目錄

The Dart language has special support for the following:

This support includes the ability to create objects using literals. For example, 'this is a string' is a string literal, and true is a boolean literal.

Because every variable in Dart refers to an object—an instance of a class—you can usually use constructors to initialize variables. Some of the built-in types have their own constructors. For example, you can use the Map() constructor to create a map.

Some other types also have special roles in the Dart language:

  • Object: The superclass of all Dart classes except Null.
  • Enum: The superclass of all enums.
  • Future and Stream: Used in asynchrony support.
  • Iterable: Used in for-in loops and in synchronous generator functions.
  • Never: Indicates that an expression can never successfully finish evaluating. Most often used for functions that always throw an exception.
  • dynamic: Indicates that you want to disable static checking. Usually you should use Object or Object? instead.
  • void: Indicates that a value is never used. Often used as a return type.

The Object, Object?, Null, and Never classes have special roles in the class hierarchy. Learn about these roles in Understanding null safety.

Numbers

Dart numbers come in two flavors:

int

Integer values no larger than 64 bits, depending on the platform. On native platforms, values can be from -263 to 263 - 1. On the web, integer values are represented as JavaScript numbers (64-bit floating-point values with no fractional part) and can be from -253 to 253 - 1.

double

64-bit (double-precision) floating-point numbers, as specified by the IEEE 754 standard.

Both int and double are subtypes of num. The num type includes basic operators such as +, -, /, and *, and is also where you’ll find abs(), ceil(), and floor(), among other methods. (Bitwise operators, such as >>, are defined in the int class.) If num and its subtypes don’t have what you’re looking for, the dart:math library might.

Integers are numbers without a decimal point. Here are some examples of defining integer literals:

var x = 1;
var hex = 0xDEADBEEF;

If a number includes a decimal, it is a double. Here are some examples of defining double literals:

var y = 1.1;
var exponents = 1.42e5;

You can also declare a variable as a num. If you do this, the variable can have both integer and double values.

num x = 1; // x can have both int and double values
x += 2.5;

Integer literals are automatically converted to doubles when necessary:

double z = 1; // Equivalent to double z = 1.0.

Here’s how you turn a string into a number, or vice versa:

// String -> int
var one = int.parse('1');
assert(one == 1);

// String -> double
var onePointOne = double.parse('1.1');
assert(onePointOne == 1.1);

// int -> String
String oneAsString = 1.toString();
assert(oneAsString == '1');

// double -> String
String piAsString = 3.14159.toStringAsFixed(2);
assert(piAsString == '3.14');

The int type specifies the traditional bitwise shift (<<, >>, >>>), complement (~), AND (&), OR (|), and XOR (^) operators, which are useful for manipulating and masking flags in bit fields. For example:

assert((3 << 1) == 6); // 0011 << 1 == 0110
assert((3 | 4) == 7); // 0011 | 0100 == 0111
assert((3 & 4) == 0); // 0011 & 0100 == 0000

For more examples, see the bitwise and shift operator section.

Literal numbers are compile-time constants. Many arithmetic expressions are also compile-time constants, as long as their operands are compile-time constants that evaluate to numbers.

const msPerSecond = 1000;
const secondsUntilRetry = 5;
const msUntilRetry = secondsUntilRetry * msPerSecond;

For more information, see Numbers in Dart.

Strings

A Dart string (String object) holds a sequence of UTF-16 code units. You can use either single or double quotes to create a string:

var s1 = 'Single quotes work well for string literals.';
var s2 = "Double quotes work just as well.";
var s3 = 'It\'s easy to escape the string delimiter.';
var s4 = "It's even easier to use the other delimiter.";

You can put the value of an expression inside a string by using ${expression}. If the expression is an identifier, you can skip the {}. To get the string corresponding to an object, Dart calls the object’s toString() method.

var s = 'string interpolation';

assert('Dart has $s, which is very handy.' ==
    'Dart has string interpolation, '
        'which is very handy.');
assert('That deserves all caps. '
        '${s.toUpperCase()} is very handy!' ==
    'That deserves all caps. '
        'STRING INTERPOLATION is very handy!');

You can concatenate strings using adjacent string literals or the + operator:

var s1 = 'String '
    'concatenation'
    " works even over line breaks.";
assert(s1 ==
    'String concatenation works even over '
        'line breaks.');

var s2 = 'The + operator ' + 'works, as well.';
assert(s2 == 'The + operator works, as well.');

Another way to create a multi-line string: use a triple quote with either single or double quotation marks:

var s1 = '''
You can create
multi-line strings like this one.
''';

var s2 = """This is also a
multi-line string.""";

You can create a “raw” string by prefixing it with r:

var s = r'In a raw string, not even \n gets special treatment.';

See Runes and grapheme clusters for details on how to express Unicode characters in a string.

Literal strings are compile-time constants, as long as any interpolated expression is a compile-time constant that evaluates to null or a numeric, string, or boolean value.

// These work in a const string.
const aConstNum = 0;
const aConstBool = true;
const aConstString = 'a constant string';

// These do NOT work in a const string.
var aNum = 0;
var aBool = true;
var aString = 'a string';
const aConstList = [1, 2, 3];

const validConstString = '$aConstNum $aConstBool $aConstString';
// const invalidConstString = '$aNum $aBool $aString $aConstList';

For more information on using strings, check out Strings and regular expressions.

Booleans

To represent boolean values, Dart has a type named bool. Only two objects have type bool: the boolean literals true and false, which are both compile-time constants.

Dart’s type safety means that you can’t use code like if (nonbooleanValue) or assert (nonbooleanValue). Instead, explicitly check for values, like this:

// Check for an empty string.
var fullName = '';
assert(fullName.isEmpty);

// Check for zero.
var hitPoints = 0;
assert(hitPoints <= 0);

// Check for null.
var unicorn = null;
assert(unicorn == null);

// Check for NaN.
var iMeantToDoThis = 0 / 0;
assert(iMeantToDoThis.isNaN);

Runes and grapheme clusters

In Dart, runes expose the Unicode code points of a string. You can use the characters package to view or manipulate user-perceived characters, also known as Unicode (extended) grapheme clusters.

Unicode defines a unique numeric value for each letter, digit, and symbol used in all of the world’s writing systems. Because a Dart string is a sequence of UTF-16 code units, expressing Unicode code points within a string requires special syntax. The usual way to express a Unicode code point is \uXXXX, where XXXX is a 4-digit hexadecimal value. For example, the heart character (♥) is \u2665. To specify more or less than 4 hex digits, place the value in curly brackets. For example, the laughing emoji (😆) is \u{1f606}.

If you need to read or write individual Unicode characters, use the characters getter defined on String by the characters package. The returned Characters object is the string as a sequence of grapheme clusters. Here’s an example of using the characters API:

import 'package:characters/characters.dart';

void main() {
  var hi = 'Hi 🇩🇰';
  print(hi);
  print('The end of the string: ${hi.substring(hi.length - 1)}');
  print('The last character: ${hi.characters.last}');
}

The output, depending on your environment, looks something like this:

$ dart run bin/main.dart
Hi 🇩🇰
The end of the string: ???
The last character: 🇩🇰

For details on using the characters package to manipulate strings, see the example and API reference for the characters package.

Symbols

A Symbol object represents an operator or identifier declared in a Dart program. You might never need to use symbols, but they’re invaluable for APIs that refer to identifiers by name, because minification changes identifier names but not identifier symbols.

To get the symbol for an identifier, use a symbol literal, which is just # followed by the identifier:

#radix
#bar

Symbol literals are compile-time constants.