Diagnostic messages
- Diagnostics
- abi_specific_integer_invalid
- abi_specific_integer_mapping_extra
- abi_specific_integer_mapping_missing
- abi_specific_integer_mapping_unsupported
- abstract_field_initializer
- abstract_sealed_class
- abstract_super_member_reference
- ambiguous_export
- ambiguous_extension_member_access
- ambiguous_import
- ambiguous_set_or_map_literal_both
- ambiguous_set_or_map_literal_either
- annotation_on_pointer_field
- argument_must_be_a_constant
- argument_must_be_native
- argument_type_not_assignable
- argument_type_not_assignable_to_error_handler
- assert_in_redirecting_constructor
- asset_directory_does_not_exist
- asset_does_not_exist
- asset_field_not_list
- asset_missing_path
- asset_not_string
- asset_not_string_or_map
- asset_path_not_string
- assignment_of_do_not_store
- assignment_to_const
- assignment_to_final
- assignment_to_final_local
- assignment_to_final_no_setter
- assignment_to_function
- assignment_to_method
- assignment_to_type
- async_for_in_wrong_context
- await_in_late_local_variable_initializer
- await_of_incompatible_type
- body_might_complete_normally
- body_might_complete_normally_catch_error
- body_might_complete_normally_nullable
- break_label_on_switch_member
- built_in_identifier_as_type
- built_in_identifier_in_declaration
- case_block_not_terminated
- case_expression_type_implements_equals
- case_expression_type_is_not_switch_expression_subtype
- cast_from_nullable_always_fails
- cast_from_null_always_fails
- cast_to_non_type
- class_used_as_mixin
- collection_element_from_deferred_library
- compound_implements_finalizable
- concrete_class_has_enum_superinterface
- concrete_class_with_abstract_member
- conflicting_constructor_and_static_member
- conflicting_generic_interfaces
- conflicting_type_variable_and_container
- conflicting_type_variable_and_member
- constant_pattern_never_matches_value_type
- constant_pattern_with_non_constant_expression
- const_constructor_param_type_mismatch
- const_constructor_with_field_initialized_by_non_const
- const_constructor_with_non_const_super
- const_constructor_with_non_final_field
- const_deferred_class
- const_initialized_with_non_constant_value
- const_initialized_with_non_constant_value_from_deferred_library
- const_instance_field
- const_map_key_not_primitive_equality
- const_not_initialized
- const_set_element_not_primitive_equality
- const_spread_expected_list_or_set
- const_spread_expected_map
- const_with_non_const
- const_with_non_constant_argument
- const_with_type_parameters
- continue_label_invalid
- creation_of_struct_or_union
- creation_with_non_type
- dead_code
- dead_code_catch_following_catch
- dead_code_on_catch_subtype
- dead_null_aware_expression
- default_list_constructor
- default_value_in_function_type
- default_value_in_redirecting_factory_constructor
- default_value_on_required_parameter
- deferred_import_of_extension
- definitely_unassigned_late_local_variable
- dependencies_field_not_map
- deprecated_colon_for_default_value
- deprecated_export_use
- deprecated_field
- deprecated_member_use
- deprecated_member_use_from_same_package
- deprecated_new_in_comment_reference
- deprecated_subtype_of_function
- disallowed_type_instantiation_expression
- division_optimization
- duplicate_constructor
- duplicate_definition
- duplicate_export
- duplicate_field_formal_parameter
- duplicate_field_name
- duplicate_hidden_name
- duplicate_ignore
- duplicate_import
- duplicate_named_argument
- duplicate_part
- duplicate_pattern_assignment_variable
- duplicate_pattern_field
- duplicate_rest_element_in_pattern
- duplicate_shown_name
- duplicate_variable_pattern
- empty_map_pattern
- empty_record_literal_with_comma
- empty_record_type_named_fields_list
- empty_record_type_with_comma
- empty_struct
- enum_constant_same_name_as_enclosing
- enum_constant_with_non_const_constructor
- enum_mixin_with_instance_variable
- enum_with_abstract_member
- enum_with_name_values
- equal_elements_in_const_set
- equal_elements_in_set
- equal_keys_in_const_map
- equal_keys_in_map
- equal_keys_in_map_pattern
- expected_one_list_pattern_type_arguments
- expected_one_list_type_arguments
- expected_one_set_type_arguments
- expected_two_map_pattern_type_arguments
- expected_two_map_type_arguments
- export_internal_library
- export_legacy_symbol
- export_of_non_library
- expression_in_map
- extends_non_class
- extension_as_expression
- extension_conflicting_static_and_instance
- extension_declares_abstract_member
- extension_declares_constructor
- extension_declares_instance_field
- extension_declares_member_of_object
- extension_override_access_to_static_member
- extension_override_argument_not_assignable
- extension_override_without_access
- extension_override_with_cascade
- extension_type_constructor_with_super_formal_parameter
- extension_type_constructor_with_super_invocation
- extension_type_declares_instance_field
- extension_type_declares_member_of_object
- extension_type_implements_disallowed_type
- extension_type_implements_itself
- extension_type_implements_not_supertype
- extension_type_implements_representation_not_supertype
- extension_type_inherited_member_conflict
- extension_type_representation_depends_on_itself
- extension_type_representation_type_bottom
- extension_type_with_abstract_member
- external_with_initializer
- extra_annotation_on_struct_field
- extra_positional_arguments
- extra_positional_arguments_could_be_named
- extra_size_annotation_carray
- ffi_native_invalid_duplicate_default_asset
- ffi_native_invalid_multiple_annotations
- ffi_native_must_be_external
- ffi_native_unexpected_number_of_parameters
- ffi_native_unexpected_number_of_parameters_with_receiver
- field_initialized_by_multiple_initializers
- field_initialized_in_initializer_and_declaration
- field_initialized_in_parameter_and_initializer
- field_initializer_factory_constructor
- field_initializer_in_struct
- field_initializer_not_assignable
- field_initializer_outside_constructor
- field_initializer_redirecting_constructor
- field_initializing_formal_not_assignable
- field_in_struct_with_initializer
- field_must_be_external_in_struct
- final_initialized_in_declaration_and_constructor
- final_not_initialized
- final_not_initialized_constructor
- flutter_field_not_map
- for_in_of_invalid_element_type
- for_in_of_invalid_type
- for_in_with_const_variable
- generic_method_type_instantiation_on_dynamic
- generic_struct_subclass
- getter_not_subtype_setter_types
- illegal_async_generator_return_type
- illegal_async_return_type
- illegal_concrete_enum_member
- illegal_enum_values
- illegal_sync_generator_return_type
- implements_non_class
- implements_repeated
- implements_super_class
- implicit_super_initializer_missing_arguments
- implicit_this_reference_in_initializer
- import_deferred_library_with_load_function
- import_internal_library
- import_of_legacy_library_into_null_safe
- import_of_non_library
- inconsistent_inheritance
- inconsistent_language_version_override
- inconsistent_pattern_variable_logical_or
- initializer_for_non_existent_field
- initializer_for_static_field
- initializing_formal_for_non_existent_field
- instance_access_to_static_member
- instance_member_access_from_factory
- instance_member_access_from_static
- instantiate_abstract_class
- instantiate_enum
- instantiate_type_alias_expands_to_type_parameter
- integer_literal_imprecise_as_double
- integer_literal_out_of_range
- invalid_annotation
- invalid_annotation_constant_value_from_deferred_library
- invalid_annotation_from_deferred_library
- invalid_annotation_target
- invalid_assignment
- invalid_dependency
- invalid_exception_value
- invalid_export_of_internal_element
- invalid_export_of_internal_element_indirectly
- invalid_extension_argument_count
- invalid_factory_method_decl
- invalid_factory_method_impl
- invalid_factory_name_not_a_class
- invalid_field_name
- invalid_field_type_in_struct
- invalid_implementation_override
- invalid_inline_function_type
- invalid_internal_annotation
- invalid_language_version_override
- invalid_literal_annotation
- invalid_modifier_on_constructor
- invalid_modifier_on_setter
- invalid_non_virtual_annotation
- invalid_null_aware_operator
- invalid_override
- invalid_override_of_non_virtual_member
- invalid_pattern_variable_in_shared_case_scope
- invalid_platforms_field
- invalid_reference_to_generative_enum_constructor
- invalid_reference_to_this
- invalid_return_type_for_catch_error
- invalid_sealed_annotation
- invalid_super_formal_parameter_location
- invalid_type_argument_in_const_literal
- invalid_uri
- invalid_use_of_covariant_in_extension
- invalid_use_of_internal_member
- invalid_use_of_null_value
- invalid_use_of_type_outside_library
- invalid_use_of_visible_for_overriding_member
- invalid_use_of_visible_for_testing_member
- invalid_visibility_annotation
- invalid_visible_for_overriding_annotation
- invalid_visible_outside_template_annotation
- invocation_of_extension_without_call
- invocation_of_non_function
- invocation_of_non_function_expression
- label_in_outer_scope
- label_undefined
- late_final_field_with_const_constructor
- late_final_local_already_assigned
- leaf_call_must_not_return_handle
- leaf_call_must_not_take_handle
- list_element_type_not_assignable
- main_first_positional_parameter_type
- main_has_required_named_parameters
- main_has_too_many_required_positional_parameters
- main_is_not_function
- map_entry_not_in_map
- map_key_type_not_assignable
- map_value_type_not_assignable
- mismatched_annotation_on_struct_field
