Send data to the internet
Sending data to the internet is necessary for most apps.
The http
package has got that covered, too.
This recipe uses the following steps:
- Add the
http
package. - Send data to a server using the
http
package. - Convert the response into a custom Dart object.
- Get a
title
from user input. - Display the response on screen.
http
package
1. Add the To install the http
package, add it to the dependencies section
of the pubspec.yaml
file. You can find the latest version of the
http
package on pub.dev.
dependencies:
http: <latest_version>
Import the http
package.
import 'package:http/http.dart' as http;
If you develop for android,
add the following permission inside the manifest tag
in the AndroidManifest.xml
file located at android/app/src/main
.
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.INTERNET"/>
2. Sending data to server
This recipe covers how to create an Album
by sending an album title to the
JSONPlaceholder using the
http.post()
method.
Import dart:convert
for access to jsonEncode
to encode the data:
import 'dart:convert';
Use the http.post()
method to send the encoded data:
Future<http.Response> createAlbum(String title) {
return http.post(
Uri.parse('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/albums'),
headers: <String, String>{
'Content-Type': 'application/json; charset=UTF-8',
},
body: jsonEncode(<String, String>{
'title': title,
}),
);
}
The http.post()
method returns a Future
that contains a Response
.
-
Future
is a core Dart class for working with asynchronous operations. A Future object represents a potential value or error that will be available at some time in the future. - The
http.Response
class contains the data received from a successful http call. - The
createAlbum()
method takes an argumenttitle
that is sent to the server to create anAlbum
.
http.Response
to a custom Dart object
3. Convert the While it’s easy to make a network request,
working with a raw Future<http.Response>
isn’t very convenient. To make your life easier,
convert the http.Response
into a Dart object.
Create an Album class
First, create an Album
class that contains
the data from the network request.
It includes a factory constructor that
creates an Album
from JSON.
Converting JSON by hand is only one option. For more information, see the full article on JSON and serialization.
class Album {
final int id;
final String title;
const Album({required this.id, required this.title});
factory Album.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) {
return Album(
id: json['id'],
title: json['title'],
);
}
}
http.Response
to an Album
Convert the Use the following steps to update the createAlbum()
function to return a Future<Album>
:
- Convert the response body into a JSON
Map
with thedart:convert
package. - If the server returns a
CREATED
response with a status code of 201, then convert the JSONMap
into anAlbum
using thefromJson()
factory method. - If the server doesn’t return a
CREATED
response with a status code of 201, then throw an exception. (Even in the case of a “404 Not Found” server response, throw an exception. Do not returnnull
. This is important when examining the data insnapshot
, as shown below.)
Future<Album> createAlbum(String title) async {
final response = await http.post(
Uri.parse('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/albums'),
headers: <String, String>{
'Content-Type': 'application/json; charset=UTF-8',
},
body: jsonEncode(<String, String>{
'title': title,
}),
);
if (response.statusCode == 201) {
// If the server did return a 201 CREATED response,
// then parse the JSON.
return Album.fromJson(jsonDecode(response.body));
} else {
// If the server did not return a 201 CREATED response,
// then throw an exception.
throw Exception('Failed to create album.');
}
}
Hooray! Now you’ve got a function that sends the title to a server to create an album.
4. Get a title from user input
Next, create a TextField
to enter a title and
a ElevatedButton
to send data to server.
Also define a TextEditingController
to read the
user input from a TextField
.
When the ElevatedButton
is pressed, the _futureAlbum
is set to the value returned by createAlbum()
method.
Column(
mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.center,
children: <Widget>[
TextField(
controller: _controller,
decoration: const InputDecoration(hintText: 'Enter Title'),
),
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () {
setState(() {
_futureAlbum = createAlbum(_controller.text);
});
},
child: const Text('Create Data'),
),
],
)
On pressing the Create Data button, make the network request,
which sends the data in the TextField
to the server
as a POST
request.
The Future, _futureAlbum
, is used in the next step.
5. Display the response on screen
To display the data on screen, use the
FutureBuilder
widget.
The FutureBuilder
widget comes with Flutter and
makes it easy to work with asynchronous data sources.
You must provide two parameters:
- The
Future
you want to work with. In this case, the future returned from thecreateAlbum()
function. - A
builder
function that tells Flutter what to render, depending on the state of theFuture
: loading, success, or error.
Note that snapshot.hasData
only returns true
when
the snapshot contains a non-null data value.
This is why the createAlbum()
function should throw an exception
even in the case of a “404 Not Found” server response.
If createAlbum()
returns null
, then
CircularProgressIndicator
displays indefinitely.
FutureBuilder<Album>(
future: _futureAlbum,
builder: (context, snapshot) {
if (snapshot.hasData) {
return Text(snapshot.data!.title);
} else if (snapshot.hasError) {
return Text('${snapshot.error}');
}
return const CircularProgressIndicator();
},
)
Complete example
import 'dart:async';
import 'dart:convert';
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
import 'package:http/http.dart' as http;
Future<Album> createAlbum(String title) async {
final response = await http.post(
Uri.parse('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/albums'),
headers: <String, String>{
'Content-Type': 'application/json; charset=UTF-8',
},
body: jsonEncode(<String, String>{
'title': title,
}),
);
if (response.statusCode == 201) {
// If the server did return a 201 CREATED response,
// then parse the JSON.
return Album.fromJson(jsonDecode(response.body));
} else {
// If the server did not return a 201 CREATED response,
// then throw an exception.
throw Exception('Failed to create album.');
}
}
class Album {
final int id;
final String title;
const Album({required this.id, required this.title});
factory Album.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) {
return Album(
id: json['id'],
title: json['title'],
);
}
}
void main() {
runApp(const MyApp());
}
class MyApp extends StatefulWidget {
const MyApp({super.key});
@override
State<MyApp> createState() {
return _MyAppState();
}
}
class _MyAppState extends State<MyApp> {
final TextEditingController _controller = TextEditingController();
Future<Album>? _futureAlbum;
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp(
title: 'Create Data Example',
theme: ThemeData(
primarySwatch: Colors.blue,
),
home: Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: const Text('Create Data Example'),
),
body: Container(
alignment: Alignment.center,
padding: const EdgeInsets.all(8.0),
child: (_futureAlbum == null) ? buildColumn() : buildFutureBuilder(),
),
),
);
}
Column buildColumn() {
return Column(
mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.center,
children: <Widget>[
TextField(
controller: _controller,
decoration: const InputDecoration(hintText: 'Enter Title'),
),
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () {
setState(() {
_futureAlbum = createAlbum(_controller.text);
});
},
child: const Text('Create Data'),
),
],
);
}
FutureBuilder<Album> buildFutureBuilder() {
return FutureBuilder<Album>(
future: _futureAlbum,
builder: (context, snapshot) {
if (snapshot.hasData) {
return Text(snapshot.data!.title);
} else if (snapshot.hasError) {
return Text('${snapshot.error}');
}
return const CircularProgressIndicator();
},
);
}
}