Navigator class
A widget that manages a set of child widgets with a stack discipline.
Many apps have a navigator near the top of their widget hierarchy in order to display their logical history using an Overlay with the most recently visited pages visually on top of the older pages. Using this pattern lets the navigator visually transition from one page to another by moving the widgets around in the overlay. Similarly, the navigator can be used to show a dialog by positioning the dialog widget above the current page.
Using the Pages API
The Navigator will convert its Navigator.pages into a stack of Routes if it is provided. A change in Navigator.pages will trigger an update to the stack of Routes. The Navigator will update its routes to match the new configuration of its Navigator.pages. To use this API, one can create a Page subclass and defines a list of Pages for Navigator.pages. A Navigator.onPopPage callback is also required to properly clean up the input pages in case of a pop.
By Default, the Navigator will use DefaultTransitionDelegate to decide how routes transition in or out of the screen. To customize it, define a TransitionDelegate subclass and provide it to the Navigator.transitionDelegate.
For more information on using the pages API, see the Router widget.
Using the Navigator API
Mobile apps typically reveal their contents via full-screen elements called "screens" or "pages". In Flutter these elements are called routes and they're managed by a Navigator widget. The navigator manages a stack of Route objects and provides two ways for managing the stack, the declarative API Navigator.pages or imperative API Navigator.push and Navigator.pop.
When your user interface fits this paradigm of a stack, where the user should be able to navigate back to an earlier element in the stack, the use of routes and the Navigator is appropriate. On certain platforms, such as Android, the system UI will provide a back button (outside the bounds of your application) that will allow the user to navigate back to earlier routes in your application's stack. On platforms that don't have this build-in navigation mechanism, the use of an AppBar (typically used in the Scaffold.appBar property) can automatically add a back button for user navigation.
Displaying a full-screen route
Although you can create a navigator directly, it's most common to use the
navigator created by the Router
which itself is created and configured by
a WidgetsApp or a MaterialApp widget. You can refer to that navigator
with Navigator.of.
A MaterialApp is the simplest way to set things up. The MaterialApp's home becomes the route at the bottom of the Navigator's stack. It is what you see when the app is launched.
void main() {
runApp(const MaterialApp(home: MyAppHome()));
}
To push a new route on the stack you can create an instance of MaterialPageRoute with a builder function that creates whatever you want to appear on the screen. For example:
Navigator.push(context, MaterialPageRoute<void>(
builder: (BuildContext context) {
return Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(title: const Text('My Page')),
body: Center(
child: TextButton(
child: const Text('POP'),
onPressed: () {
Navigator.pop(context);
},
),
),
);
},
));
The route defines its widget with a builder function instead of a child widget because it will be built and rebuilt in different contexts depending on when it's pushed and popped.
As you can see, the new route can be popped, revealing the app's home page, with the Navigator's pop method:
Navigator.pop(context);
It usually isn't necessary to provide a widget that pops the Navigator in a route with a Scaffold because the Scaffold automatically adds a 'back' button to its AppBar. Pressing the back button causes Navigator.pop to be called. On Android, pressing the system back button does the same thing.
Using named navigator routes
Mobile apps often manage a large number of routes and it's often easiest to refer to them by name. Route names, by convention, use a path-like structure (for example, '/a/b/c'). The app's home page route is named '/' by default.
The MaterialApp can be created with a Map<String, WidgetBuilder> which maps from a route's name to a builder function that will create it. The MaterialApp uses this map to create a value for its navigator's onGenerateRoute callback.
void main() {
runApp(MaterialApp(
home: const MyAppHome(), // becomes the route named '/'
routes: <String, WidgetBuilder> {
'/a': (BuildContext context) => const MyPage(title: Text('page A')),
'/b': (BuildContext context) => const MyPage(title: Text('page B')),
'/c': (BuildContext context) => const MyPage(title: Text('page C')),
},
));
}
To show a route by name:
Navigator.pushNamed(context, '/b');
Routes can return a value
When a route is pushed to ask the user for a value, the value can be returned via the pop method's result parameter.
Methods that push a route return a Future. The Future resolves when the
route is popped and the Future's value is the pop method's result
parameter.
