Book Image

Flutter Cookbook, Second Edition - Second Edition

By : Simone Alessandria
5 (3)
Book Image

Flutter Cookbook, Second Edition - Second Edition

5 (3)
By: Simone Alessandria

Overview of this book

Are you ready to tap into the immense potential of Flutter? With over 1,000 new mobile apps published every day on the Apple and Google Play stores, Flutter is transforming the landscape of app development. It's time for you to join the revolution. Introducing the second edition of Flutter Cookbook, a step-by-step guide designed exclusively for you. Whether you're a seasoned developer or just starting your coding journey, this book is your ultimate companion. Dive into the latest features of Flutter 3.10 and unlock the secrets to building professional-grade, cross-platform applications. With our recipe-based approach, we'll not only show you how to implement Flutter's features but also explain why they work. Through practical examples and real-world execution, you'll gain a deeper understanding of Flutter's inner workings. From crafting stunning UI/UX with widgets to leveraging hot reload and restart techniques, we'll equip you with best practices and invaluable knowledge. As you progress, you'll learn to efficiently manage data, add interactivity and animations, and integrate essential Flutter plugins like maps, camera, voice recognition and more. And let's not forget the dedicated chapter on implementing MLkit powered by TensorFlow Lite. We'll guide you through building custom machine learning solutions, expanding the capabilities of your apps. By the time you reach the end of this comprehensive Flutter book, you'll have the skills and confidence to write and deliver fully functional apps.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
17
Other Books You May Enjoy
18
Index

Designing an HTTP client and getting data

Most mobile apps rely on data that comes from an external source. Think of apps for reading books, watching movies, sharing pictures with your friends, reading the news, or writing emails: all these apps use data taken from an external source. When an app consumes external data, usually, there is a backend service that provides that data for the app: a web service or web API.

What happens is that your app (frontend or client) connects to a web service over HTTP and requests some data. The backend service then responds by sending the data to the app, usually in .json or .xml format.

For this recipe, we will create an app that reads and writes data from a web service. As creating a web API is beyond the scope of this book, we will use a mock service, called Wire Mock Cloud, that will simulate the behavior of a real web service, but will be extremely easy to set up and use. In a later chapter, you will also see another way of creating a real-world...