inside my flutter app I want to check my api every 10 seconds. I found this post to run a function every x amount of time and did the following:
class _MainPage extends State<MainPage> { int starter = 0; void checkForNewSharedLists(){ // do request here setState((){ // change state according to result of request }); } Widget build(BuildContext context) { Timer.periodic(Duration(seconds: 15), (Timer t) => checkForNewSharedLists()); } }
Unfortunately the requests pile up: after restarting the app on the first "round" there are two request to the api, the second round it's four requests, the third it's eight and so on...
Does anybody know how to fix this?
To create a new Duration object, use this class's single constructor giving the appropriate arguments: const fastestMarathon = Duration(hours: 2, minutes: 3, seconds: 2); The Duration represents a single number of microseconds, which is the sum of all the individual arguments to the constructor.
build()
can and usually will be called more than once and every time a new Timer.periodic
is created.
You need to move that code out of build()
like
Timer? timer; @override void initState() { super.initState(); timer = Timer.periodic(Duration(seconds: 15), (Timer t) => checkForNewSharedLists()); } @override void dispose() { timer?.cancel(); super.dispose(); }
Even better would be to move out such code from widgets entirely in an API layer or similar and use a StreamBuilder
to have the view updated in case of updated data.
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