For example if we wanted to ask the user to press 'OK' to confirm an
operation we could await
the result of Navigator.push:
bool? value = await Navigator.push(context, MaterialPageRoute<bool>(
builder: (BuildContext context) {
return Center(
child: GestureDetector(
child: const Text('OK'),
onTap: () { Navigator.pop(context, true); }
),
);
}
));
If the user presses 'OK' then value will be true. If the user backs out of the route, for example by pressing the Scaffold's back button, the value will be null.
When a route is used to return a value, the route's type parameter must
match the type of pop's result. That's why we've used
MaterialPageRoute<bool>
instead of MaterialPageRoute<void>
or just
MaterialPageRoute
. (If you prefer to not specify the types, though, that's
fine too.)
Popup routes
Routes don't have to obscure the entire screen. PopupRoutes cover the screen with a ModalRoute.barrierColor that can be only partially opaque to allow the current screen to show through. Popup routes are "modal" because they block input to the widgets below.
There are functions which create and show popup routes. For example: showDialog, showMenu, and showModalBottomSheet. These functions return their pushed route's Future as described above. Callers can await the returned value to take an action when the route is popped, or to discover the route's value.
There are also widgets which create popup routes, like PopupMenuButton and DropdownButton. These widgets create internal subclasses of PopupRoute and use the Navigator's push and pop methods to show and dismiss them.
Custom routes
You can create your own subclass of one of the widget library route classes like PopupRoute, ModalRoute, or PageRoute, to control the animated transition employed to show the route, the color and behavior of the route's modal barrier, and other aspects of the route.
The PageRouteBuilder class makes it possible to define a custom route
in terms of callbacks. Here's an example that rotates and fades its child
when the route appears or disappears. This route does not obscure the entire
screen because it specifies opaque: false
, just as a popup route does.
Navigator.push(context, PageRouteBuilder<void>(
opaque: false,
pageBuilder: (BuildContext context, _, __) {
return const Center(child: Text('My PageRoute'));
},
transitionsBuilder: (___, Animation<double> animation, ____, Widget child) {
return FadeTransition(
opacity: animation,
child: RotationTransition(
turns: Tween<double>(begin: 0.5, end: 1.0).animate(animation),
child: child,
),
);
}
));
The page route is built in two parts, the "page" and the
"transitions". The page becomes a descendant of the child passed to
the transitionsBuilder
function. Typically the page is only built once,
because it doesn't depend on its animation parameters (elided with _
and __
in this example). The transition is built on every frame
for its duration.
(In this example, void
is used as the return type for the route, because
it does not return a value.)
Nesting Navigators
An app can use more than one Navigator. Nesting one Navigator below another Navigator can be used to create an "inner journey" such as tabbed navigation, user registration, store checkout, or other independent journeys that represent a subsection of your overall application.
Example
It is standard practice for iOS apps to use tabbed navigation where each tab maintains its own navigation history. Therefore, each tab has its own Navigator, creating a kind of "parallel navigation."
In addition to the parallel navigation of the tabs, it is still possible to launch full-screen pages that completely cover the tabs. For example: an on-boarding flow, or an alert dialog. Therefore, there must exist a "root" Navigator that sits above the tab navigation. As a result, each of the tab's Navigators are actually nested Navigators sitting below a single root Navigator.
In practice, the nested Navigators for tabbed navigation sit in the WidgetsApp and CupertinoTabView widgets and do not need to be explicitly created or managed.
Even though this example uses two Navigators to demonstrate nested Navigators, a similar result is possible using only a single Navigator.
Run this example with flutter run --route=/signup
to start it with
the signup flow instead of on the home page.
To create a local project with this code sample, run:
flutter create --sample=widgets.Navigator.1 mysample
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
/// Flutter code sample for [Navigator].
void main() => runApp(const NavigatorExampleApp());
class NavigatorExampleApp extends StatelessWidget {
const NavigatorExampleApp({super.key});
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp(
// MaterialApp contains our top-level Navigator
initialRoute: '/',
routes: <String, WidgetBuilder>{
'/': (BuildContext context) => const HomePage(),
'/signup': (BuildContext context) => const SignUpPage(),
},
);
}
}
class HomePage extends StatelessWidget {
const HomePage({super.key});
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return DefaultTextStyle(
style: Theme.of(context).textTheme.headlineMedium!,
child: Container(
color: Colors.white,
alignment: Alignment.center,
child: const Text('Home Page'),
),
);
}
}
class CollectPersonalInfoPage extends StatelessWidget {
const CollectPersonalInfoPage({super.key});
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return DefaultTextStyle(
style: Theme.of(context).textTheme.headlineMedium!,
child: GestureDetector(
onTap: () {
// This moves from the personal info page to the credentials page,
// replacing this page with that one.
