HtmlElementView
will consume them before Flutter sees them.PointerInterceptor
creates a platform view consisting of an empty HTML element. The element has the size of its child
widget, and is inserted in the layer tree behind its child in paint order.
This empty platform view doesn't do anything with mouse events, other than preventing them from reaching other platform views underneath it.
This gives an opportunity to the Flutter framework to handle the click, as expected:
The solution... |
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Each PointerInterceptor (green) renders between Flutter widgets and the underlying HtmlElementView . Mouse events now can't reach the background HtmlElementView, and work as expected. |
Some common scenarios where this widget may come in handy:
All the cases above have in common that they attempt to render Flutter widgets on top of platform views that handle pointer events.
There's two ways that the PointerInterceptor
widget can be used to solve the problems above:
Wrapping your button element directly (FAB, Custom Play/Pause button...):
PointerInterceptor( child: ElevatedButton(...), )
As a root container for a “layout” element, wrapping a bunch of other elements (like a Drawer):
Scaffold( ... drawer: PointerInterceptor( child: Drawer( child: ... ), ), ... )
intercepting
A common use of the PointerInterceptor
widget is to block clicks only under certain conditions (isVideoShowing
, isPanelOpen
...).
The intercepting
property allows the PointerInterceptor
widget to render itself (or not) depending on a boolean value, instead of having to manually write an if/else
on the Flutter App widget tree, so code like this:
if (someCondition) { return PointerInterceptor( child: ElevatedButton(...), ) } else { return ElevatedButton(...), }
can be rewritten as:
return PointerInterceptor( intercepting: someCondition, child: ElevatedButton(...), )
Note: when intercepting
is false, the PointerInterceptor
will not render anything in flutter, and just return its child
. The code is exactly equivalent to the example above.
debug
The PointerInterceptor
widget has a debug
property, that will render it visibly on the screen (similar to the images above).
This may be useful to see what the widget is actually covering when used as a layout element.