Hosting native macOS views in your Flutter app with Platform Views
Platform views allow you to embed native views in a Flutter app, so you can apply transforms, clips, and opacity to the native view from Dart.
This allows you, for example, to use the native web views directly inside your Flutter app.
macOS uses Hybrid composition, which means that the native NSView
is appended to the view hierarchy.
To create a platform view on macOS, use the following instructions:
On the Dart side
#On the Dart side, create a Widget
and add the build implementation, as shown in the following steps.
In the Dart widget file, make changes similar to those shown in native_view_example.dart
:
Add the following imports:
dartimport 'package:flutter/foundation.dart'; import 'package:flutter/services.dart';
Implement a
build()
method:dartWidget build(BuildContext context) { // This is used in the platform side to register the view. const String viewType = '<platform-view-type>'; // Pass parameters to the platform side. final Map<String, dynamic> creationParams = <String, dynamic>{}; return AppKitView( viewType: viewType, layoutDirection: TextDirection.ltr, creationParams: creationParams, creationParamsCodec: const StandardMessageCodec(), ); }
For more information, see the API docs for: AppKitView
.
On the platform side
#Implement the factory and the platform view. The NativeViewFactory
creates the platform view, and the platform view provides a reference to the NSView
. For example, NativeView.swift
:
import Cocoa
import FlutterMacOS
class NativeViewFactory: NSObject, FlutterPlatformViewFactory {
private var messenger: FlutterBinaryMessenger
init(messenger: FlutterBinaryMessenger) {
self.messenger = messenger
super.init()
}
func create(
withViewIdentifier viewId: Int64,
arguments args: Any?
) -> NSView {
return NativeView(
viewIdentifier: viewId,
arguments: args,
binaryMessenger: messenger)
}
/// Implementing this method is only necessary when the `arguments` in `createWithFrame` is not `nil`.
public func createArgsCodec() -> (FlutterMessageCodec & NSObjectProtocol)? {
return FlutterStandardMessageCodec.sharedInstance()
}
}
class NativeView: NSView {
init(
viewIdentifier viewId: Int64,
arguments args: Any?,
binaryMessenger messenger: FlutterBinaryMessenger?
) {
super.init(frame: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 200, height: 200))
wantsLayer = true
layer?.backgroundColor = NSColor.systemBlue.cgColor
// macOS views can be created here
createNativeView(view: self)
}
required init?(coder nsCoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: nsCoder)
}
func createNativeView(view _view: NSView) {
let nativeLabel = NSTextField()
nativeLabel.frame = CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 180, height: 48.0)
nativeLabel.stringValue = "Native text from macOS"
nativeLabel.textColor = NSColor.black
nativeLabel.font = NSFont.systemFont(ofSize: 14)
nativeLabel.isBezeled = false
nativeLabel.focusRingType = .none
nativeLabel.isEditable = true
nativeLabel.sizeToFit()
_view.addSubview(nativeLabel)
}
}
Finally, register the platform view. This can be done in an app or a plugin.
For app registration, modify the App's MainFlutterWindow.swift
:
import Cocoa
import FlutterMacOS
class MainFlutterWindow: NSWindow {
override func awakeFromNib() {
// ...
let registrar = flutterViewController.registrar(forPlugin: "plugin-name")
let factory = NativeViewFactory(messenger: registrar.messenger)
registrar.register(
factory,
withId: "<platform-view-type>")
}
}
For plugin registration, modify the plugin's main file (for example, Plugin.swift
):
import Cocoa
import FlutterMacOS
public class Plugin: NSObject, FlutterPlugin {
public static func register(with registrar: FlutterPluginRegistrar) {
let factory = NativeViewFactory(messenger: registrar.messenger)
registrar.register(factory, withId: "<platform-view-type>")
}
}
For more information, see the API docs for:
Putting it together
#When implementing the build()
method in Dart, you can use defaultTargetPlatform
to detect the platform, and decide which widget to use:
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
// This is used in the platform side to register the view.
const String viewType = '<platform-view-type>';
// Pass parameters to the platform side.
final Map<String, dynamic> creationParams = <String, dynamic>{};
switch (defaultTargetPlatform) {
case TargetPlatform.android:
// return widget on Android.
case TargetPlatform.iOS:
// return widget on iOS.
case TargetPlatform.macOS:
// return widget on macOS.
default:
throw UnsupportedError('Unsupported platform view');
}
}
Performance
#Platform views in Flutter come with performance trade-offs.
For example, in a typical Flutter app, the Flutter UI is composed on a dedicated raster thread. This allows Flutter apps to be fast, as this thread is rarely blocked.
When a platform view is rendered with hybrid composition, the Flutter UI continues to be composed from the dedicated raster thread, but the platform view performs graphics operations on the platform thread. To rasterize the combined contents, Flutter performs synchronization between its raster thread and the platform thread. As such, any slow or blocking operations on the platform thread can negatively impact Flutter graphics performance.
Unless stated otherwise, the documentation on this site reflects the latest stable version of Flutter. Page last updated on 2024-07-20. View source or report an issue.