Navigator.of(context)
.pushReplacementNamed('signup/choose_credentials');
},
child: Container(
color: Colors.lightBlue,
alignment: Alignment.center,
child: const Text('Collect Personal Info Page'),
),
),
);
}
}
class ChooseCredentialsPage extends StatelessWidget {
const ChooseCredentialsPage({
super.key,
required this.onSignupComplete,
});
final VoidCallback onSignupComplete;
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return GestureDetector(
onTap: onSignupComplete,
child: DefaultTextStyle(
style: Theme.of(context).textTheme.headlineMedium!,
child: Container(
color: Colors.pinkAccent,
alignment: Alignment.center,
child: const Text('Choose Credentials Page'),
),
),
);
}
}
class SignUpPage extends StatelessWidget {
const SignUpPage({super.key});
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
// SignUpPage builds its own Navigator which ends up being a nested
// Navigator in our app.
return Navigator(
initialRoute: 'signup/personal_info',
onGenerateRoute: (RouteSettings settings) {
WidgetBuilder builder;
switch (settings.name) {
case 'signup/personal_info':
// Assume CollectPersonalInfoPage collects personal info and then
// navigates to 'signup/choose_credentials'.
builder = (BuildContext context) => const CollectPersonalInfoPage();
case 'signup/choose_credentials':
// Assume ChooseCredentialsPage collects new credentials and then
// invokes 'onSignupComplete()'.
builder = (BuildContext _) => ChooseCredentialsPage(
onSignupComplete: () {
// Referencing Navigator.of(context) from here refers to the
// top level Navigator because SignUpPage is above the
// nested Navigator that it created. Therefore, this pop()
// will pop the entire "sign up" journey and return to the
// "/" route, AKA HomePage.
Navigator.of(context).pop();
},
);
default:
throw Exception('Invalid route: ${settings.name}');
}
return MaterialPageRoute<void>(builder: builder, settings: settings);
},
);
}
}
Navigator.of operates on the nearest ancestor Navigator from the given
BuildContext. Be sure to provide a BuildContext below the intended
Navigator, especially in large build
methods where nested Navigators
are created. The Builder widget can be used to access a BuildContext at
a desired location in the widget subtree.
Finding the enclosing route
In the common case of a modal route, the enclosing route can be obtained from inside a build method using ModalRoute.of. To determine if the enclosing route is the active route (e.g. so that controls can be dimmed when the route is not active), the Route.isCurrent property can be checked on the returned route.
State Restoration
If provided with a restorationScopeId and when surrounded by a valid RestorationScope the Navigator will restore its state by recreating the current history stack of Routes during state restoration and by restoring the internal state of those Routes. However, not all Routes on the stack can be restored:
- Page-based routes restore their state if Page.restorationId is provided.
- Routes added with the classic imperative API (push, pushNamed, and friends) can never restore their state.
- A Route added with the restorable imperative API (restorablePush, restorablePushNamed, and all other imperative methods with "restorable" in their name) restores its state if all routes below it up to and including the first Page-based route below it are restored. If there is no Page-based route below it, it only restores its state if all routes below it restore theirs.
If a Route is deemed restorable, the Navigator will set its Route.restorationScopeId to a non-null value. Routes can use that ID to store and restore their own state. As an example, the ModalRoute will use this ID to create a RestorationScope for its content widgets.
- Inheritance
-
- Object
- DiagnosticableTree
- Widget
- StatefulWidget
- Navigator
Constructors
-
Creates a widget that maintains a stack-based history of child widgets.
const
Properties
- clipBehavior → Clip
-
The content will be clipped (or not) according to this option.
final
- hashCode → int
-
The hash code for this object.
no setterinherited
- initialRoute → String?
