This PR adds TargetPlatform.macOS to the TargetPlatform enum. This allows us to begin implementation of some adaptive UI based on which target platform is desired.
I haven't updated the tests here, that will come in a follow-up PR.
I updated the build files for manual_tests, as well as adding in a macos and web directory to allow the manual tests to be run on the web or on desktop.
The main change here are the parts that I added to the files in manual_tests/lib/... (the addition of kIsWeb to "if (!kIsWeb && Platform.isMacOS) {") The rest is just an update of the auto-generated code from flutter create.
* add trailing commas on list/map/parameters
* add trailing commas on Invocation with nb of arg>1
* add commas for widget containing widgets
* add trailing commas if instantiation contains trailing comma
* revert bad change
* Make CupertinoApp and MaterialApp both use WidgetsApp for Navigator
* Make CupertinoApp and MaterialApp const constructors
* Make WidgetsApp routes aware
* Update tests
fuchsia_tester.dart still assumes Dart 1. Previously, it ran tests directly
from source, flutter_platform.dart automatically runs a kernel compile when
operating in Dart 2 mode, but this assumes a functional Dart SDK is available
in the artifacts directly, and fuchsia_tester.dart mocks out the artifacts
directory with an empty temp dir.
Remaining work is:
1. Get the frontend server building as a dependency on Fuchsia.
2. Patch fuchsia_tester.dart to use a valid Dart SDK and frontend server.
This also reverts migration to Dart 2 typedef syntax.
This reverts commit 6c56bb2. (#18362)
This reverts commit 3daebd0. (#18316)
Now that Dart 1 is turned off, reapplying my change to turn on the prefer_generic_function_type_aliases analysis option, and fix all the typedefs to Dart 2 preferred syntax.
Also eliminated the unused analysis_options_repo.yaml file and turned on public_member_api_docs in analysys_options.yaml.
No logic changes, just changing the typedef syntax for all typedefs, and updating analysis options.
The main purpose of this PR is to make it so that when you set the
initial route and it's a hierarchical route (e.g. `/a/b/c`), it
implies multiple pushes, one for each step of the route (so in that
case, `/`, `/a`, `/a/b`, and `/a/b/c`, in that order). If any of those
routes don't exist, it falls back to '/'.
As part of doing that, I:
* Changed the default for MaterialApp.initialRoute to honor the
actual initial route.
* Added a MaterialApp.onUnknownRoute for handling bad routes.
* Added a feature to flutter_driver that allows the host test script
and the device test app to communicate.
* Added a test to make sure `flutter drive --route` works.
(Hopefully that will also prove `flutter run --route` works, though
this isn't testing the `flutter` tool's side of that. My main
concern is over whether the engine side works.)
* Fixed `flutter drive` to output the right target file name.
* Changed how the stocks app represents its data, so that we can
show a page for a stock before we know if it exists.
* Made it possible to show a stock page that doesn't exist. It shows
a progress indicator if we're loading the data, or else shows a
message saying it doesn't exist.
* Changed the pathing structure of routes in stocks to work more
sanely.
* Made search in the stocks app actually work (before it only worked
if we happened to accidentally trigger a rebuild). Added a test.
* Replaced some custom code in the stocks app with a BackButton.
* Added a "color" feature to BackButton to support the stocks use case.
* Spaced out the ErrorWidget text a bit more.
* Added `RouteSettings.copyWith`, which I ended up not using.
* Improved the error messages around routing.
While I was in some files I made a few formatting fixes, fixed some
code health issues, and also removed `flaky: true` from some devicelab
tests that have been stable for a while. Also added some documentation
here and there.