I'm planning to use one of my Flutter app as a web application. Unfortunately one of the plugin I'm using is not compatible for web. In my case I would be happy to exclude that feature which is using the incompatible plugin, but I'm not sure how to exclude (also plugin registration in pubspec.yaml) when targeting platform which is not supported by the plugin?
This question sounds similar to Flutter - Conditional library import in flutter-web - which I found with a simple google search.
Related
I'm trying to implement new Flutter plugin to wrap my native SDKs and use my native SDK directly and return the result.
I already finished the Android part by adding my library using maven and use it inside my Android module, but now I'm stuck on iOS part as the plugin code is just a pod that will be used at the end so how I can add my dependence via Swift Package Manager to the plugin pod and use it instead of going and add vendor frameworks. Is there any way to do that?
Currently you likely need to switch to CocoaPods.
Flutter does not support Swift Package Manager. See https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/33850
Can you guys tell me what all these different projects means?
New Flutter Project
Because I can't find the documentation anywhere
So if you can find the reference it will help me
Flutter Application: A fully-functional standalone Flutter application.
Flutter Plugin: A plugin is a kind of bridge that you develop between a native feature like camera API in Android and iOS.
Flutter Package: A package is a flutter application written solely using Dart. It doesn't have much to do with the Native functionalities.
Flutter Module: A module is a set of functionalities that you want to use in your app. It is a custom code that does a specific task but can be used for other apps in the future. So, you keep it handy. In other words, this module can be integrated in other apps too.
I'm setting up a new flutter-web application but I can't add dependencies that I could do in flutter.
for example I want to add font-awesome-flutter to the project but get this error!
font_awesome_flutter: 8.5.0
Because font_awesome_flutter >=8.0.0 depends on flutter any from sdk which is forbidden, font_awesome_flutter >=8.0.0 is forbidden.
So, because salema depends on font_awesome_flutter 8.5.0, version solving failed.
since flutter-web is not still stable and its in technical stage, a simple way for using library in flutter-web which has been working for me is to add the library resources manually. you just need to copy everything inside the lib folder of the library in your own project.
in order to access the library's resources go to https://pub.dev/flutter and search for the library you want and then find the library's github repo in the about section.
flutter_web does not have a plugin system yet. Temporarily, we provide
access to dart:html, dart:js, dart:svg, dart:indexed_db and other web
libraries that give you access to the vast majority of browser APIs.
However, expect that these libraries will be replaced by a different
plugin API.
Source:
https://github.com/flutter/flutter_web/blob/master/README.md
In short, Flutter dependencies are not supported by Flutter Web at this time.
I am new to flutter plugin development, I have read Developing packages & plugins and Writing a good Flutter plugin, but I am confused as a beginner, I have developed Flutter Application based on webview_flutter and a JavaScript library to work offline. I want to extend it as a module or a plugin.
Webview renders some stuff.
JavaScript library is being attached from assets.
I am not calling any Platform API directly from my code but my code depends on another plugin.
How do I proceed this? As a plugin or as a module?
A plugin is about making native functionality available to Flutter.
A module is about integrating Flutter with an existing native application.
Perhaps what you actually want is a reusable Pub package that you can publish to pub.dartlang.org (a plugin is also a Pub package, just a special one that additionally utilizes access to the native platform)
See also
https://flutter.io/docs/development/packages-and-plugins/developing-packages
https://www.dartlang.org/guides/libraries/create-library-packages
A "library package" is a Pub package in contrary to a plain Dart "application package" which is usually not published to pub.dartlang.org.
A pure Dart Pub package (library package) that does not depend on dart:html, dart:ui (Flutter) and is not a Flutter plugin, can be used on any platform (server, command line, Flutter, browser).
If your package has one of the named dependencies, it is limited to a specific platform.
pub.dartlang.org shows labels to categorize published packages accordingly (FLUTTER,WEB,OTHER)
Flutter plugins:
In short: Native related developments.
Flutter plugin is the wrapper of the native code like android( Kotlin or java) and iOS(swift or objective c). ... Flutter can do anything that a native application can through the use of Platform Channels and Message Passing. Flutter instructs the native iOS/Android code to perform an action and returns the result to Dart.
Flutter packages or modules:
In short: Make the development faster by using code from util libraries.
Flutter supports using shared packages contributed by other developers to the Flutter and Dart ecosystems. This allows quickly building an app without having to develop everything from scratch.
I have a library our partners use to drop our UI and flow into their apps. Can I make a cocoapod or framework file or an aar file or gradle dependency with a flutter project?
Yes! For general information, see https://flutter.dev/docs/development/add-to-app
To create an AAR from a Flutter module that other Android apps can use without any direct dependency on Flutter, see Option A - Depend on the Android Archive (AAR)
To create a Framework from a Flutter module that other iOS apps can use without any direct dependency on Flutter, see Option B - Embed frameworks in Xcode
You can also find samples at
https://github.com/flutter/samples/tree/master/experimental/add_to_app, refer to the respective samples: android_using_prebuilt_module and ios_using_prebuilt_module
Now, if you are talking about integrating Flutter into an existing library (AAR or Framwork), then no, this is currently not supported, but is being explored:
https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/39027
note that this would be termed “add-to-library” as opposed to "add-to-app"
also mentioned, flutter/add-to-app:
Packing a Flutter library into another sharable library or packing multiple Flutter libraries into an application isn’t supported.