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Flutter Cookbook, Second Edition

You're reading from   Flutter Cookbook, Second Edition 100+ step-by-step recipes for building cross-platform, professional-grade apps with Flutter 3.10.x and Dart 3.x

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803245430
Length 712 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Simone Alessandria Simone Alessandria
Author Profile Icon Simone Alessandria
Simone Alessandria
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Flutter 2. Creating Your First Flutter App FREE CHAPTER 3. Dart: A Language You Already Know 4. Introduction to Widgets 5. Mastering Layout and Taming the Widget Tree 6. Adding Interactivity and Navigation to Your App 7. Basic State Management 8. The Future is Now: Introduction to Asynchronous Programming 9. Data Persistence and Communicating with the Internet 10. Advanced State Management with Streams 11. Using Flutter Packages 12. Adding Animations to Your App 13. Using Firebase 14. Firebase Machine Learning 15. Flutter Web and Desktop 16. Distributing Your Mobile App 17. Other Books You May Enjoy
18. Index

Navigating to the next screen

So far, all our examples have taken place on a single screen. In most real-world projects, you might be managing several screens, each with their own paths that can be pushed and popped onto the screen.

Flutter, and more specifically MaterialApp, uses a class called Navigator to manage your app’s screens. Screens are abstracted into a concept called Routes, which contain both information about the widget we want to show and how we want to animate it on the screen. Navigator also keeps a full history of your routes so that you can return to the previous screens easily.

In this recipe, we’re going to link LoginScreen and StopWatch so that LoginScreen actually logs you in.

How to do it...

Let’s start linking the two screens in the app:

  1. Start by engaging in one the most enjoyable activities for a developer—deleting code! Remove the loggedIn property and all the parts of the code where it’s referenced...
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