flutter_portal: Evolved Overlay
/OverlayEntry
- declarative not imperative, intuitive-context, and easy-alignment
Want to show floating overlays - tooltips, contextual menus, dialogs, bubbles, etc? This library is an enhancement and replacement to Flutter's built-in Overlay/OverlayEntry.
Why using flutter_portal
instead of built-in Overlay/OverlayEntry/OverlayPortal?
- Declarative, not imperative: Like everything else in the Flutter world, overlays (portals) are declarative now. Simply put your floating UI in the normal widget tree. Compare: The OverlayEntry is notΒ a widget, and is manipulated imperatively using
.insert()
Β etc. - Alignment, done easily: Built-in support for aligning an overlay next to a UI component. Compare: A custom contextual menu from scratch in a few lines of code; while Overlay makes it nontrivial to align the tooltip/menu next to a widget.
- Customizable alignment logic: For example, ensure the portal target never renders outside the screen (
shiftToWithinBound
), align it to portal instead of parent widget (alignToPortal
), and you can even create your own align algorithm (extendEnhancedCompositedTransformAnchor
). Compare: Overlay does not seem to have this. - The intuitive
Context
: The overlay entry is build with its intuitive parent as itscontext
. Compare The Overlay approach uses the far-away overlay as itscontext
. Update: OverlayPortal, which is inspired by this package, improved and did this well.
As a consequence, also have the following pros:
- Easy restorable property: Since showing an overlay as simple as doing a
setState
,RestorableProperty
works nicely. Compare: When using the Overlay approach, the state of our modals are not restored when our application is killed by the OS. - Correct
Theme
/provider
: Since the overlay entry has the intuitivecontext
, it has access to the sameTheme
and the differentprovider
s as the widget that shows the overlay. Compare: The Overlay approach will yield confusing Themes and providers. Update: OverlayPortal, which is inspired by this package, improved and did this well.
PortalTarget(
// 1. Declarative: Just provide `portalFollower` as a normal widget
// 2. Intuitive BuildContext inside
portalFollower: MyAwesomeOverlayWidget(),
// 3. Align the "follower" relative to the "child" anywhere you like
anchor: Aligned.center,
child: MyChildWidget(),
)
To migrate from 0.x to 1.x, see the last section of the readme.
Check-out the examples
folder for examples on how to use flutter_portal:
Partial screenshots:
Contextual menu | Onboarding view |
---|---|
- Install it. Follow the standard procedure of installing this package. The simplest way may be
flutter pub add flutter_portal
. - Add the Portal widget. For example, place it above
MaterialApp
. Only one Portal is needed per app. - Use PortalTargets whenever you want to show some overlays.
In this example, we will see how we can use flutter_portal to show a menu
after clicking on a RaisedButton
.
Add the Portal widget
Before doing anything, you must insert the Portal widget in your widget tree. The follower widgets will behave as if they are inserted as children of this widget.
You can place this Portal above MaterialApp
or near the root of a route:
Portal(
child: MaterialApp(...)
)
First, we need to create a StatefulWidget
that renders our RaisedButton
:
class MenuExample extends StatefulWidget {
@override
_MenuExampleState createState() => _MenuExampleState();
}
class _MenuExampleState extends State<MenuExample> {
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Scaffold(
body: Center(
child: RaisedButton(
onPressed: () {},
child: Text('show menu'),
),
),
);
}
}
Then, we need to insert our PortalTarget in the widget tree.
We want our contextual menu to render right next to our RaisedButton
.
As such, our PortalTarget should be the parent of RaisedButton
like so:
child: PortalTarget(
visible: // TODO
anchor: // TODO
portalFollower: // TODO
child: RaisedButton(...),
),
We can pass our menu to PortalTarget:
PortalTarget(
visible: true,
anchor: Filled(),
portalFollower: Material(
elevation: 8,
child: IntrinsicWidth(
child: Column(
mainAxisSize: MainAxisSize.min,
children: [
ListTile(title: Text('option 1')),
ListTile(title: Text('option 2')),
],
),
),
),
child: RaisedButton(...),
)
At this stage, you may notice two things:
- our menu is full-screen (because
anchor
isFilled
) - our menu is always visible (because
visible
is true)
Let's fix the full-screen issue first and change our code so that our menu renders on the right of our RaisedButton
.
To align our menu around our button, we can change the anchor
parameter:
PortalTarget(
visible: true,
anchor: const Aligned(
follower: Alignment.topLeft,
target: Alignment.topRight,
),
portalFollower: Material(...),
child: RaisedButton(...),
)
Finally, we can update our code such that the menu show only when clicking on the button.
