true");
      controller.reverse(from: 1.0);
    });

    super.initState();

    controller = AnimationController(
      vsync: this,
      duration: Duration(seconds: 2),
    )..addStatusListener((AnimationStatus status){
        if (status == AnimationStatus.dismissed) {
          debugPrint("Animation.dismissed");
          widget.onCountdownExpire();
        }
    });
    controller.reverse(from: 1.0);
  }
  ... // omitted code
}

Update: The solution (above) was actually working, I just had to use something like this to notify the listener:

countdown.reset.notifyListeners();
// OR
countdown.reset.value = true;  
9
  • use ValueNotifier::addListener method
    – pskink
    Jun 3, 2019 at 6:17
  • @pskink Ok hi, I tried that but it does not seem to be working as expected (post updated). Am I implementing it correctly ?
    – Rajdeep
    Jun 3, 2019 at 6:49
  • @pskink ok nvm i was calling it wrongly, I had to use something like countdown.reset.notifyListeners(); . Thanks for your help ! Post your answer and I'll accept it :)
    – Rajdeep
    Jun 3, 2019 at 6:55
  • no, you dont need notifyListeners - if you call countdown.reset = ... the method notifyListeners will be called automagically - see ValueNotifier docs: "When value is replaced with something that is not equal to the old value as evaluated by the equality operator ==, this class notifies its listeners."
    – pskink
    Jun 3, 2019 at 7:03
  • 3
    sorry, i mean countdown.reset.value = ...
    – pskink
    Jun 3, 2019 at 7:07

2 Answers 2

24

OP already got an answer in the comments. I'm just typing it here so the question is correctly marked as answered.

Just notify the listener:

countdown.reset.notifyListeners();
// OR
countdown.reset.value = true;

Credit to @pskink

1
  • thanks thats work for me Apr 22, 2022 at 17:52
0

Use of overwriting getter/setters

You can make use of the getter and setter functions.

In the example below we are printing happy birthday when the person's age changes:

class Person {
  int _age;

  Person(this._age);

  int get age => _age;
  
  set age(int newValue) {
    print("Happy birthday! You have a new Age.");
    //do some awsome things here when the age changes
    _age = newValue;
  }
}

The usage is exactly as you are used to:

final newPerson = Person(20);
  
print(newPerson.age); //20
newPerson.age = 21; //prints happy birthday
print(newPerson.age); //21

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