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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Open browser app with a specific url from flutter
Well, the title says. I just trying something diferent than url_launcher.So please someone knows something similar or have a solution???

December 15, 2021 at 04:00AM by Syroot
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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Build Scalable App Using Flutter: Nubank, BMW & ByteDance’s Success Stories.
Quick Summary:In our earlier posts, we have already discussed what uses Flutter for app development and how it is the best framework for cross-platform mobile app development for all businesses, especially start-ups. Having established itself as the most sought-after framework for mobile app development, Flutter is also emerging as the most dependable framework to develop scalable apps.At a time when enterprises strive to build scalable app using Flutter, it is imperative to know what it means to have a scalable app and how Flutter can make a real difference in developing the one.Why There’s a Need to Build Scalable App?At a time when the world is almost operating digitally, scalable apps are not luxury but rather should be a way of life for businesses. The most common characteristics of a scalable app are:• Efficient enough to deal with constantly expanding end users• Efficient enough to support new features without any breakdown• Made of relatively small, independent packages or modules.When it comes to developing a mobile app, consideration of scalable architecture is a wise business and technological strategy. Some experts also call it an “insurance policy” for the app’s code.One of the basic reasons why businesses need to consider deploying scalable architecture is its accessibility and availability. There is hardly any enterprise in the industry that has not encountered a breakdown of its app infrastructure with the exit of just one engineer who had it all in her head!Scalable architecture solves this issue of centralized knowledge and its accessibility and availability. In scalable architecture, everything is so well-documented and easily understood by all the stakeholders that every team member knows how to build a new app feature without disrupting the present infrastructure. Scalable architecture for developing mobile apps thus also helps all the teams scale their knowledge of developing mobile apps.Scalable code developed using scalable architecture is also a great alternative to spaghetti code. There are a lot of instances when the legacy codebase may have got totally broken while deploying a new code.Scalable architecture solves this issue like a champ as it provides enough room to the developers to add new features to the application without breaking or disrupting the entire application.In scalable code, opening pull requests and their merging becomes smooth as scalable architecture is powerful enough to let the engineers scale new features without any disruption to the whole.Read more to Build Scalable App Using Flutter.Note: This is a Case Study based Original Content(OC).

December 15, 2021 at 05:53AM by freelancerkatie
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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Question about Facial Recognition, Data Collection
hi everyone, i recently got a new assignment from my Intern Team Management to checkout Face ID/Recognition or Biometric Authentication. But he require the project to save and send those facial, image data to the backend.So my question is: Does Google/Apple allow dev to collect and store user face, fingerprint data to send to the backend server?
and if yes, that mean the "local auth" package from flutter team does not support that kind of information collection, which package should i use?

December 15, 2021 at 07:59AM by xboxcowboy
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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Has anyone migrated AWAY from Flutter?
Just to prefix - I love Flutter and think it's a fantastic framework to build cross-platform applications, so this post isn't trying to dig at Flutter but more just discussing a business practicality issue.I see posts (on Reddit and the Web) for migrating X to Flutter, but not the other way around.Interestingly, this makes it seem like Flutter might be the "better choice" for many, but for my specific needs I have a rather simple mobile app where most of the work is done by calling our back-end API's - and integrating a fair few Native SDK's on both Android/iOS and writing bridging code to call from UI.To this end, UI is basically 90% of the app, and whilst we are doing great with Flutter, it's a pain to hire for in my specific company as they don't want to pay the big bucks and there's not many Dart / Flutter devs out there.And what's worse is, I originally made the case for RN because we are a web development company and so have a lot of HTML/CSS/JS devs, a few of them in React.It's frustrating to me that we went so far down the Flutter path which has effectively killed the input from half of our dev team (we still support an old Cordova app, and the React devs are very comfortable building new UI for it) - mainly because it was just the "shiny new thing" - but I didn't speak up enough at the time as I wasn't a permanent hire in the company.I think it would be a lot easier for us to migrate to React Native, but we've got about a years worth of dev in the Flutter app now.Just wondering if anyone has any experience migrating across - it seems like it would be a complete rewrite since it uses a different programming language (I genuinely think Dart is the biggest downside to Flutter), a completely different framework, and nothing is really shared between the two...

December 15, 2021 at 11:25AM by Vyper91
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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Will learning Kotlin beside flutter help?
Recently, I want to do "Home Screen Widgets" but I realized I want some "basic" knowledge of Kotlin to build it.. as flutter it self can't do it and native language is a must... so I removed the idea of doing the Home Screen Widgets..Until I wanted to do Alarm App.. and I realized that I need Kotlin to build the "Full Screen Notification" - I sill not sure if there is another method.. However, my question is - Is It Worth it to learn Kotlin beside flutter..If yes.. Approximately how much does it take? To what level should I learn? Where can I learn it from "Free Resource"?