- missing_annotation_on_struct_field
- missing_dart_library
- missing_default_value_for_parameter
- missing_dependency
- missing_enum_constant_in_switch
- missing_exception_value
- missing_field_type_in_struct
- missing_name
- missing_named_pattern_field_name
- missing_override_of_must_be_overridden
- missing_required_argument
- missing_required_param
- missing_return
- missing_size_annotation_carray
- missing_variable_pattern
- mixin_application_concrete_super_invoked_member_type
- mixin_application_not_implemented_interface
- mixin_application_no_concrete_super_invoked_member
- mixin_class_declaration_extends_not_object
- mixin_class_declares_constructor
- mixin_inherits_from_not_object
- mixin_instantiate
- mixin_of_non_class
- mixin_on_sealed_class
- mixin_super_class_constraint_deferred_class
- mixin_super_class_constraint_non_interface
- multiple_redirecting_constructor_invocations
- multiple_super_initializers
- must_be_a_native_function_type
- must_be_a_subtype
- must_be_immutable
- must_call_super
- must_return_void
- name_not_string
- native_field_invalid_type
- native_field_missing_type
- native_field_not_static
- new_with_undefined_constructor_default
- non_abstract_class_inherits_abstract_member
- non_bool_condition
- non_bool_expression
- non_bool_negation_expression
- non_bool_operand
- non_constant_annotation_constructor
- non_constant_case_expression
- non_constant_case_expression_from_deferred_library
- non_constant_default_value
- non_constant_default_value_from_deferred_library
- non_constant_list_element
- non_constant_map_element
- non_constant_map_key
- non_constant_map_pattern_key
- non_constant_map_value
- non_constant_relational_pattern_expression
- non_constant_set_element
- non_constant_type_argument
- non_const_argument_for_const_parameter
- non_const_call_to_literal_constructor
- non_const_generative_enum_constructor
- non_covariant_type_parameter_position_in_representation_type
- non_exhaustive_switch_expression
- non_exhaustive_switch_statement
- non_final_field_in_enum
- non_generative_constructor
- non_generative_implicit_constructor
- non_native_function_type_argument_to_pointer
- non_positive_array_dimension
- non_sized_type_argument
- non_sync_factory
- non_type_as_type_argument
- non_type_in_catch_clause
- non_void_return_for_operator
- non_void_return_for_setter
- not_assigned_potentially_non_nullable_local_variable
- not_a_type
- not_binary_operator
- not_enough_positional_arguments
- not_initialized_non_nullable_instance_field
- not_initialized_non_nullable_variable
- not_iterable_spread
- not_map_spread
- no_annotation_constructor_arguments
- no_combined_super_signature
- no_generative_constructors_in_superclass
- nullable_type_in_catch_clause
- nullable_type_in_extends_clause
- nullable_type_in_implements_clause
- nullable_type_in_on_clause
- nullable_type_in_with_clause
- null_argument_to_non_null_type
- null_check_always_fails
- obsolete_colon_for_default_value
- on_repeated
- optional_parameter_in_operator
- override_on_non_overriding_member
- packed_annotation
- packed_annotation_alignment
- part_of_different_library
- part_of_non_part
- part_of_unnamed_library
- path_does_not_exist
- path_not_posix
- path_pubspec_does_not_exist
- pattern_assignment_not_local_variable
- pattern_constant_from_deferred_library
- pattern_type_mismatch_in_irrefutable_context
- pattern_variable_assignment_inside_guard
- platform_value_disallowed
- positional_field_in_object_pattern
- positional_super_formal_parameter_with_positional_argument
- prefix_collides_with_top_level_member
- prefix_identifier_not_followed_by_dot
- prefix_shadowed_by_local_declaration
- private_collision_in_mixin_application
- private_optional_parameter
- private_setter
- read_potentially_unassigned_final
- record_literal_one_positional_no_trailing_comma
- record_type_one_positional_no_trailing_comma
- recursive_compile_time_constant
- recursive_constructor_redirect
- recursive_interface_inheritance
- redeclare_on_non_redeclaring_member
- redirect_generative_to_missing_constructor
- redirect_generative_to_non_generative_constructor
- redirect_to_abstract_class_constructor
- redirect_to_invalid_function_type
- redirect_to_invalid_return_type
- redirect_to_missing_constructor
- redirect_to_non_class
- redirect_to_non_const_constructor
- redirect_to_type_alias_expands_to_type_parameter
- referenced_before_declaration
- refutable_pattern_in_irrefutable_context
- relational_pattern_operand_type_not_assignable
- relational_pattern_operator_return_type_not_assignable_to_bool
- rest_element_in_map_pattern
- rethrow_outside_catch
- return_in_generative_constructor
- return_in_generator
- return_of_do_not_store
- return_of_invalid_type
- return_of_invalid_type_from_closure
- return_without_value
- sdk_version_async_exported_from_core
- sdk_version_as_expression_in_const_context
- sdk_version_bool_operator_in_const_context
- sdk_version_constructor_tearoffs
- sdk_version_eq_eq_operator_in_const_context
- sdk_version_extension_methods
- sdk_version_gt_gt_gt_operator
- sdk_version_is_expression_in_const_context
- sdk_version_never
- sdk_version_set_literal
- sdk_version_ui_as_code
- sdk_version_ui_as_code_in_const_context
- set_element_type_not_assignable
- shared_deferred_prefix
- size_annotation_dimensions
- static_access_to_instance_member
- subtype_of_base_or_final_is_not_base_final_or_sealed
- subtype_of_deferred_class
- subtype_of_disallowed_type
- subtype_of_ffi_class
- subtype_of_sealed_class
- subtype_of_struct_class
- supertype_expands_to_type_parameter
- super_formal_parameter_type_is_not_subtype_of_associated
- super_formal_parameter_without_associated_named
- super_formal_parameter_without_associated_positional
- super_invocation_not_last
- super_in_enum_constructor
- super_in_extension
- super_in_extension_type
- super_in_invalid_context
- super_in_redirecting_constructor
- switch_case_completes_normally
- switch_expression_not_assignable
- tearoff_of_generative_constructor_of_abstract_class
- text_direction_code_point_in_comment
- text_direction_code_point_in_literal
- throw_of_invalid_type
- top_level_cycle
- type_alias_cannot_reference_itself
- type_annotation_deferred_class
- type_argument_not_matching_bounds
- type_check_with_null
- type_parameter_referenced_by_static
- type_parameter_supertype_of_its_bound
- type_test_with_non_type
- type_test_with_undefined_name
- unchecked_use_of_nullable_value
- undefined_annotation
- undefined_class
- undefined_constructor_in_initializer
- undefined_enum_constant
- undefined_enum_constructor
- undefined_extension_getter
- undefined_extension_method
- undefined_extension_operator
- undefined_extension_setter
- undefined_function
- undefined_getter
- undefined_hidden_name
- undefined_identifier
- undefined_identifier_await
- undefined_method
- undefined_named_parameter
- undefined_operator
- undefined_prefixed_name
- undefined_referenced_parameter
- undefined_setter
- undefined_shown_name
- undefined_super_member
- unknown_platform
- unnecessary_cast
- unnecessary_dev_dependency
- unnecessary_final
- unnecessary_import
- unnecessary_nan_comparison
- unnecessary_non_null_assertion
- unnecessary_no_such_method
- unnecessary_null_assert_pattern
- unnecessary_null_check_pattern
- unnecessary_null_comparison
- unnecessary_question_mark
- unnecessary_set_literal
- unnecessary_type_check
- unqualified_reference_to_non_local_static_member
- unqualified_reference_to_static_member_of_extended_type
- unreachable_switch_case
- unreachable_switch_default
- unused_catch_clause
- unused_catch_stack
- unused_element
- unused_field
- unused_import
- unused_label
- unused_local_variable
- unused_result
- unused_shown_name
- uri_does_not_exist
- uri_does_not_exist_in_doc_import
- uri_has_not_been_generated
- uri_with_interpolation
- use_of_native_extension
- use_of_void_result
- values_declaration_in_enum
- variable_length_array_not_last
- variable_pattern_keyword_in_declaration_context
- variable_type_mismatch
- workspace_field_not_list
- workspace_value_not_string
- workspace_value_not_subdirectory
- wrong_number_of_parameters_for_operator
- wrong_number_of_parameters_for_setter
- wrong_number_of_type_arguments
- wrong_number_of_type_arguments_constructor
- wrong_number_of_type_arguments_enum
- wrong_number_of_type_arguments_extension
- wrong_number_of_type_arguments_method
- yield_in_non_generator
- yield_of_invalid_type
- always_declare_return_types
- always_put_control_body_on_new_line
- always_put_required_named_parameters_first
- always_use_package_imports
- annotate_overrides
- avoid_empty_else
- avoid_function_literals_in_foreach_calls
- avoid_futureor_void
- avoid_init_to_null
- avoid_print
- avoid_relative_lib_imports
- avoid_renaming_method_parameters
- avoid_return_types_on_setters
- avoid_returning_null_for_void
- avoid_shadowing_type_parameters
- avoid_single_cascade_in_expression_statements
- avoid_slow_async_io
- avoid_type_to_string
- avoid_types_as_parameter_names
- avoid_unnecessary_containers
- avoid_web_libraries_in_flutter
- await_only_futures
- camel_case_extensions
- camel_case_types
- cancel_subscriptions
- close_sinks
- collection_methods_unrelated_type
- constant_identifier_names
- control_flow_in_finally
- curly_braces_in_flow_control_structures
- dangling_library_doc_comments
- depend_on_referenced_packages
- empty_catches
- empty_constructor_bodies
- empty_statements
- file_names
- hash_and_equals
- implementation_imports
- implicit_call_tearoffs
