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A Dart package providing a wide range of extension methods for various data types including int, String, DateTime, and Map. The package is designed to offer practical, easy-to-use enhancements that seamlessly integrate with your existing Dart code, facilitating more concise and readable syntax.

Summary

  1. Extensions

Extensions

DateTime

formartAsReadable

String formatAsReadable([bool showTime = true]);
final dt = DateTime(2023, 1, 30, 13, 22);
String dateAndTime = dt.formatAsReadable(); // "30/01/2023 13:22"
String dateOnly = dt.formatAsReadable(false); // "30/01/2023"

fromEuropean

static DateTime fromEuropean(String value);

Parses a string in European date format (DD/MM/YYYY).

pickRandom

static DateTime pickRandom([DateTime? begin, DateTime? end]);

Picks a random DateTime between two optional DateTime parameters. If no parameters are provided, it defaults to the Unix epoch (January 1, 1970) for the start and the current DateTime for the end.

Example:

var randomDt = DateTimeExt.pickRandom();

Directory

listDirectoryFiles

Stream<File> listDirectoryFiles({
    void Function(Directory directory, Object e)? onDirectoryReadError,
});

This method is equivalent to dir.listSync(recursive: true).whereType<File>();, however, this code will fail if some directory cannot be read due to lack of permissions. This method on the other hand, won't.

var dir = Directory('some/path');
Stream<File> files = dir.listDirectoryFiles(
    onDirectoryReadError: (Directory directory, Object error) {
        // Handle directory read errors.
    },
);

Duration

toReadable

String toReadable({
    bool millisecondsAsDecimal = false,
});

Converts the duration to a readable string format.

The output is the representation of the closest greatest unit of time in the duration along with the second greatest unit.

Examples:

Duration(days: 1, hours: 3, minutes: 23, seconds: 5, milliseconds: 101).toReadable(); // '1d 3h'
Duration(hours: 3, minutes: 23, seconds: 5, milliseconds: 101).toReadable(); // '3h 23min'
Duration(minutes: 23, seconds: 5, milliseconds: 101).toReadable(); // '23min 5s'
Duration(seconds: 5).toReadable(); // '5s'
Duration(seconds: 5, milliseconds: 101).toReadable(); // '5s 101ms'
Duration(milliseconds: 101).toReadable(); // '101ms'
Duration.zero.toReadable(); // '0s'

double

toStringAsFixedRounded

String toStringAsFixedRounded(int places);

When we use .toStringAsFixed(2), its possible that the resulting string has only zero in the decimal places ("3.00" for example).

This method fixes by transforming the string "3.00" in "3".

double a = 4.0;
a.toStringAsFixedRounded(2) // "4"
double b = 3.14150;
b.toStringAsFixedRounded(5); // "3.1415"

File

getName

String getName([bool includeExtension = false]);

Returns the name of the file, without any directory in the string.

var file = File('/root/directory/file.mp3');
file.getName(); // 'file'
file.getName(true); // 'file.mp3'

int

readableByteSize

String readableByteSize([int decimalPlaces = 1]);

Converts the int (assumed to be the number of bytes), to a readable string form.

500.readableByteSize(); // 500 B
1024.readableByteSize(); // 1 KB
2148.readableByteSize(); // 2.1 KB
1048576.readableByteSize(); // 1 MB
1073741824.readableByteSize(); // 1 GB

Iterable

chunk

List<Iterable<T>> chunck(int size);

Divides the iterable into a list of iterables each with a maximum length of [size]. If the original iterable's length is less than or equal to [size], a single chunk containing all elements will be returned.

The method throws a [ArgumentError] if [size] is less than or equal to 0.

Example:

final numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6];
final chunks = numbers.chunck(2);
print(chunks); // ([1, 2], [3, 4], [5, 6])

firstWhereOrNull

T? firstWhereOrNull(bool Function(T item) filter);

Finds the first element in the list that satisfies the given [filter] function.

Iterates through each element of the list, applying [filter] to each element. Returns the first element for which [filter] returns true. If no element satisfies the [filter], returns null.

  • Parameters:

    • [filter]: A function that takes an item of type [T] as an argument and returns a [bool]. It should return true for an item that matches the criteria and false otherwise.
  • Returns: The first element of type [T] that satisfies the provided [filter] function. Returns null if no element satisfies the [filter] function.

Example:

List<String> names = ['Bob', 'Alice', 'Tom'];
String? firstNameStartingWithA = names.firstWhereOrNull((name) => name.startsWith('A'));
print(firstNameStartingWithA); // Output: Alice
// If no name starts with 'A', null will be printed instead.

separatedBy

List<T> separatedBy(T separator);

Creates a new list from the iterable by interspersing a given [separator] between each element. If the iterable contains less than two elements, the original iterable is returned as a list.

Example:

final letters = ['a', 'b', 'c'];
final spacedLetters = letters.separatedBy('-');
print(spacedLetters); // ['a', '-', 'b', '-', 'c']

pickRandom

T pickRandom();

Picks an item at a random index.

