I am trying to understand the SafeArea widget in Flutter.
SafeArea code added to Flutter Gallery app here in github show top:false
and bottom:false
everywhere. Why do these need to be set false in these cases?
SafeArea class Null safety. A widget that insets its child by sufficient padding to avoid intrusions by the operating system. For example, this will indent the child by enough to avoid the status bar at the top of the screen.
SafeArea is basically a glorified Padding widget. If you wrap another widget with SafeArea , it adds any necessary padding needed to keep your widget from being blocked by the system status bar, notches, holes, rounded corners, and other "creative" features by manufacturers.
SafeArea
is basically a glorified Padding
widget. If you wrap another widget with SafeArea
, it adds any necessary padding needed to keep your widget from being blocked by the system status bar, notches, holes, rounded corners, and other "creative" features by manufacturers.
If you are using a Scaffold with an AppBar, the appropriate spacing will be calculated at the top of the screen without needing to wrap the Scaffold in a SafeArea and the status bar background will be affected by the AppBar color (Red in this example).
If you wrap the Scaffold in a SafeArea, then the status bar area will have a black background rather than be influenced by the AppBar.
Here is an example without SafeArea
set:
Align( alignment: Alignment.topLeft, // and bottomLeft child: Text('My Widget: ...'), )
And again with the widget wrapped in a SafeArea widget:
Align( alignment: Alignment.topLeft, // and bottomLeft child: SafeArea( child: Text('My Widget: ...'), ), )
You can set a minimum padding for edges not affected by notches and such:
SafeArea( minimum: const EdgeInsets.all(16.0), child: Text('My Widget: ...'), )
You can also turn off the safe area insets for any side:
SafeArea( left: false, top: false, right: false, bottom: false, child: Text('My Widget: ...'), )
Setting them all to false would be the same as not using SafeArea. The default for all sides is true
. Most of the time you will not need to use these settings, but I can imagine a situation where you have a widget that fills the whole screen. You want the top to not be blocked by anything, but you don't care about the bottom. In that case, you would just set bottom: false
but leave the other sides to their default true
values.
SafeArea( bottom: false, child: myWidgetThatFillsTheScreen, )
In case you want to play around more with this, here is main.dart:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart'; void main() => runApp(MyApp()); class MyApp extends StatelessWidget { @override Widget build(BuildContext context) { return MaterialApp( debugShowCheckedModeBanner: false, home: Scaffold( body: BodyWidget(), ), ); } } class BodyWidget extends StatelessWidget { @override Widget build(BuildContext context) { return Align( alignment: Alignment.topLeft, child: SafeArea( left: true, top: true, right: true, bottom: true, minimum: const EdgeInsets.all(16.0), child: Text( 'My Widget: This is my widget. It has some content that I don\'t want ' 'blocked by certain manufacturers who add notches, holes, and round corners.'), ), ); } }
When you wrap a widget A in a safe area, you are asking to the framework "Please, keep my widget A away from the device's UI navigation and notches".
The arguments 'top, bottom, right and left' are used to tell to the framework if you want him to avoid the device's intrusions from that sides specifically.
For example: if you put your widget A inside a safe area in the top of the screen and sets the "top" argument to false, it will be cropped by the iPhone's X and Pixel 3's notches.
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