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example 1
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<code_start>
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container(color: red)
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<code_end>
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the screen is the parent of the container, and it
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forces the container to be exactly the same size as the screen.
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so the container fills the screen and paints it red.
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<topic_end>
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<topic_start>
|
example 2
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<code_start>
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container(width: 100, height: 100, color: red)
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<code_end>
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the red container wants to be 100 × 100,
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but it can’t, because the screen forces it to be
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exactly the same size as the screen.
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so the container fills the screen.
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<topic_end>
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<topic_start>
|
example 3
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<code_start>
|
center(
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child: container(width: 100, height: 100, color: red),
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)
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<code_end>
|
the screen forces the center to be exactly the same size
|
as the screen, so the center fills the screen.
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the center tells the container that it can be any size it
|
wants, but not bigger than the screen. now the container
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can indeed be 100 × 100.
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<topic_end>
|
<topic_start>
|
example 4
|
<code_start>
|
align(
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alignment: Alignment.bottomRight,
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child: container(width: 100, height: 100, color: red),
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)
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<code_end>
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this is different from the previous example in that it uses
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align instead of center.
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align also tells the container that it can be any size it
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wants, but if there is empty space it won’t center the container.
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instead, it aligns the container to the bottom-right of the
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available space.
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<topic_end>
|
<topic_start>
|
example 5
|
<code_start>
|
center(
|
child: container(
|
width: double.infinity, height: double.infinity, color: red),
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)
|
<code_end>
|
the screen forces the center to be exactly the
|
same size as the screen, so the center fills the screen.
|
the center tells the container that it can be any size it wants,
|
but not bigger than the screen. the container wants to be
|
of infinite size, but since it can’t be bigger than the screen,
|
it just fills the screen.
|
<topic_end>
|
<topic_start>
|
example 6
|
<code_start>
|
center(
|
child: container(color: red),
|
)
|
<code_end>
|
the screen forces the center to be exactly the
|
same size as the screen, so the center fills the screen.
|
the center tells the container that it can be any
|
size it wants, but not bigger than the screen.
|
since the container has no child and no fixed size,
|
it decides it wants to be as big as possible,
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so it fills the whole screen.
|
but why does the container decide that?
|
simply because that’s a design decision by those who
|
created the container widget. it could have been
|
created differently, and you have to read the
|
container API documentation to understand
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how it behaves, depending on the circumstances.
|
<topic_end>
|
<topic_start>
|
example 7
|
<code_start>
|
center(
|
child: container(
|
color: red,
|
child: container(color: green, width: 30, height: 30),
|
),
|
)
|
<code_end>
|
the screen forces the center to be exactly the same
|
size as the screen, so the center fills the screen.
|
the center tells the red container that it can be any size
|
it wants, but not bigger than the screen. since the red
|
container has no size but has a child,
|
it decides it wants to be the same size as its child.
|
the red container tells its child that it can be any size
|
it wants, but not bigger than the screen.
|
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