Example:

Iterable<String> names = ['Bob', 'Alice', 'Tom', 'Fiona'];
names.pickRandom(); // 'Bob' or 'Alice' or 'Tom' or 'Fiona'

removeIndices

List<T> removeIndices(Set<int> indices);

Removes the items in the given indexes.

This function creates a new list and does not change the original iterable.

Example:

Iterable<String> names = ['Bob', 'Alice', 'Tom', 'Fiona'];
Iterable<String> filtered = names.removeIndices({1,3}); // ('Bob', 'Tom')

List

prettyJSON

String get prettyJSON

Converts the list to a indented JSON string.

This method uses a [JsonEncoder] with an indentation of four spaces to format the JSON string for readability.

Returns: A string representing the JSON-encoded version of the list, formatted with indentation for easier reading.

Example:

final list = [{'name': 'John Doe', 'age': 30}, {'name': 'Jane Doe', 'age': 27}];
print(list.prettyJSON);
/*
[
    {
        "name": "John Doe",
        "age": 30
    },
    {
        "name": "Jane Doe",
        "age": 27
    }
]
*/

sortByDate

void sortByDate(DateTime Function(T item) getter, [bool asc = true]);

Sorts the list by the given date of each item.

sortByNum

void sortByNum(num Function(T item) getter, [bool asc = true]);

Sorts the list by the given number of each item.

sortByNumericString

void sortByNumericString(
    String Function(T item) getter, {
    bool asc = true,
    bool appendNonNumbersAtEnd = true,
});

Sorts the list assuming the extracted string is a number.

If [appendNonNumbersAtEnd] is true, then the items that are not a valid number are appended at the end of the numberic items. Otherwise, they are inserted at the begining of the list.

sortByString

void sortByString(String Function(T item) getter, [bool asc = true]);

Sorts the list by the given string of each item.

Map<String, dynamic>

tryGetDateTime

DateTime? tryGetDateTime(String key);

Reads a value from the Map and returns it as a DateTime, if possible.

  • If the value is a DateTime, then this value is returned;
  • If the value is a String, then it tries to parse it;
  • If none of the criteria before is meet, null is returned.

This method is meant to simplify this code:

Map<String, dynamic> json = { ... };
String? isoString = json['timestamp'];
DateTime? dt = null;
if (isoString != null) {
  dt = DateTime.tryParse(isoString);
}

Which becomes more simpler:

Map<String, dynamic> json = { ... };
DateTime? dt = json.tryGetDateTime('timestamp')

getDateTime

DateTime getDateTime(String key);

Reads the value from the given key, and process it to returns a DateTime.

  • If the value is a DateTime, then this value is returned;
  • If the value is a String, then it tries to parse it;
  • If none of the criteria before is meet, a FormatException is thrown.

This method is meant to simplify this code:

Map<String, dynamic> json = { ... };
dynamic isoString = json['timestamp'];
DateTime dt = iso is String ? DateTime.parse(isoString) : isoString;

Which becomes more simpler:

Map<String, dynamic> json = { ... };
DateTime dt = json.getDateTime('timestamp')

getDouble

double getDouble(String key);

Retrieves a value from the map by the provided [key] and converts it to a double.

This method uses [tryGetDouble] to attempt conversion. If the conversion fails and the value is null, it throws a [FormatException].

Example:

var map = {'a': 1, 'b': '2.5', 'c': 'three'};
print(map.getDouble('a')); // 1.0
print(map.getDouble('b')); // 2.5
print(map.getDouble('c')); // throws FormatException

tryGetDouble

double? tryGetDouble(String key);

Tries to retrieve a value from the map by the provided [key] and convert it to a double.

The method checks the type of the value associated with the [key] in the following order:

  • If the value is already a double, it is returned as is.
  • If the value is an int, it is converted to double and returned.
  • If the value is a String, the method tries to parse it as a double.

If the value cannot be converted to double, the method returns null.

Example:

var map = {'a': 1, 'b': '2.5', 'c': 'three'};
print(map.tryGetDouble('a')); // 1.0
print(map.tryGetDouble('b')); // 2.5
print(map.tryGetDouble('c')); // null

getList

List<T> getList<T>(String key, T? Function(dynamic item) parser);

Tries to retrieve a value from the map by the provided [key] and convert it to a list of type [T].

The method expects the value associated with the [key] to be a list. It uses the provided [parser] function to convert each item in the list to type [T].

If the value is not a list, the method returns a empty list.

Example:

var map = {
  'ints': [1, 2, 3],
  'strings': ['a', 'b', 'c'],
  'mixed': [null, '2', 3.0],
  'notArray': 12,
};
print(map.tryGetList<int>('ints', (x) => x as int?)); // [1, 2, 3]
print(map.tryGetList<String>('strings', (x) => x as String?)); // ['a', 'b', 'c']
print(map.tryGetList<double>('mixed', (x) => double.tryParse(x.toString()))); // [2.0, 3.0]
print(map.getList<String>('notArray', (x) => x as String)); // []

prettyJSON

String get prettyJSON

Returns a string in JSON format with identation.