December 15, 2021 at 02:45PM by osamawaseem1
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New tweet from FlutterDev:

D. All of the above is the correct answer! 🥳— Flutter (@FlutterDev) Dec 15, 2021

December 15, 2021 at 09:18PM
https://twitter.com/FlutterDev/status/1471213194827866112
New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Flutter dev with mySQL
Hello guys, I am thinking about writing an app thats needs relational db and I dont want to use firebase cuz of that reason. What is the best way to connect flutter with mysql db?Also can you point me in the right direction for xmpp implementation for flutter?Thanks a lot

December 15, 2021 at 10:05PM by Ok_Remove3123
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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Speeding up dart auto completion for M1 Macs
Hey all!I got a new Mac m1 and after installing Flutter I noticed that things weren't as responsive and it was overall not too great of a work environment.I found out that the bundled dart sdk with Flutter is not the arm version.I then followed this stackoverflow posthttps://stackoverflow.com/a/69506979/4310761I'm not sure what'll happen during an upgrade but it's 1000% worth doing for the noticable improvement

December 15, 2021 at 11:44PM by Dgameman1
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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Provider, Riverpod, and GetIt are not state management solutions. Prove me wrong.
Ok, the title is a little clickbait. But the general idea here is I find the line between DI/service locators and state management in Flutter really blurry and wondering if anyone can clear things up for me.In Android, for example, Dagger/Koin are considered DI/service locators solutions because they create, store and provide dependencies to others. And when you want to manage your application's states, you use patterns such as MVP, MVVM, MVI.Going back to Flutter, I find little difference between Provider/Riverpod/GetIt and Dagger/Koin, they all manage dependencies. No package actually mentions where to store or how to organize your states. When people mention using them as state management solutions, it is usually with other stuff that manages your states like ChangeNotifier, ValueNotifier, Stream. Bloc/Mobx/MVU/Redux, on the other hand, actually provides a pattern for you to manage your states. One of the popular comparisons, Provider vs Bloc, then becomes somewhat confusing, rather it should be something like ChangeNotifier vs Bloc.Am I understanding state management too narrow and literal? Perhaps. But not drawing a line will lead to bloated packages, cough, GetX, cough. So, what are your thoughts? Is there a line to draw?

December 16, 2021 at 07:10AM by lgn03
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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Survey on 'Community Platform Choice for Mobile developers'
Hi all,I have been struggling to choose the right platform to interact with Mobile developer communities and get insights lately as part of my job role. The community seems to be scattered across multiple platforms like Discord, Facebook, Slack, and so on.To understand this better I have created a quick (1 min) survey and would really appreciate your help to know your preferred platform.Link: https://forms.gle/ysxos9FimW9c1ccf8Your contribution would really help me in gauging the right platforms to target and interact with the mobile developer community. I request you all to please take up this 1 min survey to provide us with your preference. Your help would be highly appreciated :)

December 16, 2021 at 09:33AM by Friendly-Fan-8607
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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Learning curve of Flutter/Native-Ios and Swift/Dart. And Documentation for both
Hello All, This is my first time posting to Reddit. So apologies if I am breaking any rules.I recently enrolled in Angela’s ios course and have completed about 35% of it. I am really liking it and learning a lot. But the problem is ios documentation is so referenced based rather than example based unlike in flutter or Android, which makes me think that it will be difficult once I start coding on my own to turn references documentation into actual code.I read flutter and dart documentation and I must say they are superior to ios and provides much more depth and examples making it easier for starters.I tried leaning flutter for few days and only thing I found hard to pick up is the widget style layout system. But even SwiftUI and jet pack compose will soon adopt this as well, and than I will be forced to adopt it instead or UIKit.I am not in rush of finding job. I just want to learn better and future proof technology.Can anyone tell if learning flutter/dart instead of native will be an advantage in coming future? I am of course aware about some use of native stuff in flutter.I plan on mostly bringing my ideas to life which are not graphic intensive and some free lancingPlease share your suggestions.

December 16, 2021 at 10:23AM by ptlsajan10
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New post on /r/flutterdev subreddit:

Enforcing Clean Architecture to my imports
I'm looking for a way to enforce the clean architecture pattern to my project imports.My code is splitted like so on the root folder:core/domain/data/app/ (presentation layer)main.dartI would like to implement an analysis rule preventing any import from data or app in my domain layer.
My data layer should also not be able to import anything from the app folder.I don't think there is a way to do so using the dart static analyser rules.What would you suggest ?
I'm thinking of implementing something on my CI or make a VSCode extension to check imports.

December 16, 2021 at 12:04PM by DuckNorris44
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