flutter-elinux
compose-samples
flutter-elinux | compose-samples | |
---|---|---|
3 | 101 | |
390 | 18,824 | |
2.1% | 1.4% | |
7.4 | 9.7 | |
16 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Dart | Kotlin | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
flutter-elinux
- Jitsi Meet Flutter SDK
- Debugging on Raspberry Pi
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Ask HN: Flutter vs. React Native – which one do you prefer?
Flutter, for sure. It feels like a much more thoughtful system overall. I'm not as impressed with the Dart ecosystem as I am with the Flutter one, mostly because the Dart ecosystem lacks widely used/supported frameworks for server-side development. I would LOVE to completely remove Javascript from my life and if there were a solid server-side framework for Dart, I could use it literally everywhere.
Re your problems:
1. Yeah, break widgets down. Yes, it's more work, but it's necessary in the same way that breaking code down into smaller functions is necessary. You don't just cram everything into one file and you shouldn't expect that a mega-widget will be the right way either.
2. Flutter for web is still very early on. You should know that there are two renderers (one that uses canvas and one that uses real dom elements), but they're both just "okay" at this point. They have been rapidly improving however -- the difference between now and this time last year is significant. It'll keep getting better and in the mean time, it's usable enough. The download sizes are huge and sometimes rendering can be a little janky, but again: it'll get better. For me, the promise of a unified system for desktop, web, mobile, and even some limited 3rd party embedded Linux support (https://github.com/sony/flutter-elinux) is really appealing.
compose-samples
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Jetpack Compose Mastery Part 2: Advanced Tools and Resources for Mastering Compose UI
The official documentation provides a comprehensive guide on the basics of Jetpack Compose, components, layouts, theming, and more advanced topics.
- Jetpack Compose UI App Development Toolkit
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How the new Threads app is made
Apparently Jetpack Compose is an Android copy of SwiftUI?
https://developer.android.com/jetpack/compose
Only two HN threads with comments: https://hn.algolia.com/?q=jetpack+compose
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Adaptive layouts in jetpack compose
If you want to take a look at code, we have the Jetnews sample app that support different screen sizes. And Jetcaster also implements features such as table top mode.
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Customizable calendar for Jetpack Compose with option to add app specific dates etc.
check this out : https://github.com/android/compose-samples/tree/main/Crane
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Seeking Guidance: How should I learn Android Dev
So I would say that instead if learning everything from Android SDK, you should just set a goal to create some app. Learn about Activities, their lifecycle, layouts (or Compose if you want to be more up to date). Try to implement your app based on this. Then improve your app using Fragments and their lifecycle. If you truly want to understand Views, which are essentially the building blocks of Android UI then I would recommend implementing your own custom View, which will have completely custom look - it is cool thing to try and you will learn how it all works inside.
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New App structure/template to follow?
The compose samples by Google are a good reference to look into: https://github.com/android/compose-samples
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Let's create notification reminder app in Jetpack Compose.
Basic understanding of Jetpack Compose.
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Architecture Help
The compose-samples repo has a comprehensive list of samples ranging from low to complex projects which might be worth a look.
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Android development beginner.
For instance, there is a link to this repository, that contains all sorts of samples, that are up to date and ready to use. That's cutting edge, which is a recommended start.
What are some alternatives?
flutter-embedded-linux - Embedded Linux embedding for Flutter
MPAndroidChart - A powerful 🚀 Android chart view / graph view library, supporting line- bar- pie- radar- bubble- and candlestick charts as well as scaling, panning and animations.
compose-multiplatform - Compose Multiplatform, a modern UI framework for Kotlin that makes building performant and beautiful user interfaces easy and enjoyable.
filament - Filament is a real-time physically based rendering engine for Android, iOS, Windows, Linux, macOS, and WebGL2
sharik - Sharik is an open-source, cross-platform solution for sharing files via Wi-Fi or Mobile Hotspot
Flutter - Flutter makes it easy and fast to build beautiful apps for mobile and beyond
harmonoid - 🎵 Elegant music app to play & manage music library. YouTube Music client. Lyrics & Playlists. [Moved to: https://github.com/harmonoid/harmonoid]
MVICore - MVI framework with events, time-travel, and more
pangolin_desktop - Pangolin Desktop UI shell, designed for dahliaOS, written in Flutter.
android-mvvm-dagger-rxjava-retrofit - A sample project which demostrate use of MVVM and Dagger 2 with RxJava2 along with Retrofit
syphon - ⚗️ a privacy centric matrix client
Decompose - Kotlin Multiplatform lifecycle-aware business logic components (aka BLoCs) with routing (navigation) and pluggable UI (Jetpack Compose, SwiftUI, JS React, etc.)