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Render After Effects animations natively on Flutter. This package is a pure Dart implementation of a Lottie player.

Home Page: https://pub.dev/packages/lottie

License: MIT License

Dart 98.87% Kotlin 0.07% Swift 0.22% Objective-C 0.01% HTML 0.03% Ruby 0.80%

lottie-flutter's Introduction

Lottie for Flutter

pub package

Lottie is a mobile library for Android and iOS that parses Adobe After Effects animations exported as json with Bodymovin and renders them natively on mobile!

This repository is an unofficial conversion of the Lottie-android library in pure Dart.

It works on Android, iOS, macOS, linux, windows and web.

Usage

Simple animation

This example shows how to display a Lottie animation in the simplest way.
The Lottie widget will load the json file and run the animation indefinitely.

import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
import 'package:lottie/lottie.dart';

void main() => runApp(const MyApp());

class MyApp extends StatelessWidget {
  const MyApp({Key? key}) : super(key: key);

  @override
  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    return MaterialApp(
      home: Scaffold(
        body: ListView(
          children: [
            // Load a Lottie file from your assets
            Lottie.asset('assets/LottieLogo1.json'),

            // Load a Lottie file from a remote url
            Lottie.network(
                'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xvrh/lottie-flutter/master/example/assets/Mobilo/A.json'),

            // Load an animation and its images from a zip file
            Lottie.asset('assets/lottiefiles/angel.zip'),
          ],
        ),
      ),
    );
  }
}

Specify a custom AnimationController

This example shows how to take full control over the animation by providing your own AnimationController.

With a custom AnimationController you have a rich API to play the animation in various ways: start and stop the animation when you want, play forward or backward, loop between specifics points...

import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
import 'package:lottie/lottie.dart';

void main() => runApp(const MyApp());

class MyApp extends StatefulWidget {
  const MyApp({Key? key}) : super(key: key);

  @override
  _MyAppState createState() => _MyAppState();
}

class _MyAppState extends State<MyApp> with TickerProviderStateMixin {
  late final AnimationController _controller;

  @override
  void initState() {
    super.initState();

    _controller = AnimationController(vsync: this);
  }

  @override
  void dispose() {
    _controller.dispose();
    super.dispose();
  }

  @override
  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    return MaterialApp(
      home: Scaffold(
        body: ListView(
          children: [
            Lottie.asset(
              'assets/LottieLogo1.json',
              controller: _controller,
              onLoaded: (composition) {
                // Configure the AnimationController with the duration of the
                // Lottie file and start the animation.
                _controller
                  ..duration = composition.duration
                  ..forward();
              },
            ),
          ],
        ),
      ),
    );
  }
}

See this file for a more comprehensive example.

Control the size of the Widget

The Lottie widget takes the same arguments and have the same behavior as the Image widget in term of controlling its size.

Lottie.asset(
  'assets/LottieLogo1.json',
  width: 200,
  height: 200,
  fit: BoxFit.fill,
)

width and height are optionals and fallback on the size imposed by the parent or on the intrinsic size of the lottie animation.

Custom loading

The Lottie widget has several convenient constructors (Lottie.asset, Lottie.network, Lottie.memory) to load, parse and cache automatically the json file.

Sometime you may prefer to have full control over the loading of the file. Use LottieComposition.fromByteData to parse the file from a list of bytes.

This example shows how to load and parse a Lottie composition from a json file.

class MyWidget extends StatefulWidget {
  const MyWidget({Key? key}) : super(key: key);

  @override
  _MyWidgetState createState() => _MyWidgetState();
}

class _MyWidgetState extends State<MyWidget> {
  late final Future<LottieComposition> _composition;

  @override
  void initState() {
    super.initState();

    _composition = _loadComposition();
  }

  Future<LottieComposition> _loadComposition() async {
    var assetData = await rootBundle.load('assets/LottieLogo1.json');
    return await LottieComposition.fromByteData(assetData);
  }

  @override
  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    return FutureBuilder<LottieComposition>(
      future: _composition,
      builder: (context, snapshot) {
        var composition = snapshot.data;
        if (composition != null) {
          return Lottie(composition: composition);
        } else {
          return const Center(child: CircularProgressIndicator());
        }
      },
    );
  }
}

Custom drawing

This example goes low level and shows you how to draw a LottieComposition on a custom Canvas at a specific frame in a specific position and size.

class CustomDrawer extends StatelessWidget {
  final LottieComposition composition;

  const CustomDrawer(this.composition, {Key? key}) : super(key: key);

  @override
  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    return CustomPaint(
      painter: _Painter(composition),
      size: const Size(400, 400),
    );
  }
}

class _Painter extends CustomPainter {
  final LottieDrawable drawable;

  _Painter(LottieComposition composition)
      : drawable = LottieDrawable(composition);

  @override
  void paint(Canvas canvas, Size size) {
    var frameCount = 40;
    var columns = 10;
    for (var i = 0; i < frameCount; i++) {
      var destRect = Offset(i % columns * 50.0, i ~/ 10 * 80.0) & (size / 5);
      drawable
        ..setProgress(i / frameCount)
        ..draw(canvas, destRect);
    }
  }

  @override
  bool shouldRepaint(CustomPainter oldDelegate) {
    return true;
  }
}

Modify properties at runtime

This example shows how to modify some properties of the animation at runtime. Here we change the text, the color, the opacity and the position of some layers. For each ValueDelegate we can either provide a static value or a callback to compute a value for a each frame.

class _Animation extends StatelessWidget {
  @override
  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    return Lottie.asset(
      'assets/Tests/Shapes.json',
      delegates: LottieDelegates(
        text: (initialText) => '**$initialText**',
        values: [
          ValueDelegate.color(
            const ['Shape Layer 1', 'Rectangle', 'Fill 1'],
            value: Colors.red,
          ),
          ValueDelegate.opacity(
            const ['Shape Layer 1', 'Rectangle'],
            callback: (frameInfo) => (frameInfo.overallProgress * 100).round(),
          ),
          ValueDelegate.position(
            const ['Shape Layer 1', 'Rectangle', '**'],
            relative: const Offset(100, 200),
          ),
        ],
      ),
    );
  }
}

Limitations

This port supports the same feature set as Lottie Android.

Flutter Web

Run the app with flutter run -d chrome --web-renderer canvaskit

See a preview here: https://xvrh.github.io/lottie-flutter-web/

More examples

See the example folder for more code samples of the various possibilities.

lottie-flutter's People

Contributors

xvrh avatar dsyrstad avatar thevinhluong avatar olegas avatar

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