Add a drawer to a screen
In apps that use Material Design, there are two primary options for navigation: tabs and drawers. When there is insufficient space to support tabs, drawers provide a handy alternative.
In Flutter, use the Drawer
widget in combination with a Scaffold
to create a layout with a Material Design drawer. This recipe uses the following steps:
- Create a
Scaffold
. - Add a drawer.
- Populate the drawer with items.
- Close the drawer programmatically.
1. Create a Scaffold
#To add a drawer to the app, wrap it in a Scaffold
widget. The Scaffold
widget provides a consistent visual structure to apps that follow the Material Design Guidelines. It also supports special Material Design components, such as Drawers, AppBars, and SnackBars.
In this example, create a Scaffold
with a drawer
:
Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: const Text('AppBar without hamburger button'),
),
drawer: // Add a Drawer here in the next step.
);
2. Add a drawer
#Now add a drawer to the Scaffold
. A drawer can be any widget, but it's often best to use the Drawer
widget from the material library, which adheres to the Material Design spec.
Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: const Text('AppBar with hamburger button'),
),
drawer: Drawer(
child: // Populate the Drawer in the next step.
),
);
3. Populate the drawer with items
#Now that you have a Drawer
in place, add content to it. For this example, use a ListView
. While you could use a Column
widget, ListView
is handy because it allows users to scroll through the drawer if the content takes more space than the screen supports.
Populate the ListView
with a DrawerHeader
and two ListTile
widgets. For more information on working with Lists, see the list recipes.
Drawer(
// Add a ListView to the drawer. This ensures the user can scroll
// through the options in the drawer if there isn't enough vertical
// space to fit everything.
child: ListView(
// Important: Remove any padding from the ListView.
padding: EdgeInsets.zero,
children: [
const DrawerHeader(
decoration: BoxDecoration(
color: Colors.blue,
),
child: Text('Drawer Header'),
),
ListTile(
title: const Text('Item 1'),
onTap: () {
// Update the state of the app.
// ...
},
),
ListTile(
title: const Text('Item 2'),
onTap: () {
// Update the state of the app.
// ...
},
),
],
),
);
4. Open the drawer programmatically
#Typically, you don't need to write any code to open a drawer
, Because when the leading
widget is null, the default implementation in AppBar
is DrawerButton
.
But if you want to have free control of the drawer
. You can do this by using the Builder
call Scaffold.of(context).openDrawer()
.
Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: const Text('AppBar with hamburger button'),
leading: Builder(
builder: (context) {
return IconButton(
icon: const Icon(Icons.menu),
onPressed: () {
Scaffold.of(context).openDrawer();
},
);
},
),
),
drawer: Drawer(
child: // Populate the Drawer in the last step.
),
);
5. Close the drawer programmatically
#After a user taps an item, you might want to close the drawer. You can do this by using the Navigator
.
When a user opens the drawer, Flutter adds the drawer to the navigation stack. Therefore, to close the drawer, call Navigator.pop(context)
.
ListTile(
title: const Text('Item 1'),
onTap: () {
// Update the state of the app
// ...
// Then close the drawer
Navigator.pop(context);
},
),
Interactive example
#This example shows a Drawer
as it is used within a Scaffold
widget. The Drawer
has three ListTile
items. The _onItemTapped
function changes the selected item's index and displays the corresponding text in the center of the Scaffold
.
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
void main() => runApp(const MyApp());
class MyApp extends StatelessWidget {
const MyApp({super.key});
static const appTitle = 'Drawer Demo';
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return const MaterialApp(
title: appTitle,
home: MyHomePage(title: appTitle),
);
}
}
class MyHomePage extends StatefulWidget {
const MyHomePage({super.key, required this.title});
final String title;
@override
State<MyHomePage> createState() => _MyHomePageState();
}
class _MyHomePageState extends State<MyHomePage> {
int _selectedIndex = 0;
static const TextStyle optionStyle =
TextStyle(fontSize: 30, fontWeight: FontWeight.bold);
static const List<Widget> _widgetOptions = <Widget>[
Text(
'Index 0: Home',
style: optionStyle,
),
Text(
'Index 1: Business',
style: optionStyle,
),
Text(
'Index 2: School',
style: optionStyle,
),
];
void _onItemTapped(int index) {
setState(() {
_selectedIndex = index;
});
}
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: Text(widget.title),
leading: Builder(
builder: (context) {
return IconButton(
icon: const Icon(Icons.menu),
onPressed: () {
Scaffold.of(context).openDrawer();
},
);
},
),
),
body: Center(
child: _widgetOptions[_selectedIndex],
),
drawer: Drawer(
// Add a ListView to the drawer. This ensures the user can scroll
// through the options in the drawer if there isn't enough vertical
// space to fit everything.
child: ListView(
// Important: Remove any padding from the ListView.
padding: EdgeInsets.zero,
children: [
const DrawerHeader(
decoration: BoxDecoration(
color: Colors.blue,
),
child: Text('Drawer Header'),
),
ListTile(
title: const Text('Home'),
selected: _selectedIndex == 0,
onTap: () {
// Update the state of the app
_onItemTapped(0);
// Then close the drawer
Navigator.pop(context);
},
),
ListTile(
title: const Text('Business'),
selected: _selectedIndex == 1,
onTap: () {
// Update the state of the app
_onItemTapped(1);
// Then close the drawer
Navigator.pop(context);
},
),
ListTile(
title: const Text('School'),
selected: _selectedIndex == 2,
onTap: () {
// Update the state of the app
_onItemTapped(2);
// Then close the drawer
Navigator.pop(context);
},
),
],
),
),
);
}
}
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