- invalid_runtime_check_with_js_interop_types
- invalid_use_of_do_not_submit_member
- library_annotations
- library_names
- library_prefixes
- library_private_types_in_public_api
- literal_only_boolean_expressions
- no_adjacent_strings_in_list
- no_duplicate_case_values
- no_leading_underscores_for_library_prefixes
- no_leading_underscores_for_local_identifiers
- no_logic_in_create_state
- no_wildcard_variable_uses
- non_constant_identifier_names
- null_check_on_nullable_type_parameter
- overridden_fields
- package_names
- package_prefixed_library_names
- prefer_adjacent_string_concatenation
- prefer_collection_literals
- prefer_conditional_assignment
- prefer_const_constructors
- prefer_const_constructors_in_immutables
- prefer_const_declarations
- prefer_const_literals_to_create_immutables
- prefer_contains
- prefer_double_quotes
- prefer_final_fields
- prefer_for_elements_to_map_fromiterable
- prefer_function_declarations_over_variables
- prefer_generic_function_type_aliases
- prefer_if_null_operators
- prefer_initializing_formals
- prefer_inlined_adds
- prefer_interpolation_to_compose_strings
- prefer_is_empty
- prefer_is_not_empty
- prefer_is_not_operator
- prefer_iterable_wheretype
- prefer_null_aware_operators
- prefer_relative_imports
- prefer_single_quotes
- prefer_typing_uninitialized_variables
- prefer_void_to_null
- provide_deprecation_message
- recursive_getters
- secure_pubspec_urls
- sized_box_for_whitespace
- sized_box_shrink_expand
- slash_for_doc_comments
- sort_child_properties_last
- sort_constructors_first
- sort_pub_dependencies
- sort_unnamed_constructors_first
- test_types_in_equals
- throw_in_finally
- type_init_formals
- type_literal_in_constant_pattern
- unawaited_futures
- unintended_html_in_doc_comment
- unnecessary_brace_in_string_interps
- unnecessary_const
- unnecessary_constructor_name
- unnecessary_final
- unnecessary_getters_setters
- unnecessary_lambdas
- unnecessary_late
- unnecessary_library_name
- unnecessary_new
- unnecessary_null_aware_assignments
- unnecessary_null_in_if_null_operators
- unnecessary_nullable_for_final_variable_declarations
- unnecessary_overrides
- unnecessary_parenthesis
- unnecessary_raw_strings
- unnecessary_statements
- unnecessary_string_escapes
- unnecessary_string_interpolations
- unnecessary_this
- unnecessary_to_list_in_spreads
- unrelated_type_equality_checks
- use_build_context_synchronously
- use_colored_box
- use_decorated_box
- use_full_hex_values_for_flutter_colors
- use_function_type_syntax_for_parameters
- use_if_null_to_convert_nulls_to_bools
- use_key_in_widget_constructors
- use_late_for_private_fields_and_variables
- use_named_constants
- use_raw_strings
- use_rethrow_when_possible
- use_setters_to_change_properties
- use_string_buffers
- use_string_in_part_of_directives
- use_super_parameters
- use_truncating_division
- valid_regexps
- void_checks
This page lists diagnostic messages produced by the Dart analyzer, with details about what those messages mean and how you can fix your code. For more information about the analyzer, see Customizing static analysis.
Diagnostics
#The analyzer produces the following diagnostics for code that doesn't conform to the language specification or that might work in unexpected ways.
abi_specific_integer_invalid
#Classes extending 'AbiSpecificInteger' must have exactly one const constructor, no other members, and no type parameters.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class that extends AbiSpecificInteger
doesn't meet all of the following requirements:
- there must be exactly one constructor
- the constructor must be marked
const
- there must not be any members of other than the one constructor
- there must not be any type parameters
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
doesn't define a const constructor:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8()})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor isn't a const
constructor:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8()})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
C();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
defines multiple constructors:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8()})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
const C.zero();
const C.one();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
defines a field:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8()})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
final int i;
const C(this.i);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
has a type parameter:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8()})
final class C<T> extends AbiSpecificInteger { // type parameters
const C();
}
Common fixes
#Change the class so that it meets the requirements of having no type parameters and a single member that is a const
constructor:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8()})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
const C();
}
abi_specific_integer_mapping_extra
#Classes extending 'AbiSpecificInteger' must have exactly one 'AbiSpecificIntegerMapping' annotation specifying the mapping from ABI to a 'NativeType' integer with a fixed size.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class that extends AbiSpecificInteger
has more than one AbiSpecificIntegerMapping
annotation.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there are two AbiSpecificIntegerMapping
annotations on the class C
:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8()})
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.linuxX64 : Uint16()})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
const C();
}
Common fixes
#Remove all but one of the annotations, merging the arguments as appropriate:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8(), Abi.linuxX64 : Uint16()})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
const C();
}
abi_specific_integer_mapping_missing
#Classes extending 'AbiSpecificInteger' must have exactly one 'AbiSpecificIntegerMapping' annotation specifying the mapping from ABI to a 'NativeType' integer with a fixed size.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class that extends AbiSpecificInteger
doesn't have an AbiSpecificIntegerMapping
annotation.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there's no AbiSpecificIntegerMapping
annotation on the class C
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
const C();
}
Common fixes
#Add an AbiSpecificIntegerMapping
annotation to the class:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8()})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
const C();
}
abi_specific_integer_mapping_unsupported
#Invalid mapping to '{0}'; only mappings to 'Int8', 'Int16', 'Int32', 'Int64', 'Uint8', 'Uint16', 'UInt32', and 'Uint64' are supported.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a value in the map argument of an AbiSpecificIntegerMapping
annotation is anything other than one of the following integer types:
Int8
Int16
Int32
Int64
Uint8
Uint16
UInt32
Uint64
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of the map entry is Array<Uint8>
, which isn't a valid integer type:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Array<Uint8>(4)})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
const C();
}
Common fixes
#Use one of the valid types as a value in the map:
import 'dart:ffi';
@AbiSpecificIntegerMapping({Abi.macosX64 : Int8()})
final class C extends AbiSpecificInteger {
const C();
}
abstract_field_initializer
#Abstract fields can't have initializers.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field that has the abstract
modifier also has an initializer.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is marked as abstract
and has an initializer:
abstract class C {
abstract int f = 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is marked as abstract
and there's an initializer in the constructor:
abstract class C {
abstract int f;
C() : f = 0;
}
Common fixes
#If the field must be abstract, then remove the initializer:
abstract class C {
abstract int f;
}
If the field isn't required to be abstract, then remove the keyword:
abstract class C {
int f = 0;
}
abstract_sealed_class
#A 'sealed' class can't be marked 'abstract' because it's already implicitly abstract.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class is declared using both the modifier abstract
and the modifier sealed
. Sealed classes are implicitly abstract, so explicitly using both modifiers is not allowed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
is declared using both abstract
and sealed
:
abstract sealed class C {}
Common fixes
#If the class should be abstract but not sealed, then remove the sealed
modifier:
abstract class C {}
If the class should be both abstract and sealed, then remove the abstract
modifier:
sealed class C {}
abstract_super_member_reference
#The {0} '{1}' is always abstract in the supertype.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an inherited member is referenced using super
, but there is no concrete implementation of the member in the superclass chain. Abstract members can't be invoked.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because B
doesn't inherit a concrete implementation of a
:
abstract class A {
int get a;
}
class B extends A {
int get a => super.a;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the invocation of the abstract member, possibly replacing it with an invocation of a concrete member.