To do that, we need to declare a new boolean inside our StatefulWidget
,
that says whether the menu is open or not:
class _MenuExampleState extends State<MenuExample> {
bool isMenuOpen = false;
...
}
We then pass this isMenuOpen
variable to our PortalEntry:
PortalTarget(
visible: isMenuOpen,
...
)
Then, inside the onPressed
callback of our RaisedButton
, we can
update this isMenuOpen
variable:
RaisedButton(
onPressed: () {
setState(() {
isMenuOpen = true;
});
},
child: Text('show menu'),
),
One final step is to close the menu when the user clicks randomly outside of the menu.
This can be implemented with a second PortalEntry combined with [GestureDetector] like so:
PortalTarget(
visible: isMenuOpen,
portalFollower: GestureDetector(
behavior: HitTestBehavior.opaque,
onTap: () {
setState(() {
isMenuOpen = false;
});
},
),
...
),
There are a few concepts that are useful to fully understand when using
flutter_portal
. That is especially true if you want to support custom use
cases, which is easily possible with the abstract API provided.
In the following, each of the abstract concepts you need to understand are
explained on a high level. You will find them both in class names (e.g. the
Portal
widget or the PortalTarget
widget as well as in parameter names).
A portal (or the portal if you only have one) is the space used for doing all of the portal work. On a low level, this means that you have one widget that allows its subtree to place targets and followers that are connected.
The portal also defines the area (rectangle bounds) that are available to any followers to be rendered onto the screen.
In detail, you might wrap your whole MaterialApp
in a single Portal
widget,
which would mean that you can use the whole area of your app to render followers
attached to targets that are children of the Portal
widget.
A target is any place within a portal that can be followed by a follower. This allows you to attach whatever you want to overlay to a specific place in your UI, no matter where it moves dynamically.
On a low level, this means that you wrap the part of your UI that you want to
follow in a PortalTarget
widget and configure it.
Imagine you want to display tooltips when an avatar is hovered in your app. In that case, the avatar would be the portal target and could be used to anchor the tooltip that is overlayed.
Another example would be a dropdown menu. The widget that shows the current selection is the target and when tapping on it, the dropdown options would be overlayed through the portal as the follower.
A follower can only be used in combination with a target. You can use it for anything that you want to overlay on top of your UI, attached to a target.
Specifically, this means that you can pass one follower
to every
PortalTarget
, which will be displayed above your UI within the portal when
you specify so.
If you wanted to display an autocomplete text field using flutter_portal
,
you would want to follow the text field to overlay your autocomplete
suggestions. The widget for the autocomplete suggestions would be the portal
follower in that case.
Anchors define the layout connection between targets and followers. In general, anchors are implemented as an abstract API that provides all the information necessary to support any positioning you want. That means that anchors can be defined based on the attributes of the associated portal, target, and follower.
There are a few anchors that are implemented by default, e.g. Aligned
or
Filled
.
There are some breaking changes (mostly introduced by #44) from 0.x to 1.0, but it can be easily migrated. The following:
PortalEntry(
portalAnchor: Alignment.topLeft,
childAnchor: Alignment.topRight,
portal: MyAwesomePortalWidget(),
child: MyAwesomeChildWidget(),
)
Becomes:
PortalTarget(
anchor: const Aligned(
follower: Alignment.topLeft,
target: Alignment.topRight,
),
portalFollower: MyAwesomePortalWidget(),
child: MyAwesomeChildWidget(),
)
If you originally use PortalEntry
without portalAnchor
/childAnchor
(i.e. make it fullscreen), then you can write as:
PortalTarget(
anchor: const Filled(),
...
)
Owners
- @rrousselGit: The former owner of this package. Create this package in December 2019, and majorly maintain until early 2022. Contributions include: Implementation of the package, including code, documentations, examples, etc. Change algorithms of rendering. Remove PortalEntry's generic. Allow delaying the disappearance of PortalEntry, useful for leave animations.
- @fzyzcjy: The current owner of this package. See
CHANGELOG.md
for contributions.
Contributors
- @creativecreatorormaybenot: New anchoring logic for advanced use cases, making anchors more flexible, improving code quality, and enhancing non-fragility without additional layout/paint calls.
- @Jjagg: Migrate to NNBD.
- @CaseyHillers: Make example compatible with Dart 3.
- @srawlins: Update analyzer to make it compatible with Dart 3.
- @mono0926: Update dependencies and doc.
- @tepcii and @nilsreichardt: Fix doc.
- @mityax: Fix export.
- @parlough: Remove outdated lint.