Small, easy to use and extensible logger which prints beautiful logs.
Inspired by logger for Android.
Show some ❤️ and star the repo to support the project
Just create an instance of Logger
and start logging:
var logger = Logger();
logger.d("Logger is working!");
Instead of a string message, you can also pass other objects like List
, Map
or Set
.
You can log with different levels:
logger.t("Trace log");
logger.d("Debug log");
logger.i("Info log");
logger.w("Warning log");
logger.e("Error log", error: 'Test Error');
logger.f("What a fatal log", error: error, stackTrace: stackTrace);
To show only specific log levels, you can set:
Logger.level = Level.warning;
This hides all trace
, debug
and info
log events.
When creating a logger, you can pass some options:
var logger = Logger(
filter: null, // Use the default LogFilter (-> only log in debug mode)
printer: PrettyPrinter(), // Use the PrettyPrinter to format and print log
output: null, // Use the default LogOutput (-> send everything to console)
);
If you use the PrettyPrinter
, there are more options:
var logger = Logger(
printer: PrettyPrinter(
methodCount: 2, // Number of method calls to be displayed
errorMethodCount: 8, // Number of method calls if stacktrace is provided
lineLength: 120, // Width of the output
colors: true, // Colorful log messages
printEmojis: true, // Print an emoji for each log message
printTime: false // Should each log print contain a timestamp
),
);
With the io
package you can auto detect the lineLength
and colors
arguments.
Assuming you have imported the io
package with import 'dart:io' as io;
you
can auto detect colors
with io.stdout.supportsAnsiEscapes
and lineLength
with io.stdout.terminalColumns
.
You should probably do this unless there's a good reason you don't want to
import io
, for example when using this library on the web.
The LogFilter
decides which log events should be shown and which don't.
The default implementation (DevelopmentFilter
) shows all logs with level >= Logger.level
while
in debug mode (i.e., running dart with --enable-asserts
).
In release mode all logs are omitted.
You can create your own LogFilter
like this:
class MyFilter extends LogFilter {
@override
bool shouldLog(LogEvent event) {
return true;
}
}
This will show all logs even in release mode. (NOT a good idea)
The LogPrinter
creates and formats the output, which is then sent to the LogOutput
.
You can implement your own LogPrinter
. This gives you maximum flexibility.
A very basic printer could look like this:
class MyPrinter extends LogPrinter {
@override
List<String> log(LogEvent event) {
return [event.message];
}
}
If you created a cool LogPrinter
which might be helpful to others, feel free to open a pull
request.
:)
Please note that in some cases ANSI escape sequences do not work under macOS. These escape sequences are used to colorize the output. This seems to be related to a Flutter bug that affects iOS builds: flutter/flutter#64491
However, if you are using a JetBrains IDE (Android Studio, IntelliJ, etc.)
you can make use of
the Grep Console Plugin
and the PrefixPrinter
decorator to achieve colored logs for any logger:
var logger = Logger(
printer: PrefixPrinter(PrettyPrinter(colors: false))
);
LogOutput
sends the log lines to the desired destination.
The default implementation (ConsoleOutput
) send every line to the system console.
class ConsoleOutput extends LogOutput {
@override
void output(OutputEvent event) {
for (var line in event.lines) {
print(line);
}
}
}
Possible future LogOutput
s could send to a file, firebase or to Logcat. Feel free to open pull
requests.
This package was originally created by Simon Choi, with further development by Harm Aarts, greatly enhancing its functionality over time.