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// Copyright 2014 The Flutter Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
import 'package:flutter/widgets.dart';
import 'debug.dart';
import 'icon_button.dart';
import 'icons.dart';
import 'material_localizations.dart';
import 'theme.dart';
/// A "back" icon that's appropriate for the current [TargetPlatform].
///
/// The current platform is determined by querying for the ambient [Theme].
///
/// See also:
///
/// * [BackButton], an [IconButton] with a [BackButtonIcon] that calls
/// [Navigator.maybePop] to return to the previous route.
/// * [IconButton], which is a more general widget for creating buttons
/// with icons.
/// * [Icon], a material design icon.
/// * [ThemeData.platform], which specifies the current platform.
class BackButtonIcon extends StatelessWidget {
/// Creates an icon that shows the appropriate "back" image for
/// the current platform (as obtained from the [Theme]).
const BackButtonIcon({ Key? key }) : super(key: key);
/// Returns the appropriate "back" icon for the given `platform`.
static IconData _getIconData(TargetPlatform platform) {
switch (platform) {
case TargetPlatform.android:
case TargetPlatform.fuchsia:
case TargetPlatform.linux:
case TargetPlatform.windows:
return Icons.arrow_back;
case TargetPlatform.iOS:
case TargetPlatform.macOS:
return Icons.arrow_back_ios;
}
}
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) => Icon(_getIconData(Theme.of(context).platform));
}
/// A material design back button.
///
/// A [BackButton] is an [IconButton] with a "back" icon appropriate for the
/// current [TargetPlatform]. When pressed, the back button calls
/// [Navigator.maybePop] to return to the previous route unless a custom
/// [onPressed] callback is provided.
///
/// When deciding to display a [BackButton], consider using
/// `ModalRoute.of(context)?.canPop` to check whether the current route can be
/// popped. If that value is false (e.g., because the current route is the
/// initial route), the [BackButton] will not have any effect when pressed,
/// which could frustrate the user.
///
/// Requires one of its ancestors to be a [Material] widget.
///
/// See also:
///
/// * [AppBar], which automatically uses a [BackButton] in its
/// [AppBar.leading] slot when the [Scaffold] has no [Drawer] and the
/// current [Route] is not the [Navigator]'s first route.
/// * [BackButtonIcon], which is useful if you need to create a back button
/// that responds differently to being pressed.
/// * [IconButton], which is a more general widget for creating buttons with
/// icons.
/// * [CloseButton], an alternative which may be more appropriate for leaf
/// node pages in the navigation tree.
class BackButton extends StatelessWidget {
/// Creates an [IconButton] with the appropriate "back" icon for the current
/// target platform.
const BackButton({ Key? key, this.color, this.onPressed }) : super(key: key);
/// The color to use for the icon.
///
/// Defaults to the [IconThemeData.color] specified in the ambient [IconTheme],
/// which usually matches the ambient [Theme]'s [ThemeData.iconTheme].
final Color? color;
/// An override callback to perform instead of the default behavior which is
/// to pop the [Navigator].
///
/// It can, for instance, be used to pop the platform's navigation stack
/// via [SystemNavigator] instead of Flutter's [Navigator] in add-to-app
/// situations.
///
/// Defaults to null.
final VoidCallback? onPressed;
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
assert(debugCheckHasMaterialLocalizations(context));
return IconButton(
icon: const BackButtonIcon(),
color: color,
tooltip: MaterialLocalizations.of(context).backButtonTooltip,
onPressed: () {
if (onPressed != null) {
onPressed!();
} else {
Navigator.maybePop(context);
}
},
);
}
}
/// A material design close button.
///
/// A [CloseButton] is an [IconButton] with a "close" icon. When pressed, the
/// close button calls [Navigator.maybePop] to return to the previous route.
///
/// Use a [CloseButton] instead of a [BackButton] on fullscreen dialogs or
/// pages that may solicit additional actions to close.
///
/// See also:
///
/// * [AppBar], which automatically uses a [CloseButton] in its
/// [AppBar.leading] slot when appropriate.
/// * [BackButton], which is more appropriate for middle nodes in the
/// navigation tree or where pages can be popped instantaneously with
/// no user data consequence.
/// * [IconButton], to create other material design icon buttons.
class CloseButton extends StatelessWidget {
/// Creates a Material Design close button.
const CloseButton({ Key? key, this.color, this.onPressed }) : super(key: key);
/// The color to use for the icon.
///
/// Defaults to the [IconThemeData.color] specified in the ambient [IconTheme],
/// which usually matches the ambient [Theme]'s [ThemeData.iconTheme].
final Color? color;
/// An override callback to perform instead of the default behavior which is
/// to pop the [Navigator].
///
/// It can, for instance, be used to pop the platform's navigation stack
/// via [SystemNavigator] instead of Flutter's [Navigator] in add-to-app
/// situations.
///
/// Defaults to null.
final VoidCallback? onPressed;
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
assert(debugCheckHasMaterialLocalizations(context));
return IconButton(
icon: const Icon(Icons.close),
color: color,
tooltip: MaterialLocalizations.of(context).closeButtonTooltip,
onPressed: () {
if (onPressed != null) {
onPressed!();
} else {
Navigator.maybePop(context);
}
},
);
}
}