ambiguous_export
#The name '{0}' is defined in the libraries '{1}' and '{2}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when two or more export directives cause the same name to be exported from multiple libraries.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
containing
class C {}
And a file b.dart
containing
class C {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the name C
is being exported from both a.dart
and b.dart
:
export 'a.dart';
export 'b.dart';
Common fixes
#If none of the names in one of the libraries needs to be exported, then remove the unnecessary export directives:
export 'a.dart';
If all of the export directives are needed, then hide the name in all except one of the directives:
export 'a.dart';
export 'b.dart' hide C;
ambiguous_extension_member_access
#A member named '{0}' is defined in '{1}' and '{2}', and neither is more specific.
A member named '{0}' is defined in {1}, and none are more specific.
Description
#When code refers to a member of an object (for example, o.m()
or o.m
or o[i]
) where the static type of o
doesn't declare the member (m
or []
, for example), then the analyzer tries to find the member in an extension. For example, if the member is m
, then the analyzer looks for extensions that declare a member named m
and have an extended type that the static type of o
can be assigned to. When there's more than one such extension in scope, the extension whose extended type is most specific is selected.
The analyzer produces this diagnostic when none of the extensions has an extended type that's more specific than the extended types of all of the other extensions, making the reference to the member ambiguous.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there's no way to choose between the member in E1
and the member in E2
:
extension E1 on String {
int get charCount => 1;
}
extension E2 on String {
int get charCount => 2;
}
void f(String s) {
print(s.charCount);
}
Common fixes
#If you don't need both extensions, then you can delete or hide one of them.
If you need both, then explicitly select the one you want to use by using an extension override:
extension E1 on String {
int get charCount => length;
}
extension E2 on String {
int get charCount => length;
}
void f(String s) {
print(E2(s).charCount);
}
ambiguous_import
#The name '{0}' is defined in the libraries {1}.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a name is referenced that is declared in two or more imported libraries.
Example
#Given a library (a.dart
) that defines a class (C
in this example):
class A {}
class C {}
And a library (b.dart
) that defines a different class with the same name:
class B {}
class C {}
The following code produces this diagnostic:
import 'a.dart';
import 'b.dart';
void f(C c1, C c2) {}
Common fixes
#If any of the libraries aren't needed, then remove the import directives for them:
import 'a.dart';
void f(C c1, C c2) {}
If the name is still defined by more than one library, then add a hide
clause to the import directives for all except one library:
import 'a.dart' hide C;
import 'b.dart';
void f(C c1, C c2) {}
If you must be able to reference more than one of these types, then add a prefix to each of the import directives, and qualify the references with the appropriate prefix:
import 'a.dart' as a;
import 'b.dart' as b;
void f(a.C c1, b.C c2) {}
ambiguous_set_or_map_literal_both
#The literal can't be either a map or a set because it contains at least one literal map entry or a spread operator spreading a 'Map', and at least one element which is neither of these.
Description
#Because map and set literals use the same delimiters ({
and }
), the analyzer looks at the type arguments and the elements to determine which kind of literal you meant. When there are no type arguments, then the analyzer uses the types of the elements. If all of the elements are literal map entries and all of the spread operators are spreading a Map
then it's a Map
. If none of the elements are literal map entries and all of the spread operators are spreading an Iterable
, then it's a Set
. If neither of those is true then it's ambiguous.
The analyzer produces this diagnostic when at least one element is a literal map entry or a spread operator spreading a Map
, and at least one element is neither of these, making it impossible for the analyzer to determine whether you are writing a map literal or a set literal.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
union(Map<String, String> a, List<String> b, Map<String, String> c) =>
{...a, ...b, ...c};
The list b
can only be spread into a set, and the maps a
and c
can only be spread into a map, and the literal can't be both.
Common fixes
#There are two common ways to fix this problem. The first is to remove all of the spread elements of one kind or another, so that the elements are consistent. In this case, that likely means removing the list and deciding what to do about the now unused parameter:
union(Map<String, String> a, List<String> b, Map<String, String> c) =>
{...a, ...c};
The second fix is to change the elements of one kind into elements that are consistent with the other elements. For example, you can add the elements of the list as keys that map to themselves:
union(Map<String, String> a, List<String> b, Map<String, String> c) =>
{...a, for (String s in b) s: s, ...c};
ambiguous_set_or_map_literal_either
#This literal must be either a map or a set, but the elements don't have enough information for type inference to work.
Description
#Because map and set literals use the same delimiters ({
and }
), the analyzer looks at the type arguments and the elements to determine which kind of literal you meant. When there are no type arguments and all of the elements are spread elements (which are allowed in both kinds of literals) then the analyzer uses the types of the expressions that are being spread. If all of the expressions have the type Iterable
, then it's a set literal; if they all have the type Map
, then it's a map literal.
This diagnostic is produced when none of the expressions being spread have a type that allows the analyzer to decide whether you were writing a map literal or a set literal.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
union(a, b) => {...a, ...b};
The problem occurs because there are no type arguments, and there is no information about the type of either a
or b
.
Common fixes
#There are three common ways to fix this problem. The first is to add type arguments to the literal. For example, if the literal is intended to be a map literal, you might write something like this:
union(a, b) => <String, String>{...a, ...b};
The second fix is to add type information so that the expressions have either the type Iterable
or the type Map
. You can add an explicit cast or, in this case, add types to the declarations of the two parameters:
union(List<int> a, List<int> b) => {...a, ...b};
The third fix is to add context information. In this case, that means adding a return type to the function:
Set<String> union(a, b) => {...a, ...b};
In other cases, you might add a type somewhere else. For example, say the original code looks like this:
union(a, b) {
var x = {...a, ...b};
return x;
}
You might add a type annotation on x
, like this:
union(a, b) {
Map<String, String> x = {...a, ...b};
return x;
}
annotation_on_pointer_field
#Fields in a struct class whose type is 'Pointer' shouldn't have any annotations.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field that's declared in a subclass of Struct
and has the type Pointer
also has an annotation associated with it.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field p
, which has the type Pointer
and is declared in a subclass of Struct
, has the annotation @Double()
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Double()
external Pointer<Int8> p;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the annotations from the field:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
external Pointer<Int8> p;
}
argument_must_be_a_constant
#Argument '{0}' must be a constant.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an invocation of either Pointer.asFunction
or DynamicLibrary.lookupFunction
has an isLeaf
argument whose value isn't a constant expression.
