text stringlengths 1 474 |
|---|
} |
}<code_end> |
A TabController is required to coordinate the tab selection |
between a TabBar and a TabBarView. |
The TabController constructor length argument is the total |
number of tabs. A TickerProvider is required to trigger |
the notification whenever a frame triggers a state change. |
The TickerProvider is vsync. Pass the |
vsync: this argument to the TabController constructor |
whenever you create a new TabController.The TickerProvider is an interface implemented |
by classes that can vend Ticker objects. |
Tickers can be used by any object that must be notified whenever a |
frame triggers, but they’re most commonly used indirectly via an |
AnimationController. AnimationControllers |
need a TickerProvider to obtain their Ticker. |
If you are creating an AnimationController from a State, |
then you can use the TickerProviderStateMixin |
or SingleTickerProviderStateMixin |
classes to obtain a suitable TickerProvider.The Scaffold widget wraps a new TabBar widget and |
creates two tabs. The TabBarView widget |
is passed as the body parameter of the Scaffold widget. |
All screens corresponding to the TabBar widget’s tabs are |
children to the TabBarView widget along with the same TabController. |
<code_start>class _NavigationHomePageState extends State<NavigationHomePage> |
with SingleTickerProviderStateMixin { |
late TabController controller = TabController(length: 2, vsync: this); |
@override |
Widget build(BuildContext context) { |
return Scaffold( |
bottomNavigationBar: Material( |
color: Colors.blue, |
child: TabBar( |
tabs: const <Tab>[ |
Tab( |
icon: Icon(Icons.person), |
), |
Tab( |
icon: Icon(Icons.email), |
), |
], |
controller: controller, |
), |
), |
body: TabBarView( |
controller: controller, |
children: const <Widget>[HomeScreen(), TabScreen()], |
)); |
} |
}<code_end> |
<topic_end> |
<topic_start>Drawer navigation |
In React Native, import the needed react-navigation packages and then use |
createDrawerNavigator and DrawerNavigation.In Flutter, we can use the Drawer widget in combination with a |
Scaffold to create a layout with a Material Design drawer. |
To add a Drawer to an app, wrap it in a Scaffold widget. |
The Scaffold widget provides a consistent |
visual structure to apps that follow the |
Material Design guidelines. It also supports |
special Material Design components, |
such as Drawers, AppBars, and SnackBars.The Drawer widget is a Material Design panel that slides |
in horizontally from the edge of a Scaffold to show navigation |
links in an application. You can |
provide a ElevatedButton, a Text widget, |
or a list of items to display as the child to the Drawer widget. |
In the following example, the ListTile |
widget provides the navigation on tap. |
<code_start>@override |
Widget build(BuildContext context) { |
return Drawer( |
elevation: 20, |
child: ListTile( |
leading: const Icon(Icons.change_history), |
title: const Text('Screen2'), |
onTap: () { |
Navigator.of(context).pushNamed('/b'); |
}, |
), |
); |
}<code_end> |
The Scaffold widget also includes an AppBar widget that automatically |
displays an appropriate IconButton to show the Drawer when a Drawer is |
available in the Scaffold. The Scaffold automatically handles the |
edge-swipe gesture to show the Drawer. |
<code_start>@override |
Widget build(BuildContext context) { |
return Scaffold( |
drawer: Drawer( |
elevation: 20, |
child: ListTile( |
leading: const Icon(Icons.change_history), |
title: const Text('Screen2'), |
onTap: () { |
Navigator.of(context).pushNamed('/b'); |
}, |
), |
), |
appBar: AppBar(title: const Text('Home')), |
body: Container(), |
); |
}<code_end> |
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