beamer 0.6.1
beamer: ^0.6.1 copied to clipboard
Route through guarded page stacks and URLs using the Navigator 2.0 API effortlessly.
Handle your application routing, synchronize it with browser URL and more. Beamer uses the power of Navigator 2.0 API and implements all the underlying logic for you.
Key Concepts #
The key concept of Beamer is a BeamLocation which represents a stack of one or more pages. You will be extending BeamLocation to define your app's locations to which you can then beam to using
Beamer.of(context).beamTo(MyLocation())
// or context.beamTo(MyLocation())
or beamTo a specific configuration of some location;
context.beamTo(
BooksLocation(
pathBlueprint: '/books/:bookId',
pathParameters: {'bookId': '2'},
),
),
You can think of it as teleporting / beaming to another place in your app. Similar to Navigator.of(context).pushReplacementNamed('/my-route'), but Beamer is not limited to a single page, nor to a push per se. You can create an arbitrary stack of pages that gets build when you beam there.
Using Beamer can feel like using many of Navigator's push/pop methods at once.
Note that "Navigator 1.0" can be used alongside Beamer. You can easily push or pop pages with Navigator.of(context), but those will not be contributing to the URI. This is often needed when some info/helper page needs to be shown that doesn't influence the browser's URL. And of course, when using Beamer on mobile, this is a non-issue as there is no URL.
Examples #
Books #
Here is a recreation of books example from this article where you can learn a lot about Navigator 2.0. See Example for full application code of this example.
Advanced Books #
For a step further, we add more flows to demonstrate the power of Beamer. The full code is available here.
Deep Location #
You can instantly beam to a location in your app that has many pages stacked (deep linking) and then pop them one by one or simply beamBack to where you came from. The full code is available here.
Guards #
You can define global guards (for example, authentication guard) or location guards that keep a specific location safe. The full code is available here.
Bottom Navigation (WIP) #
An example of putting Beamer into widget tree. This is not yet fully functional for web usage; setting the URL from browser doesn't update the state properly. It should work when nested routers issue is done. The full code is available here.
Usage #
With *App.router #
In order to use Beamer on your entire app, you must (as per official documentation) construct your *App widget with .router constructor to which (along with all your regular *App attributes) you provide
routerDelegatethat controls (re)building ofNavigatorpages androuteInformationParserthat decides which URI corresponds to whichRouterstate/configuration, in our case -BeamLocation.
Here you use the Beamer implementation of those - BeamerRouterDelegate and BeamerRouteInformationParser, to which you pass your BeamLocations.
class MyApp extends StatelessWidget {
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp.router(
routerDelegate: BeamerRouterDelegate(
initialLocation: HomeLocation(),
),
routeInformationParser: BeamerRouteInformationParser(
beamLocations: [
HomeLocation(),
BooksLocation(),
],
),
...
);
}
}
As a Widget (WIP) #
class MyApp extends StatefulWidget {
@override
_MyAppState createState() => _MyAppState();
}
class _MyAppState extends State<MyApp> {
final List<BeamLocation> _beamLocations = [
BooksLocation(pathBlueprint: '/books'),
ArticlesLocation(pathBlueprint: '/articles'),
];
final _beamerKey = GlobalKey<BeamerState>();
Beamer _beamer;
int _currentIndex = 0;
@override
void initState() {
_beamer = Beamer(
key: _beamerKey,
routerDelegate: BeamerRouterDelegate(initialLocation: _beamLocations[0]),
routeInformationParser: BeamerRouteInformationParser(
beamLocations: _beamLocations,
),
);
super.initState();
}
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp(
debugShowCheckedModeBanner: false,
home: Scaffold(
body: _beamer,
bottomNavigationBar: BottomNavigationBar(
currentIndex: _currentIndex,
items: [
BottomNavigationBarItem(label: 'Books', icon: Icon(Icons.book)),
BottomNavigationBarItem(
label: 'Articles', icon: Icon(Icons.article)),
],
onTap: (index) {
setState(() => _currentIndex = index);
_beamerKey.currentState.routerDelegate
.beamTo(_beamLocations[index]);
}),
),
);
}
}
General Notes #
-
When extending
BeamLocation, two getters need to be implemented;pathBlueprintsandpages.pagesrepresent a stack that will be built byNavigatorwhen you beam there, andpathBlueprintsis there for Beamer to decide whichBeamLocationcorresponds to an URL coming from browser.BeamLocationtakes query and path parameters from URI. The:is necessary inpathBlueprintsif you might get path parameter from browser.
-
BeamPage's child is an arbitraryWidgetsthat represent your app screen / page.keyis important forNavigatorto optimize rebuilds. This should be an unique value for "page state".BeamPagecreatesMaterialPageRoute, but you can extendsBeamPageand overridecreateRouteto make your own implementation instead.
Migrating from 0.4.x to >=0.5.x #
- instead of wrapping
MaterialAppwithBeamer, use*App.router() String BeamLocation.pathBlueprintis nowList<String> BeamLocation.pathBlueprintsBeamLocation.withParametersconstructor is removed and all parameters are handled with 1 constructor. See example if you needsuper.BeamPage.pageis now calledBeamPage.child
Contributing #
This package is still in early stages. To see the upcoming features, check the Issue board.
If you notice any bugs not present in issues, please file a new issue. If you are willing to fix or enhance things yourself, you are very welcome to make a pull request. Before making a pull request;
- if you wish to solve an existing issue, please let us know in issue comments first
- if you have another enhancement in mind, create an issue for it first so we can discuss your idea