The analyzer also produces this diagnostic when an invocation of either Pointer.fromFunction
or NativeCallable.isolateLocal
has an exceptionalReturn
argument whose value isn't a constant expression.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of the isLeaf
argument is a parameter, and hence isn't a constant:
import 'dart:ffi';
int Function(int) fromPointer(
Pointer<NativeFunction<Int8 Function(Int8)>> p, bool isLeaf) {
return p.asFunction(isLeaf: isLeaf);
}
Common fixes
#If there's a suitable constant that can be used, then replace the argument with a constant:
import 'dart:ffi';
const isLeaf = false;
int Function(int) fromPointer(Pointer<NativeFunction<Int8 Function(Int8)>> p) {
return p.asFunction(isLeaf: isLeaf);
}
If there isn't a suitable constant, then replace the argument with a boolean literal:
import 'dart:ffi';
int Function(int) fromPointer(Pointer<NativeFunction<Int8 Function(Int8)>> p) {
return p.asFunction(isLeaf: true);
}
argument_must_be_native
#Argument to 'Native.addressOf' must be annotated with @Native
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the argument passed to Native.addressOf
isn't annotated with the Native
annotation.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the argument to addressOf
is a string, not a field, and strings can't be annotated:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Void Function()>()
external void f();
void g() {
print(Native.addressOf('f'));
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
is being passed to addressOf
but isn't annotated as being Native
:
import 'dart:ffi';
external void f();
void g() {
print(Native.addressOf<NativeFunction<Void Function()>>(f));
}
Common fixes
#If the argument isn't either a field or a function, then replace the argument with a field or function that's annotated with Native
:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Void Function()>()
external void f();
void g() {
print(Native.addressOf<NativeFunction<Void Function()>>(f));
}
If the argument is either a field or a function, then annotate the field of function with Native
:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Void Function()>()
external void f();
void g() {
print(Native.addressOf<NativeFunction<Void Function()>>(f));
}
argument_type_not_assignable
#The argument type '{0}' can't be assigned to the parameter type '{1}'. {2}
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the static type of an argument can't be assigned to the static type of the corresponding parameter.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because a num
can't be assigned to a String
:
String f(String x) => x;
String g(num y) => f(y);
Common fixes
#If possible, rewrite the code so that the static type is assignable. In the example above you might be able to change the type of the parameter y
:
String f(String x) => x;
String g(String y) => f(y);
If that fix isn't possible, then add code to handle the case where the argument value isn't the required type. One approach is to coerce other types to the required type:
String f(String x) => x;
String g(num y) => f(y.toString());
Another approach is to add explicit type tests and fallback code:
String f(String x) => x;
String g(Object y) => f(y is String ? y : '');
If you believe that the runtime type of the argument will always be the same as the static type of the parameter, and you're willing to risk having an exception thrown at runtime if you're wrong, then add an explicit cast:
String f(String x) => x;
String g(num y) => f(y as String);
argument_type_not_assignable_to_error_handler
#The argument type '{0}' can't be assigned to the parameter type '{1} Function(Object)' or '{1} Function(Object, StackTrace)'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an invocation of Future.catchError
has an argument that is a function whose parameters aren't compatible with the arguments that will be passed to the function when it's invoked. The static type of the first argument to catchError
is just Function
, even though the function that is passed in is expected to have either a single parameter of type Object
or two parameters of type Object
and StackTrace
.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the closure being passed to catchError
doesn't take any parameters, but the function is required to take at least one parameter:
void f(Future<int> f) {
f.catchError(() => 0);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the closure being passed to catchError
takes three parameters, but it can't have more than two required parameters:
void f(Future<int> f) {
f.catchError((one, two, three) => 0);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because even though the closure being passed to catchError
takes one parameter, the closure doesn't have a type that is compatible with Object
:
void f(Future<int> f) {
f.catchError((String error) => 0);
}
Common fixes
#Change the function being passed to catchError
so that it has either one or two required parameters, and the parameters have the required types:
void f(Future<int> f) {
f.catchError((Object error) => 0);
}
assert_in_redirecting_constructor
#A redirecting constructor can't have an 'assert' initializer.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a redirecting constructor (a constructor that redirects to another constructor in the same class) has an assert in the initializer list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the unnamed constructor is a redirecting constructor and also has an assert in the initializer list:
class C {
C(int x) : assert(x > 0), this.name();
C.name() {}
}
Common fixes
#If the assert isn't needed, then remove it:
class C {
C(int x) : this.name();
C.name() {}
}
If the assert is needed, then convert the constructor into a factory constructor:
class C {
factory C(int x) {
assert(x > 0);
return C.name();
}
C.name() {}
}
asset_directory_does_not_exist
#The asset directory '{0}' doesn't exist.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an asset list contains a value referencing a directory that doesn't exist.
Example
#Assuming that the directory assets
doesn't exist, the following code produces this diagnostic because it's listed as a directory containing assets:
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- assets/
Common fixes
#If the path is correct, then create a directory at that path.
If the path isn't correct, then change the path to match the path of the directory containing the assets.
asset_does_not_exist
#The asset file '{0}' doesn't exist.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an asset list contains a value referencing a file that doesn't exist.
Example
#Assuming that the file doesNotExist.gif
doesn't exist, the following code produces this diagnostic because it's listed as an asset:
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- doesNotExist.gif
Common fixes
#If the path is correct, then create a file at that path.
If the path isn't correct, then change the path to match the path of the file containing the asset.
asset_field_not_list
#The value of the 'assets' field is expected to be a list of relative file paths.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of the assets
key isn't a list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of the assets
key is a string when a list is expected:
name: example
flutter:
assets: assets/
Common fixes
#Change the value of the asset list so that it's a list:
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- assets/
asset_missing_path
#Asset map entry must contain a 'path' field.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an asset map is missing a path
value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the asset map is missing a path
value:
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- flavors:
- premium
Common fixes
#Change the asset map so that it contains a path
field with a string value (a valid POSIX-style file path):
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- path: assets/image.gif
flavors:
- premium
asset_not_string
#Assets are required to be file paths (strings).
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an assets
list contains a value that isn't a string.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the assets
list contains a map:
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- image.gif: true
Common fixes
#Change the assets
list so that it only contains valid POSIX-style file paths:
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- assets/image.gif
asset_not_string_or_map
#An asset value is required to be a file path (string) or map.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an asset value isn't a string or a map.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the asset value is a list:
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- [one, two, three]
Common fixes
#If you need to specify more than just the path to the asset, then replace the value with a map with a path
key (a valid POSIX-style file path):
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- path: assets/image.gif
flavors:
- premium
If you only need to specify the path, then replace the value with the path to the asset (a valid POSIX-style file path):
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- assets/image.gif
asset_path_not_string
#Asset paths are required to be file paths (strings).
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an asset map contains a path
value that isn't a string.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the asset map contains a path
value which is a list:
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- path: [one, two, three]
flavors:
- premium
Common fixes
#Change the asset
map so that it contains a path
value which is a string (a valid POSIX-style file path):
name: example
flutter:
assets:
- path: image.gif
flavors:
- premium
assignment_of_do_not_store
#'{0}' is marked 'doNotStore' and shouldn't be assigned to a field or top-level variable.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of a function (including methods and getters) that is explicitly or implicitly marked by the doNotStore
annotation is stored in either a field or top-level variable.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of the function f
is being stored in the top-level variable x
:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@doNotStore
int f() => 1;
var x = f();
Common fixes
#Replace references to the field or variable with invocations of the function producing the value.
assignment_to_const
#Constant variables can't be assigned a value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds an assignment to a top-level variable, a static field, or a local variable that has the const
modifier. The value of a compile-time constant can't be changed at runtime.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because c
is being assigned a value even though it has the const
modifier:
const c = 0;
void f() {
c = 1;
print(c);
}
Common fixes
#If the variable must be assignable, then remove the const
modifier:
var c = 0;
void f() {
c = 1;
print(c);
}
If the constant shouldn't be changed, then either remove the assignment or use a local variable in place of references to the constant:
const c = 0;
void f() {
var v = 1;
print(v);
}
assignment_to_final
#'{0}' can't be used as a setter because it's final.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds an invocation of a setter, but there's no setter because the field with the same name was declared to be final
or const
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because v
is final:
class C {
final v = 0;
}
f(C c) {
c.v = 1;
}
Common fixes
#If you need to be able to set the value of the field, then remove the modifier final
from the field:
class C {
int v = 0;
}
f(C c) {
c.v = 1;
}
assignment_to_final_local
#The final variable '{0}' can only be set once.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a local variable that was declared to be final is assigned after it was initialized.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
is final, so it can't have a value assigned to it after it was initialized:
void f() {
final x = 0;
x = 3;
print(x);
}
Common fixes
#Remove the keyword final
, and replace it with var
if there's no type annotation:
void f() {
var x = 0;
x = 3;
print(x);
}
assignment_to_final_no_setter
#There isn't a setter named '{0}' in class '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a reference to a setter is found; there is no setter defined for the type; but there is a getter defined with the same name.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there is no setter named x
in C
, but there is a getter named x
:
class C {
int get x => 0;
set y(int p) {}
}
void f(C c) {
c.x = 1;
}
Common fixes
#If you want to invoke an existing setter, then correct the name:
class C {
int get x => 0;
set y(int p) {}
}
void f(C c) {
c.y = 1;
}
If you want to invoke the setter but it just doesn't exist yet, then declare it:
class C {
int get x => 0;
set x(int p) {}
set y(int p) {}
}
void f(C c) {
c.x = 1;
}
assignment_to_function
#Functions can't be assigned a value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a function appears on the left-hand side of an assignment expression.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the assignment to the function f
is invalid:
void f() {}
void g() {
f = () {};
}
Common fixes
#If the right-hand side should be assigned to something else, such as a local variable, then change the left-hand side:
void f() {}
void g() {
var x = () {};
print(x);
}
If the intent is to change the implementation of the function, then define a function-valued variable instead of a function:
void Function() f = () {};
void g() {
f = () {};
}
assignment_to_method
#Methods can't be assigned a value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the target of an assignment is a method.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
can't be assigned a value because it's a method:
class C {
void f() {}
void g() {
f = null;
}
}
Common fixes
#Rewrite the code so that there isn't an assignment to a method.
