The Flutter Clock Contest is currently running with a submission deadline of Jan 20th, 2020. The following lesson will teach you how to build a basic Binary clock with Flutter.
We are building the binary clock shown in the demo video below. Notice how the clock ticks once-per-second and updates the highlighted boxes in the UI. The actual time is shown in big plain digits at the bottom, with the binary value for each number under it.
Each column represents a digit of time in hh:mm:ss
format. Each row represents a binary value of 1, 2, 4, or 8 (or 0 if no boxes are colored). You calculate each digit in regular time by adding all the values (or bits) in a column.
Get started by creating a new Flutter app by running flutter create my_awesome_clock
. The initial app will import a few dependencies and wrap the Clock
widget inside of Scaffold.
main.dart
import 'dart:async';
import 'dart:math';
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
import 'package:flutter/services.dart' show SystemChrome, DeviceOrientation;
import 'package:intl/intl.dart' show DateFormat;
void main() {
runApp(MyApp());
}
class MyApp extends StatelessWidget {
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp(
home: Scaffold(
body: Clock(),
),
);
}
}
The Flutter Clock contest requires the app to run in landscape mode. You can tell Flutter to whitelist specific device orientations with the SystemChrome class. In our case, we will allow landscapeLeft
or landscapeRight
by updating the main function.
main.dart
void main() {
SystemChrome.setPreferredOrientations([
DeviceOrientation.landscapeRight,
DeviceOrientation.landscapeLeft,
]);
runApp(MyApp());
}
The only state that ever changes on the clock is the time, which should update once-per-second. Simply create a DateTime property and update it every second with a periodic timer.
main.dart
class Clock extends StatefulWidget {
Clock({Key key}) : super(key: key);
@override
_ClockState createState() => _ClockState();
}
class _ClockState extends State<Clock> {
DateTime _now = DateTime.now(); // or BinaryTime see next step
// Tick the clock
@override
void initState() {
Timer.periodic(Duration(seconds: 1), (v) {
setState(() {
_now = DateTime.now(); // or BinaryTime see next step
});
});
super.initState();
}
}
A clock displays time on a format that looks like 14:23:55
or hh:mm:ss
. In order to keep business logic out of the widget, a custom class called BinaryTime
provides the values we need for the main UI.
main.dart
/// Utility class to access values as binary integers
class BinaryTime {
List<String> binaryIntegers;
BinaryTime() {
DateTime now = DateTime.now();
String hhmmss = DateFormat("Hms").format(now).replaceAll(':', '');
binaryIntegers = hhmmss
.split('')
.map((str) => int.parse(str).toRadixString(2).padLeft(4, '0'))
.toList();
}
get hourTens => binaryIntegers[0];
get hourOnes => binaryIntegers[1];
get minuteTens => binaryIntegers[2];
get minuteOnes => binaryIntegers[3];
get secondTens => binaryIntegers[4];
get secondOnes => binaryIntegers[5];
}
Each column in the binary clock represents a digit in normal base-10 time. The Clock widget implements six fixed columns for each digit.
main.dart
class Clock extends StatefulWidget {
Clock({Key key}) : super(key: key);
@override
_ClockState createState() => _ClockState();
}
class _ClockState extends State<Clock> {
BinaryTime _now = BinaryTime();
// Tick the clock
@override
void initState() {
Timer.periodic(Duration(seconds: 1), (v) {
setState(() {
_now = BinaryTime();
});
});
super.initState();
}
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Container(
padding: EdgeInsets.all(50),
child: Row(
mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.spaceBetween,
children: [
// Columns for the clock
ClockColumn(
binaryInteger: _now.hourTens,
title: 'H',
color: Colors.blue,
rows: 2,
),
ClockColumn(
binaryInteger: _now.hourOnes,
title: 'h',
color: Colors.lightBlue,
),
ClockColumn(
binaryInteger: _now.minuteTens,
title: 'M',
color: Colors.green,
rows: 3,
),
ClockColumn(
binaryInteger: _now.minuteOnes,
title: 'm',
color: Colors.lightGreen,
),
ClockColumn(
binaryInteger: _now.secondTens,
title: 'S',
color: Colors.pink,
rows: 3,
),
ClockColumn(
binaryInteger: _now.secondOnes,
title: 's',
color: Colors.pinkAccent,
),
],
),
);
}
}
At this point, each column must be split into four cells, where a cell represents a single bit. The code below loops over the digits in a binary integer, then colors them if the cell is active (has a value of 1).
main.dart
/// Column to represent a binary integer.
class ClockColumn extends StatelessWidget {
String binaryInteger;
String title;
Color color;
int rows;
List bits;
ClockColumn({this.binaryInteger, this.title, this.color, this.rows = 4}) {
bits = binaryInteger.split('');
}
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Column(
mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.spaceBetween,
children: [
...[
Container(
child: Text(
title,
style: Theme.of(context).textTheme.display1,
),
)
],
...bits.asMap().entries.map((entry) {
int idx = entry.key;
String bit = entry.value;
bool isActive = bit == '1';
int binaryCellValue = pow(2, 3 - idx);
return AnimatedContainer(
duration: Duration(milliseconds: 475),
curve: Curves.ease,
height: 40,
width: 30,
decoration: BoxDecoration(
borderRadius: BorderRadius.all(Radius.circular(5)),
color: isActive
? color
: idx < 4 - rows
? Colors.white.withOpacity(0)
: Colors.black38,
),
margin: EdgeInsets.all(4),
child: Center(
child: isActive
? Text(
binaryCellValue.toString(),
style: TextStyle(
color: Colors.black.withOpacity(0.2),
fontSize: 18,
fontWeight: FontWeight.w700,
),
)
: Container(),
),
);
}),
...[
Text(
int.parse(binaryInteger, radix: 2).toString(),
style: TextStyle(fontSize: 30, color: color),
),
Container(
child: Text(
binaryInteger,
style: TextStyle(fontSize: 15, color: color),
),
)
]
],
);
}
}
#Flutter #Dart