// Copyright 2014 The Flutter Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be // found in the LICENSE file. import 'package:flutter/foundation.dart'; import 'events.dart'; /// The callback to register with a [PointerSignalResolver] to express /// interest in a pointer signal event. typedef PointerSignalResolvedCallback = void Function(PointerSignalEvent event); bool _isSameEvent(PointerSignalEvent event1, PointerSignalEvent event2) { return (event1.original ?? event1) == (event2.original ?? event2); } /// Mediates disputes over which listener should handle pointer signal events /// when multiple listeners wish to handle those events. /// /// Pointer signals (such as [PointerScrollEvent]) are immediate, so unlike /// events that participate in the gesture arena, pointer signals always /// resolve at the end of event dispatch. Yet if objects interested in handling /// these signal events were to handle them directly, it would cause issues /// such as multiple [Scrollable] widgets in the widget hierarchy responding /// to the same mouse wheel event. Using this class, these events will only /// be dispatched to the first registered handler, which will in turn /// correspond to the widget that's deepest in the widget hierarchy. /// /// To use this class, objects should register their event handler like so: /// /// ```dart /// void handleSignalEvent(PointerSignalEvent event) { /// GestureBinding.instance!.pointerSignalResolver.register(event, (PointerSignalEvent event) { /// // handle the event... /// }); /// } /// ``` /// /// {@tool dartpad} /// Here is an example that demonstrates the effect of not using the resolver /// versus using it. /// /// When this example is set to _not_ use the resolver, then triggering the /// mouse wheel over the outer box will cause only the outer box to change /// color, but triggering the mouse wheel over the inner box will cause _both_ /// the outer and the inner boxes to change color (because they're both /// receiving the event). /// /// When this example is set to _use_ the resolver, then only the box located /// directly under the cursor will change color when the mouse wheel is /// triggered. /// /// ** See code in examples/api/lib/gestures/pointer_signal_resolver/pointer_signal_resolver.0.dart ** /// {@end-tool} class PointerSignalResolver { PointerSignalResolvedCallback? _firstRegisteredCallback; PointerSignalEvent? _currentEvent; /// Registers interest in handling [event]. /// /// See the documentation for the [PointerSignalResolver] class on when and /// how this method should be used. void register(PointerSignalEvent event, PointerSignalResolvedCallback callback) { assert(event != null); assert(callback != null); assert(_currentEvent == null || _isSameEvent(_currentEvent!, event)); if (_firstRegisteredCallback != null) { return; } _currentEvent = event; _firstRegisteredCallback = callback; } /// Resolves the event, calling the first registered callback if there was /// one. /// /// This is called by the [GestureBinding] after the framework has finished /// dispatching the pointer signal event. @pragma('vm:notify-debugger-on-exception') void resolve(PointerSignalEvent event) { if (_firstRegisteredCallback == null) { assert(_currentEvent == null); return; } assert(_isSameEvent(_currentEvent!, event)); try { _firstRegisteredCallback!(_currentEvent!); } catch (exception, stack) { InformationCollector? collector; assert(() { collector = () sync* { yield DiagnosticsProperty<PointerSignalEvent>('Event', event, style: DiagnosticsTreeStyle.errorProperty); }; return true; }()); FlutterError.reportError(FlutterErrorDetails( exception: exception, stack: stack, library: 'gesture library', context: ErrorDescription('while resolving a PointerSignalEvent'), informationCollector: collector, )); } _firstRegisteredCallback = null; _currentEvent = null; } }