assignment_to_type
#Types can't be assigned a value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a type name appears on the left-hand side of an assignment expression.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the assignment to the class C
is invalid:
class C {}
void f() {
C = null;
}
Common fixes
#If the right-hand side should be assigned to something else, such as a local variable, then change the left-hand side:
void f() {}
void g() {
var c = null;
print(c);
}
async_for_in_wrong_context
#The async for-in loop can only be used in an async function.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an async for-in loop is found in a function or method whose body isn't marked as being either async
or async*
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the body of f
isn't marked as being either async
or async*
, but f
contains an async for-in loop:
void f(list) {
await for (var e in list) {
print(e);
}
}
Common fixes
#If the function should return a Future
, then mark the body with async
:
Future<void> f(list) async {
await for (var e in list) {
print(e);
}
}
If the function should return a Stream
of values, then mark the body with async*
:
Stream<void> f(list) async* {
await for (var e in list) {
print(e);
}
}
If the function should be synchronous, then remove the await
before the loop:
void f(list) {
for (var e in list) {
print(e);
}
}
await_in_late_local_variable_initializer
#The 'await' expression can't be used in a 'late' local variable's initializer.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a local variable that has the late
modifier uses an await
expression in the initializer.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because an await
expression is used in the initializer for v
, a local variable that is marked late
:
Future<int> f() async {
late var v = await 42;
return v;
}
Common fixes
#If the initializer can be rewritten to not use await
, then rewrite it:
Future<int> f() async {
late var v = 42;
return v;
}
If the initializer can't be rewritten, then remove the late
modifier:
Future<int> f() async {
var v = await 42;
return v;
}
await_of_incompatible_type
#The 'await' expression can't be used for an expression with an extension type that is not a subtype of 'Future'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type of the expression in an await
expression is an extension type, and the extension type isn't a subclass of Future
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension type E
isn't a subclass of Future
:
extension type E(int i) {}
void f(E e) async {
await e;
}
Common fixes
#If the extension type is correctly defined, then remove the await
:
extension type E(int i) {}
void f(E e) {
e;
}
If the extension type is intended to be awaitable, then add Future
(or a subtype of Future
) to the implements
clause (adding an implements
clause if there isn't one already), and make the representation type match:
extension type E(Future<int> i) implements Future<int> {}
void f(E e) async {
await e;
}
body_might_complete_normally
#The body might complete normally, causing 'null' to be returned, but the return type, '{0}', is a potentially non-nullable type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function has a return type that's potentially non-nullable but would implicitly return null
if control reached the end of the function.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
has an implicit return of null
inserted at the end of the method, but the method is declared to not return null
:
class C {
int m(int t) {
print(t);
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
has an implicit return of null
inserted at the end of the method, but because the class C
can be instantiated with a non-nullable type argument, the method is effectively declared to not return null
:
class C<T> {
T m(T t) {
print(t);
}
}
Common fixes
#If there's a reasonable value that can be returned, then add a return
statement at the end of the method:
class C<T> {
T m(T t) {
print(t);
return t;
}
}
If the method won't reach the implicit return, then add a throw
at the end of the method:
class C<T> {
T m(T t) {
print(t);
throw '';
}
}
If the method intentionally returns null
at the end, then add an explicit return of null
at the end of the method and change the return type so that it's valid to return null
:
class C<T> {
T? m(T t) {
print(t);
return null;
}
}
body_might_complete_normally_catch_error
#This 'onError' handler must return a value assignable to '{0}', but ends without returning a value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the closure passed to the onError
parameter of the Future.catchError
method is required to return a non-null
value (because of the Future
s type argument) but can implicitly return null
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the closure passed to the catchError
method is required to return an int
but doesn't end with an explicit return
, causing it to implicitly return null
:
void g(Future<int> f) {
f.catchError((e, st) {});
}
Common fixes
#If the closure should sometimes return a non-null
value, then add an explicit return to the closure:
void g(Future<int> f) {
f.catchError((e, st) {
return -1;
});
}
If the closure should always return null
, then change the type argument of the Future
to be either void
or Null
:
void g(Future<void> f) {
f.catchError((e, st) {});
}
body_might_complete_normally_nullable
#This function has a nullable return type of '{0}', but ends without returning a value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function can implicitly return null
by falling off the end. While this is valid Dart code, it's better for the return of null
to be explicit.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
implicitly returns null
:
String? f() {}
Common fixes
#If the return of null
is intentional, then make it explicit:
String? f() {
return null;
}
If the function should return a non-null value along that path, then add the missing return statement:
String? f() {
return '';
}
break_label_on_switch_member
#A break label resolves to the 'case' or 'default' statement.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a break in a case clause inside a switch statement has a label that is associated with another case clause.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the label l
is associated with the case clause for 0
:
void f(int i) {
switch (i) {
l: case 0:
break;
case 1:
break l;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the intent is to transfer control to the statement after the switch, then remove the label from the break statement:
void f(int i) {
switch (i) {
case 0:
break;
case 1:
break;
}
}
If the intent is to transfer control to a different case block, then use continue
rather than break
:
void f(int i) {
switch (i) {
l: case 0:
break;
case 1:
continue l;
}
}
built_in_identifier_as_type
#The built-in identifier '{0}' can't be used as a type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a built-in identifier is used where a type name is expected.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because import
can't be used as a type because it's a built-in identifier:
import<int> x;
Common fixes
#Replace the built-in identifier with the name of a valid type:
List<int> x;
built_in_identifier_in_declaration
#The built-in identifier '{0}' can't be used as a prefix name.
The built-in identifier '{0}' can't be used as a type name.
The built-in identifier '{0}' can't be used as a type parameter name.
The built-in identifier '{0}' can't be used as a typedef name.
The built-in identifier '{0}' can't be used as an extension name.
The built-in identifier '{0}' can't be used as an extension type name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name used in the declaration of a class, extension, mixin, typedef, type parameter, or import prefix is a built-in identifier. Built-in identifiers can't be used to name any of these kinds of declarations.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because mixin
is a built-in identifier:
extension mixin on int {}
Common fixes
#Choose a different name for the declaration.
case_block_not_terminated
#The last statement of the 'case' should be 'break', 'continue', 'rethrow', 'return', or 'throw'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the last statement in a case
block isn't one of the required terminators: break
, continue
, rethrow
, return
, or throw
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the case
block ends with an assignment:
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case 0:
x += 2;
default:
x += 1;
}
}
Common fixes
#Add one of the required terminators:
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case 0:
x += 2;
break;
default:
x += 1;
}
}
case_expression_type_implements_equals
#The switch case expression type '{0}' can't override the '==' operator.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type of the expression following the keyword case
has an implementation of the ==
operator other than the one in Object
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the expression following the keyword case
(C(0)
) has the type C
, and the class C
overrides the ==
operator:
class C {
final int value;
const C(this.value);
bool operator ==(Object other) {
return false;
}
}
void f(C c) {
switch (c) {
case C(0):
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#If there isn't a strong reason not to do so, then rewrite the code to use an if-else structure:
class C {
final int value;
const C(this.value);
bool operator ==(Object other) {
return false;
}
}
void f(C c) {
if (c == C(0)) {
// ...