Map<String, dynamic> map = {
    'name': 'Vinícius',
    'enabled': true,
};
map.prettyJSON
// "{
//   "name": "Vinícius",
//   "enabled": true
// }"

String

count

int count(Pattern search);

Counts the occurence of a input pattern.

toMaybeDate

DateTime? toMaybeDate();

Converts strings in ISO-8601 or DD/MM/(YYYY|YY)[ HH:mm] formats to a DateTime object. The returned DateTime object does not take hours, minutes, or seconds into account.

Returns null if the string cannot be parsed into a valid date.

String isoDateString = "2022-01-01";
String brDateString = "01/01/2022";
print(isoDateString.toMaybeDate()); // Outputs: 2022-01-01 00:00:00.000
print(brDateString.toMaybeDate()); // Outputs: 2022-01-01 00:00:00.000

insertAt

String insertAt(int i, String value);

Inserts a given string [value] into the current string at the specified index [i].

Returns a new string with the value inserted.

String originalString = "HelloWorld";
print(originalString.insertAt(5, " ")); // Outputs: "Hello World"

isEmail

bool get isEmail;

Checks if the current string is a valid email address.

Returns true if the string matches the email pattern, otherwise false.

String email = "[email protected]";
String nonEmail = "notAnEmail";
print(email.isEmail); // Outputs: true
print(nonEmail.isEmail); // Outputs: false

hasUpperCase

bool get hasUpperCase;

Checks if the string contains at least one uppercase letter.

This getter considers not only English uppercase letters but also uppercase accented letters commonly used in the Brazilian Portuguese language, such as Á, À, Â, Ã, É, Ê, Í, Ó, Ô, Õ, Ú, and Ç.

Example:

String text1 = 'Hello world';
print(text1.hasUpperCase); // Output: true

String text2 = 'hello world';
print(text2.hasUpperCase); // Output: false

hasLowerCase

bool get hasLowerCase;

Checks if the string contains at least one lowercase letter.

This getter considers not only English lowercase letters but also lowercase accented letters commonly used in the Brazilian Portuguese language, such as á, à, â, ã, é, ê, í, ó, ô, õ, ú, and ç.

Example:

String text1 = 'Hello world';
print(text1.hasLowerCase); // Output: true
///
String text2 = 'HELLO WORLD';
print(text2.hasLowerCase); // Output: false

hasNumber

bool get hasNumber;

Checks if the string contains at least one digit.

Example:

String text1 = 'Hello123';
print(text1.hasNumber); // Output: true

String text2 = 'Hello';
print(text2.hasNumber); // Output: false

hasSymbol

bool get hasSymbol;

Checks if the string contains at least one special symbol.

This getter looks for common special symbols such as !, @, #, $, %, ^, &, *, (, ), ,, ., ?, ", :, {, }, |, <, and >.

Example:

String text1 = 'Hello@World';
print(text1.hasSymbol); // Output: true

String text2 = 'HelloWorld';
print(text2.hasSymbol); // Output: false

hasLengthBetween

bool hasLengthBetween(int min, int max)

Checks if the length of the string is between the specified minimum and maximum values, inclusive.

Parameters:

  • min: The minimum length of the string.
  • max: The maximum length of the string.

Returns true if the length of the string is within the specified range, otherwise returns false.

Example:

String text = 'Hello';
print(text.hasLengthBetween(3, 6)); // Output: true

print(text.hasLengthBetween(6, 10)); // Output: false

getInitials

String getInitials({
    int initialsCount = 2,
    String joinString = '',
});

Returns the initials of each word of a string.

This function takes a string and returns its initials, up to a specified number of initials. By default, it returns the first two initials without any separator.

Examples:

var name = 'John Doe';
print(name.getInitials()); // 'JD'
print(name.getInitials(initialsCount: 1)); // 'J'
print(name.getInitials(joinString: '.')); // 'J.D'

Parameters:

  • initialsCount (int): The maximum number of initials to return. Defaults to 2.
  • joinString (String): The string to use to join the initials. Defaults to '' (no separator).

Returns: A string containing the initials.

toTitleCase

String toTitleCase([bool Function(String word)? wordIgnorer]);

Converts each word in the string to title case, where the first letter is capitalized and the remainder of the word is in lowercase, except for words specified by the [wordIgnorer] function.

Example:

'hello world'.toTitleCase(); // 'Hello World'
'hora de sair'.toTitleCase((word) => word == 'de'); // 'Hora de Sair'

toSimple

String toSimple();

Converts a string into a form that is easy to compare to other string variations.

This is useful for sorting lists based on a string.

Here are what is done:

  • Converts all characters to lower case;
  • Remove accentuation from characters;

Example:

  • "Açucar" -> "acucar"

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