Demo
A. Navigation
when we are navigating through different screens within app, actually, the route stacks are changing.
So, firstly, we need to figure out how to listen to this changes e.g Push screen, Pop back to users screen.
1. Attaching saving method in each action button
we can actually put this on every navigation-related button.
a. on drawer items
ListTile(
title: Text("Beta"),
onTap: () {
saveLastScreen(); // saving to SharedPref here
Navigator.of(context).pushNamed('/beta'); // then push
},
),
b. on Titlebar back buttons
appBar: AppBar(
title: Text("Screen"),
leading: IconButton(
icon: Icon(Icons.menu),
onPressed: () {
saveLastScreen(); // saving to SharedPref here
Navigator.pop(context); // then pop
},
),
),
c. and also capturing event of Phone Back button on Android devices
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return WillPopScope(
onWillPop: (){ // will triggered as we click back button
saveLastScreen(); // saving to SharedPref here
return Future.value(true);
},
child: Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: Text("Base Screen"),
),
Therefore, we will have more code and it will be harder to manage.
2. Listening on Route Changes using Route observer
Nonetheless, Flutter provides on MaterialApp, that we can have some "middleware
" to capture those changes on route stacks.
We may have this on our MyApp widget :
class MyApp extends StatelessWidget {
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp(
title: 'Save Last Route',
navigatorObservers: <NavigatorObserver>[
MyRouteObserver(), // this will listen all changes
],
routes: {
'/': (context) {
return BaseScreen();
},
'/alpha': (context) {
return ScreenAlpha();
},
We can define MyRouteObserver
class as below :
class MyRouteObserver extends RouteObserver {
void saveLastRoute(Route lastRoute) async {
final SharedPreferences prefs = await SharedPreferences.getInstance();
prefs.setString('last_route', lastRoute.settings.name);
}
@override
void didPop(Route route, Route previousRoute) {
saveLastRoute(previousRoute); // note : take route name in stacks below
super.didPop(route, previousRoute);
}
@override
void didPush(Route route, Route previousRoute) {
saveLastRoute(route); // note : take new route name that just pushed
super.didPush(route, previousRoute);
}
@override
void didRemove(Route route, Route previousRoute) {
saveLastRoute(route);
super.didRemove(route, previousRoute);
}
@override
void didReplace({Route newRoute, Route oldRoute}) {
saveLastRoute(newRoute);
super.didReplace(newRoute: newRoute, oldRoute: oldRoute);
}
}
B. How to Start the App
As users interacting through the screens, the Shared Preferences will always store last route name. To make the app navigate correspondingly, we need to make our BaseScreen statefull and override its initState method as below :
return MaterialApp(
routes: {
'/': (context) {
return BaseScreen(); // define it as Main Route
},
class BaseScreen extends StatefulWidget {
@override
_BaseScreenState createState() => _BaseScreenState();
}
class _BaseScreenState extends State<BaseScreen> {
@override
void initState() {
super.initState();
navigateToLastPage();
}
void navigateToLastPage() async {
final SharedPreferences prefs = await SharedPreferences.getInstance();
String lastRoute = prefs.getString('last_route');
// No need to push to another screen, if the last route was root
if (lastRoute.isNotEmpty && lastRoute != '/') {
Navigator.of(context).pushNamed(lastRoute);
}
}
C. Working Repo
You may look at this repository that overrides RouteObserver as explained in second option above
Saving and Opening Screen Beta and Screen Delta in different starts
D. Shared Preferences / JSON / SQLite
I suggest to use Shared preferences for simplicity. As we only record simple String for route name, we can only write two lines of code to Save and two lines of code to Load.
If we use JSON file, we need to manually set Path for it using path_provider
package.
Moreover, if we use SQLite, we need to setup DB (may consist > 8 more lines), and setup table and also inserting table method.