}
}
If you can't rewrite the switch statement and the implementation of ==
isn't necessary, then remove it:
class C {
final int value;
const C(this.value);
}
void f(C c) {
switch (c) {
case C(0):
break;
}
}
If you can't rewrite the switch statement and you can't remove the definition of ==
, then find some other value that can be used to control the switch:
class C {
final int value;
const C(this.value);
bool operator ==(Object other) {
return false;
}
}
void f(C c) {
switch (c.value) {
case 0:
break;
}
}
case_expression_type_is_not_switch_expression_subtype
#The switch case expression type '{0}' must be a subtype of the switch expression type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the expression following case
in a switch
statement has a static type that isn't a subtype of the static type of the expression following switch
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because 1
is an int
, which isn't a subtype of String
(the type of s
):
void f(String s) {
switch (s) {
case 1:
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the value of the case
expression is wrong, then change the case
expression so that it has the required type:
void f(String s) {
switch (s) {
case '1':
break;
}
}
If the value of the case
expression is correct, then change the switch
expression to have the required type:
void f(int s) {
switch (s) {
case 1:
break;
}
}
cast_from_nullable_always_fails
#This cast will always throw an exception because the nullable local variable '{0}' is not assigned.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a local variable that has a nullable type hasn't been assigned and is cast to a non-nullable type. Because the variable hasn't been assigned it has the default value of null
, causing the cast to throw an exception.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable x
is cast to a non-nullable type (int
) when it's known to have the value null
:
void f() {
num? x;
x as int;
print(x);
}
Common fixes
#If the variable is expected to have a value before the cast, then add an initializer or an assignment:
void f() {
num? x = 3;
x as int;
print(x);
}
If the variable isn't expected to be assigned, then remove the cast:
void f() {
num? x;
print(x);
}
cast_from_null_always_fails
#This cast always throws an exception because the expression always evaluates to 'null'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an expression whose type is Null
is being cast to a non-nullable type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because n
is known to always be null
, but it's being cast to a non-nullable type:
void f(Null n) {
n as int;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary cast:
void f(Null n) {
n;
}
cast_to_non_type
#The name '{0}' isn't a type, so it can't be used in an 'as' expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name following the as
in a cast expression is defined to be something other than a type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
is a variable, not a type:
num x = 0;
int y = x as x;
Common fixes
#Replace the name with the name of a type:
num x = 0;
int y = x as int;
class_used_as_mixin
#The class '{0}' can't be used as a mixin because it's neither a mixin class nor a mixin.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class that is neither a mixin class
nor a mixin
is used in a with
clause.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class M
is being used as a mixin, but it isn't defined as a mixin class
:
class M {}
class C with M {}
Common fixes
#If the class can be a pure mixin, then change class
to mixin
:
mixin M {}
class C with M {}
If the class needs to be both a class and a mixin, then add mixin
:
mixin class M {}
class C with M {}
collection_element_from_deferred_library
#Constant values from a deferred library can't be used as keys in a 'const' map literal.
Constant values from a deferred library can't be used as values in a 'const' constructor.
Constant values from a deferred library can't be used as values in a 'const' list literal.
Constant values from a deferred library can't be used as values in a 'const' map literal.
Constant values from a deferred library can't be used as values in a 'const' set literal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a collection literal that is either explicitly (because it's prefixed by the const
keyword) or implicitly (because it appears in a constant context) a constant contains a value that is declared in a library that is imported using a deferred import. Constants are evaluated at compile time, and values from deferred libraries aren't available at compile time.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that defines the constant zero
:
const zero = 0;
The following code produces this diagnostic because the constant list literal contains a.zero
, which is imported using a deferred
import:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
var l = const [a.zero];
Common fixes
#If the collection literal isn't required to be constant, then remove the const
keyword:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
var l = [a.zero];
If the collection is required to be constant and the imported constant must be referenced, then remove the keyword deferred
from the import:
import 'a.dart' as a;
var l = const [a.zero];
If you don't need to reference the constant, then replace it with a suitable value:
var l = const [0];
compound_implements_finalizable
#The class '{0}' can't implement Finalizable.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a subclass of either Struct
or Union
implements Finalizable
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class S
implements Finalizable
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class S extends Struct implements Finalizable {
external Pointer notEmpty;
}
Common fixes
#Try removing the implements clause from the class:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class S extends Struct {
external Pointer notEmpty;
}
concrete_class_has_enum_superinterface
#Concrete classes can't have 'Enum' as a superinterface.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a concrete class indirectly has the class Enum
as a superinterface.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the concrete class B
has Enum
as a superinterface as a result of implementing A
:
abstract class A implements Enum {}
class B implements A {}
Common fixes
#If the implemented class isn't the class you intend to implement, then change it:
abstract class A implements Enum {}
class B implements C {}
class C {}
If the implemented class can be changed to not implement Enum
, then do so:
abstract class A {}
class B implements A {}
If the implemented class can't be changed to not implement Enum
, then remove it from the implements
clause:
abstract class A implements Enum {}
class B {}
concrete_class_with_abstract_member
#'{0}' must have a method body because '{1}' isn't abstract.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member of a concrete class is found that doesn't have a concrete implementation. Concrete classes aren't allowed to contain abstract members.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because m
is an abstract method but C
isn't an abstract class:
class C {
void m();
}
Common fixes
#If it's valid to create instances of the class, provide an implementation for the member:
class C {
void m() {}
}
If it isn't valid to create instances of the class, mark the class as being abstract:
abstract class C {
void m();
}
conflicting_constructor_and_static_member
#'{0}' can't be used to name both a constructor and a static field in this class.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a constructor and a static getter in this class.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a constructor and a static method in this class.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a constructor and a static setter in this class.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a named constructor and either a static method or static field have the same name. Both are accessed using the name of the class, so having the same name makes the reference ambiguous.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the static field foo
and the named constructor foo
have the same name:
class C {
C.foo();
static int foo = 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the static method foo
and the named constructor foo
have the same name:
class C {
C.foo();
static void foo() {}
}
Common fixes
#Rename either the member or the constructor.
conflicting_generic_interfaces
#The {0} '{1}' can't implement both '{2}' and '{3}' because the type arguments are different.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class attempts to implement a generic interface multiple times, and the values of the type arguments aren't the same.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because C
is defined to implement both I<int>
(because it extends A
) and I<String>
(because it implementsB
), but int
and String
aren't the same type:
class I<T> {}
class A implements I<int> {}
class B implements I<String> {}
class C extends A implements B {}
Common fixes
#Rework the type hierarchy to avoid this situation. For example, you might make one or both of the inherited types generic so that C
can specify the same type for both type arguments:
class I<T> {}
class A<S> implements I<S> {}
class B implements I<String> {}
class C extends A<String> implements B {}
conflicting_type_variable_and_container
#'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and the class in which the type parameter is defined.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and the enum in which the type parameter is defined.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and the extension in which the type parameter is defined.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and the extension type in which the type parameter is defined.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and the mixin in which the type parameter is defined.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class, mixin, or extension declaration declares a type parameter with the same name as the class, mixin, or extension that declares it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type parameter C
has the same name as the class C
of which it's a part:
class C<C> {}
Common fixes
#Rename either the type parameter, or the class, mixin, or extension:
class C<T> {}
conflicting_type_variable_and_member
#'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and a member in this class.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and a member in this enum.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and a member in this extension type.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and a member in this extension.
