Makes PlatformViewsController view to use tracked event's action & pointer count (#47424)

related issue https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/111268,
https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/106190

### Motivation:
- At https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/111268, we found that
Android PlatformView scrolls slowly after #34182 commit

### Modification:
- Makes `PlatformViewsController` view to use `tracked event`'s action &
pointer count

### Result:
- Now PlatformView scrolls not slowly
- Close https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/111268,
https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/106190


- [ ] I read the [Contributor Guide] and followed the process outlined
there for submitting PRs.
- [ ] I read the [Tree Hygiene] wiki page, which explains my
responsibilities.
- [ ] I read and followed the [Flutter Style Guide], including [Features
we expect every widget to implement].
- [x] I signed the [CLA].
- [x] I listed at least one issue that this PR fixes in the description
above.
- [ ] I updated/added relevant documentation (doc comments with `///`).
- [x] I added new tests to check the change I am making, or this PR is
[test-exempt].
- [x] All existing and new tests are passing.

Co-authored-by: John McCutchan <john@johnmccutchan.com>
2 files changed
tree: 127de85381d1c28a77c62d776f0e1377b43782dd
  1. .github/
  2. assets/
  3. benchmarking/
  4. build/
  5. ci/
  6. common/
  7. display_list/
  8. docs/
  9. examples/
  10. flow/
  11. flutter_frontend_server/
  12. flutter_vma/
  13. fml/
  14. impeller/
  15. lib/
  16. runtime/
  17. shell/
  18. skia/
  19. sky/
  20. testing/
  21. third_party/
  22. tools/
  23. vulkan/
  24. wasm/
  25. web_sdk/
  26. .ci.yaml
  27. .clang-format
  28. .clang-tidy
  29. .gitattributes
  30. .gitignore
  31. .pylintrc
  32. .style.yapf
  33. analysis_options.yaml
  34. AUTHORS
  35. BUILD.gn
  36. CODEOWNERS
  37. CONTRIBUTING.md
  38. DEPS
  39. Doxyfile
  40. LICENSE
  41. README.md
README.md

Flutter Engine

OpenSSF Scorecard SLSA 1

Flutter is Google's SDK for crafting beautiful, fast user experiences for mobile, web, and desktop from a single codebase. Flutter works with existing code, is used by developers and organizations around the world, and is free and open source.

The Flutter Engine is a portable runtime for hosting Flutter applications. It implements Flutter's core libraries, including animation and graphics, file and network I/O, accessibility support, plugin architecture, and a Dart runtime and compile toolchain. Most developers will interact with Flutter via the Flutter Framework, which provides a modern, reactive framework, and a rich set of platform, layout and foundation widgets.

If you want to run/contribute to Flutter Web engine, more tooling can be found at felt. This is a tool written to make web engine development experience easy.

If you are new to Flutter, then you will find more general information on the Flutter project, including tutorials and samples, on our Web site at Flutter.dev. For specific information about Flutter's APIs, consider our API reference which can be found at the docs.flutter.dev.

Flutter is a fully open source project, and we welcome contributions. Information on how to get started can be found at our contributor guide.