-
The name of the first route to show.
final
- key → Key?
-
Controls how one widget replaces another widget in the tree.
finalinherited
-
observers
→ List<
NavigatorObserver> -
A list of observers for this navigator.
final
- onDidRemovePage → DidRemovePageCallback?
-
Called when the Route associated with the given Page has been removed
from the Navigator.
final
- onGenerateInitialRoutes → RouteListFactory
-
Called when the widget is created to generate the initial list of Route
objects if initialRoute is not null.
final
- onGenerateRoute → RouteFactory?
-
Called to generate a route for a given RouteSettings.
final
- onPopPage → PopPageCallback?
-
This is deprecated and replaced by onDidRemovePage.
final
- onUnknownRoute → RouteFactory?
-
Called when onGenerateRoute fails to generate a route.
final
-
pages
→ List<
Page> -
The list of pages with which to populate the history.
final
- reportsRouteUpdateToEngine → bool
-
Whether this navigator should report route update message back to the
engine when the top-most route changes.
final
- requestFocus → bool
-
Whether or not the navigator and it's new topmost route should request focus
when the new route is pushed onto the navigator.
final
- restorationScopeId → String?
-
Restoration ID to save and restore the state of the navigator, including
its history.
final
- routeTraversalEdgeBehavior → TraversalEdgeBehavior
-
Controls the transfer of focus beyond the first and the last items of a
focus scope that defines focus traversal of widgets within a route.
final
- runtimeType → Type
-
A representation of the runtime type of the object.
no setterinherited
- transitionDelegate → TransitionDelegate
-
The delegate used for deciding how routes transition in or off the screen
during the pages updates.
final
Methods
-
createElement(
) → StatefulElement -
Creates a StatefulElement to manage this widget's location in the tree.
inherited
-
createState(
) → NavigatorState -
Creates the mutable state for this widget at a given location in the tree.
override
-
debugDescribeChildren(
) → List< DiagnosticsNode> -
Returns a list of DiagnosticsNode objects describing this node's
children.
inherited
-
debugFillProperties(
DiagnosticPropertiesBuilder properties) → void -
Add additional properties associated with the node.
inherited
-
noSuchMethod(
Invocation invocation) → dynamic -
Invoked when a nonexistent method or property is accessed.
inherited
-
toDiagnosticsNode(
{String? name, DiagnosticsTreeStyle? style}) → DiagnosticsNode -
Returns a debug representation of the object that is used by debugging
tools and by DiagnosticsNode.toStringDeep.
inherited
-
toString(
{DiagnosticLevel minLevel = DiagnosticLevel.info}) → String -
A string representation of this object.
inherited
-
toStringDeep(
{String prefixLineOne = '', String? prefixOtherLines, DiagnosticLevel minLevel = DiagnosticLevel.debug}) → String -
Returns a string representation of this node and its descendants.
inherited
-
toStringShallow(
{String joiner = ', ', DiagnosticLevel minLevel = DiagnosticLevel.debug}) → String -
Returns a one-line detailed description of the object.
inherited
-
toStringShort(
) → String -
A short, textual description of this widget.
inherited
Operators
-
operator ==(
Object other) → bool -
The equality operator.
inherited
Static Methods
-
canPop(
BuildContext context) → bool - Whether the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context can be popped.
-
defaultGenerateInitialRoutes(
String initialRouteName) → List< Route> - Turn a route name into a set of Route objects.
-
maybeOf(
BuildContext context, { }) → NavigatorState? - The state from the closest instance of this class that encloses the given context, if any.
-
maybePop<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, [T? result]) → Future< bool> - Consults the current route's Route.popDisposition getter or Route.willPop method, and acts accordingly, potentially popping the route as a result; returns whether the pop request should be considered handled.
-
of(
BuildContext context, { }) → NavigatorState - The state from the closest instance of this class that encloses the given context.
-
pop<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, [T? result]) → void - Pop the top-most route off the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context.
-
popAndPushNamed<
T extends Object?, TO extends Object?> (BuildContext context, String routeName, {TO? result, Object? arguments}) → Future< T?> - Pop the current route off the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context and push a named route in its place.
