I am building a Stateful Widget in Flutter, and as such, there is a requirement for all arguments passed in the constructor to be final (since Stateful widgets are marked with the @immutable annotation).
Thing is, I want to have two different constructors for my widget and to exclude some of the members of the Stateful widget, depending on the constructor used. I have to stress, that I do not want these arguments to be optional, but mandatory.
For example,
class MyWidget extends StatefulWidget {
MyWidget.first({this.firstArgument}};
MyWidget.second({this.secondArgument});
final int firstArgument;
final String secondArgument;
@override
MyWidget createState() => MyWidgetState();
}
When I write this, I get a compiler error, telling me that:
All final variables must be initialized, but 'firstArgument' isn't.
The same goes for the second member variable.
How can I overcome this?
I can't move firstArgument
and secondArgument
to the state of MyWidget, since I want them to be initialized in the constructor(s) and also because they should not be changed.
I can't mark them as not final since then I will get a compiler warning and also break the Stateful widget paradigm.
Is there a different approach I should use?
Thing is, I want to have two different constructors for my widget and to exclude some of the members of the Stateful widget, depending on the constructor used. I have to stress, that I do not want these arguments to be optional, but mandatory.
If you don't want them to be optional, you need to mark them as required:
MyWidget.first({required this.firstArgument}};
MyWidget.second({required this.secondArgument});
(If you don't have null-safety enabled, you will instead need to use the weaker @required
annotation from package:meta
.)
My understanding is that you want firstArgument
and secondArgument
to be required for MyWidget.first
and MyWidget.second
respectively but that they are not intended to be required together (that is, only one should be set).
You could fix this by explicitly initializing both values in the constructors:
MyWidget.first({required this.firstArgument}} : secondArgument = null;
MyWidget.second({required this.secondArgument}): firstArgument = null;
If you have null-safety enabled, you also would need to make your members nullable:
final int? firstArgument;
final String? secondArgument;