Skip to content
/ fluro Public
forked from lukepighetti/fluro

A fork of fluro that uses NavigatorState instead of BuildContext

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

XLNT/fluro

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

93 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation



The brightest, hippest, coolest router for Flutter.

Version Build Status Coverage

Features

  • Simple route navigation
  • Function handlers (map to a function instead of a route)
  • Wildcard parameter matching
  • Querystring parameter parsing
  • Common transitions built-in
  • Simple custom transition creation

Version compatability

See CHANGELOG for all breaking (and non-breaking) changes.

Getting started

You should ensure that you add the router as a dependency in your flutter project.

dependencies:
 fluro: "^1.4.0"

You can also reference the git repo directly if you want:

dependencies:
 fluro:
   git: git://github.com/theyakka/fluro.git

You should then run flutter packages upgrade or update your packages in IntelliJ.

Example Project

There is a pretty sweet example project in the example folder. Check it out. Otherwise, keep reading to get up and running.

Setting up

First, you should define a new Router object by initializing it as such:

final router = Router();

It may be convenient for you to store the router globally/statically so that you can access the router in other areas in your application.

After instantiating the router, you will need to define your routes and your route handlers:

var usersHandler = Handler(handlerFunc: (BuildContext context, Map<String, dynamic> params) {
  return UsersScreen(params["id"][0]);
});

void defineRoutes(Router router) {
  router.define("/users/:id", handler: usersHandler);

  // it is also possible to define the route transition to use
  // router.define("users/:id", handler: usersHandler, transitionType: TransitionType.inFromLeft);
}

In the above example, the router will intercept a route such as /users/1234 and route the application to the UsersScreen passing the value 1234 as a parameter to that screen.

Navigating

You can use the Router with the MaterialApp.onGenerateRoute parameter via the Router.generator function. To do so, pass the function reference to the onGenerate parameter like: onGenerateRoute: router.generator.

You can then use Navigator.push and the flutter routing mechanism will match the routes for you.

You can also manually push to a route yourself. To do so:

router.navigateTo(context, "/users/1234", transition: TransitionType.fadeIn);

Fluro is a Yakka original.

About

A fork of fluro that uses NavigatorState instead of BuildContext

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Dart 86.2%
  • Objective-C 7.0%
  • Kotlin 2.9%
  • Ruby 2.4%
  • Java 1.3%
  • Shell 0.2%