-
popUntil(
BuildContext context, RoutePredicate predicate) → void - Calls pop repeatedly on the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context until the predicate returns true.
-
push<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, Route< T> route) → Future<T?> - Push the given route onto the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context.
-
pushAndRemoveUntil<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, Route< T> newRoute, RoutePredicate predicate) → Future<T?> -
Push the given route onto the navigator that most tightly encloses the
given context, and then remove all the previous routes until the
predicate
returns true. -
pushNamed<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, String routeName, {Object? arguments}) → Future< T?> - Push a named route onto the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context.
-
pushNamedAndRemoveUntil<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, String newRouteName, RoutePredicate predicate, {Object? arguments}) → Future< T?> -
Push the route with the given name onto the navigator that most tightly
encloses the given context, and then remove all the previous routes until
the
predicate
returns true. -
pushReplacement<
T extends Object?, TO extends Object?> (BuildContext context, Route< T> newRoute, {TO? result}) → Future<T?> - Replace the current route of the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context by pushing the given route and then disposing the previous route once the new route has finished animating in.
-
pushReplacementNamed<
T extends Object?, TO extends Object?> (BuildContext context, String routeName, {TO? result, Object? arguments}) → Future< T?> -
Replace the current route of the navigator that most tightly encloses the
given context by pushing the route named
routeName
and then disposing the previous route once the new route has finished animating in. -
removeRoute(
BuildContext context, Route route) → void -
Immediately remove
route
from the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context, and Route.dispose it. -
removeRouteBelow(
BuildContext context, Route anchorRoute) → void -
Immediately remove a route from the navigator that most tightly encloses
the given context, and Route.dispose it. The route to be removed is the
one below the given
anchorRoute
. -
replace<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, {required Route oldRoute, required Route< T> newRoute}) → void - Replaces a route on the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context with a new route.
-
replaceRouteBelow<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, {required Route anchorRoute, required Route< T> newRoute}) → void -
Replaces a route on the navigator that most tightly encloses the given
context with a new route. The route to be replaced is the one below the
given
anchorRoute
. -
restorablePopAndPushNamed<
T extends Object?, TO extends Object?> (BuildContext context, String routeName, {TO? result, Object? arguments}) → String - Pop the current route off the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context and push a named route in its place.
-
restorablePush<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, RestorableRouteBuilder< T> routeBuilder, {Object? arguments}) → String - Push a new route onto the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context.
-
restorablePushAndRemoveUntil<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, RestorableRouteBuilder< T> newRouteBuilder, RoutePredicate predicate, {Object? arguments}) → String -
Push a new route onto the navigator that most tightly encloses the
given context, and then remove all the previous routes until the
predicate
returns true. -
restorablePushNamed<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, String routeName, {Object? arguments}) → String - Push a named route onto the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context.
-
restorablePushNamedAndRemoveUntil<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, String newRouteName, RoutePredicate predicate, {Object? arguments}) → String -
Push the route with the given name onto the navigator that most tightly
encloses the given context, and then remove all the previous routes until
the
predicate
returns true. -
restorablePushReplacement<
T extends Object?, TO extends Object?> (BuildContext context, RestorableRouteBuilder< T> routeBuilder, {TO? result, Object? arguments}) → String - Replace the current route of the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context by pushing a new route and then disposing the previous route once the new route has finished animating in.
-
restorablePushReplacementNamed<
T extends Object?, TO extends Object?> (BuildContext context, String routeName, {TO? result, Object? arguments}) → String -
Replace the current route of the navigator that most tightly encloses the
given context by pushing the route named
routeName
and then disposing the previous route once the new route has finished animating in. -
restorableReplace<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, {required Route oldRoute, required RestorableRouteBuilder< T> newRouteBuilder, Object? arguments}) → String - Replaces a route on the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context with a new route.
-
restorableReplaceRouteBelow<
T extends Object?> (BuildContext context, {required Route anchorRoute, required RestorableRouteBuilder< T> newRouteBuilder, Object? arguments}) → String -
Replaces a route on the navigator that most tightly encloses the given
context with a new route. The route to be replaced is the one below the
given
anchorRoute
.
Constants
- defaultRouteName → const String
- The name for the default route of the application.