'{0}' can't be used to name both a type parameter and a member in this mixin.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class, mixin, or extension declaration declares a type parameter with the same name as one of the members of the class, mixin, or extension that declares it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type parameter T
has the same name as the field T
:
class C<T> {
int T = 0;
}
Common fixes
#Rename either the type parameter or the member with which it conflicts:
class C<T> {
int total = 0;
}
constant_pattern_never_matches_value_type
#The matched value type '{0}' can never be equal to this constant of type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constant pattern can never match the value it's being tested against because the type of the constant is known to never match the type of the value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of the constant pattern (true)
is bool
, and the type of the value being matched (x
) is int
, and a Boolean can never match an integer:
void f(int x) {
if (x case true) {}
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the value is correct, then rewrite the pattern to be compatible:
void f(int x) {
if (x case 3) {}
}
If the type of the constant is correct, then rewrite the value to be compatible:
void f(bool x) {
if (x case true) {}
}
constant_pattern_with_non_constant_expression
#The expression of a constant pattern must be a valid constant.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constant pattern has an expression that isn't a valid constant.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constant pattern i
isn't a constant:
void f(int e, int i) {
switch (e) {
case i:
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the value that should be matched is known, then replace the expression with a constant:
void f(int e, int i) {
switch (e) {
case 0:
break;
}
}
If the value that should be matched isn't known, then rewrite the code to not use a pattern:
void f(int e, int i) {
if (e == i) {}
}
const_constructor_param_type_mismatch
#A value of type '{0}' can't be assigned to a parameter of type '{1}' in a const constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the runtime type of a constant value can't be assigned to the static type of a constant constructor's parameter.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the runtime type of i
is int
, which can't be assigned to the static type of s
:
class C {
final String s;
const C(this.s);
}
const dynamic i = 0;
void f() {
const C(i);
}
Common fixes
#Pass a value of the correct type to the constructor:
class C {
final String s;
const C(this.s);
}
const dynamic i = 0;
void f() {
const C('$i');
}
const_constructor_with_field_initialized_by_non_const
#Can't define the 'const' constructor because the field '{0}' is initialized with a non-constant value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor has the keyword const
, but a field in the class is initialized to a non-constant value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field s
is initialized to a non-constant value:
String x = '3';
class C {
final String s = x;
const C();
}
Common fixes
#If the field can be initialized to a constant value, then change the initializer to a constant expression:
class C {
final String s = '3';
const C();
}
If the field can't be initialized to a constant value, then remove the keyword const
from the constructor:
String x = '3';
class C {
final String s = x;
C();
}
const_constructor_with_non_const_super
#A constant constructor can't call a non-constant super constructor of '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor that is marked as const
invokes a constructor from its superclass that isn't marked as const
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the const
constructor in B
invokes the constructor nonConst
from the class A
, and the superclass constructor isn't a const
constructor:
class A {
const A();
A.nonConst();
}
class B extends A {
const B() : super.nonConst();
}
Common fixes
#If it isn't essential to invoke the superclass constructor that is currently being invoked, then invoke a constant constructor from the superclass:
class A {
const A();
A.nonConst();
}
class B extends A {
const B() : super();
}
If it's essential that the current constructor be invoked and if you can modify it, then add const
to the constructor in the superclass:
class A {
const A();
const A.nonConst();
}
class B extends A {
const B() : super.nonConst();
}
If it's essential that the current constructor be invoked and you can't modify it, then remove const
from the constructor in the subclass:
class A {
const A();
A.nonConst();
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.nonConst();
}
const_constructor_with_non_final_field
#Can't define a const constructor for a class with non-final fields.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor is marked as a const constructor, but the constructor is defined in a class that has at least one non-final instance field (either directly or by inheritance).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field x
isn't final:
class C {
int x;
const C(this.x);
}
Common fixes
#If it's possible to mark all of the fields as final, then do so:
class C {
final int x;
const C(this.x);
}
If it isn't possible to mark all of the fields as final, then remove the keyword const
from the constructor:
class C {
int x;
C(this.x);
}
const_deferred_class
#Deferred classes can't be created with 'const'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class from a library that is imported using a deferred import is used to create a const
object. Constants are evaluated at compile time, and classes from deferred libraries aren't available at compile time.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because it attempts to create a const
instance of a class from a deferred library:
import 'dart:convert' deferred as convert;
const json2 = convert.JsonCodec();
Common fixes
#If the object isn't required to be a constant, then change the code so that a non-constant instance is created:
import 'dart:convert' deferred as convert;
final json2 = convert.JsonCodec();
If the object must be a constant, then remove deferred
from the import directive:
import 'dart:convert' as convert;
const json2 = convert.JsonCodec();
const_initialized_with_non_constant_value
#Const variables must be initialized with a constant value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a value that isn't statically known to be a constant is assigned to a variable that's declared to be a const
variable.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
isn't declared to be const
:
var x = 0;
const y = x;
Common fixes
#If the value being assigned can be declared to be const
, then change the declaration:
const x = 0;
const y = x;
If the value can't be declared to be const
, then remove the const
modifier from the variable, possibly using final
in its place:
var x = 0;
final y = x;
const_initialized_with_non_constant_value_from_deferred_library
#Constant values from a deferred library can't be used to initialize a 'const' variable.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a const
variable is initialized using a const
variable from a library that is imported using a deferred import. Constants are evaluated at compile time, and values from deferred libraries aren't available at compile time.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable pi
is being initialized using the constant math.pi
from the library dart:math
, and dart:math
is imported as a deferred library:
import 'dart:math' deferred as math;
const pi = math.pi;
Common fixes
#If you need to reference the value of the constant from the imported library, then remove the keyword deferred
:
import 'dart:math' as math;
const pi = math.pi;
If you don't need to reference the imported constant, then remove the reference:
const pi = 3.14;
const_instance_field
#Only static fields can be declared as const.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance field is marked as being const.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is an instance field:
class C {
const int f = 3;
}
Common fixes
#If the field needs to be an instance field, then remove the keyword const
, or replace it with final
:
class C {
final int f = 3;
}
If the field really should be a const field, then make it a static field:
class C {
static const int f = 3;
}
const_map_key_not_primitive_equality
#The type of a key in a constant map can't override the '==' operator, or 'hashCode', but the class '{0}' does.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the class of object used as a key in a constant map literal implements either the ==
operator, the getter hashCode
, or both. The implementation of constant maps uses both the ==
operator and the hashCode
getter, so any implementation other than the ones inherited from Object
requires executing arbitrary code at compile time, which isn't supported.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constant map contains a key whose type is C
, and the class C
overrides the implementation of ==
:
class C {
const C();
bool operator ==(Object other) => true;
}
const map = {C() : 0};
The following code produces this diagnostic because the constant map contains a key whose type is C
, and the class C
overrides the implementation of hashCode
:
class C {
const C();
int get hashCode => 3;
}
const map = {C() : 0};
Common fixes
#If you can remove the implementation of ==
and hashCode
from the class, then do so:
class C {
const C();
}
const map = {C() : 0};
If you can't remove the implementation of ==
and hashCode
from the class, then make the map non-constant:
class C {
const C();
bool operator ==(Object other) => true;
}
final map = {C() : 0};
const_not_initialized
#The constant '{0}' must be initialized.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a variable that is declared to be a constant doesn't have an initializer.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because c
isn't initialized:
const c;
Common fixes
#Add an initializer:
const c = 'c';
const_set_element_not_primitive_equality
#const_set_element_type_implements_equals
)
An element in a constant set can't override the '==' operator, or 'hashCode', but the type '{0}' does.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the class of object used as an element in a constant set literal implements either the ==
operator, the getter hashCode
, or both. The implementation of constant sets uses both the ==
operator and the hashCode
getter, so any implementation other than the ones inherited from Object
requires executing arbitrary code at compile time, which isn't supported.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constant set contains an element whose type is C
, and the class C
overrides the implementation of ==
:
class C {
const C();
bool operator ==(Object other) => true;
}
const set = {C()};
The following code produces this diagnostic because the constant set contains an element whose type is C
, and the class C
overrides the implementation of hashCode
:
class C {
const C();
int get hashCode => 3;
}
const map = {C()};
Common fixes
#If you can remove the implementation of ==
and hashCode
from the class, then do so:
class C {
const C();
}
const set = {C()};
If you can't remove the implementation of ==
and hashCode
from the class, then make the set non-constant:
class C {
const C();
bool operator ==(Object other) => true;
}
final set = {C()};
const_spread_expected_list_or_set
#A list or a set is expected in this spread.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the expression of a spread operator in a constant list or set evaluates to something other than a list or a set.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of list1
is null
, which is neither a list nor a set:
const dynamic list1 = 42;
const List<int> list2 = [...list1];
Common fixes
#Change the expression to something that evaluates to either a constant list or a constant set:
const dynamic list1 = [42];
const List<int> list2 = [...list1];
const_spread_expected_map
#A map is expected in this spread.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the expression of a spread operator in a constant map evaluates to something other than a map.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of map1
is null
, which isn't a map:
const dynamic map1 = 42;
const Map<String, int> map2 = {...map1};
Common fixes
#Change the expression to something that evaluates to a constant map:
const dynamic map1 = {'answer': 42};
const Map<String, int> map2 = {...map1};
const_with_non_const
#The constructor being called isn't a const constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the keyword const
is used to invoke a constructor that isn't marked with const
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor in A
isn't a const constructor:
class A {
A();
}
A f() => const A();
Common fixes
#If it's desirable and possible to make the class a constant class (by making all of the fields of the class, including inherited fields, final), then add the keyword const
to the constructor:
class A {
const A();
}
A f() => const A();
Otherwise, remove the keyword const
:
class A {
A();
}
A f() => A();
const_with_non_constant_argument
#Arguments of a constant creation must be constant expressions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a const constructor is invoked with an argument that isn't a constant expression.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because i
isn't a constant:
class C {
final int i;
const C(this.i);
}
C f(int i) => const C(i);
Common fixes
#Either make all of the arguments constant expressions, or remove the const
keyword to use the non-constant form of the constructor:
class C {
final int i;
const C(this.i);
}
C f(int i) => C(i);
const_with_type_parameters
#A constant constructor tearoff can't use a type parameter as a type argument.
A constant creation can't use a type parameter as a type argument.
A constant function tearoff can't use a type parameter as a type argument.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type parameter is used as a type argument in a const
invocation of a constructor. This isn't allowed because the value of the type parameter (the actual type that will be used at runtime) can't be known at compile time.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type parameter T
is being used as a type argument when creating a constant:
class C<T> {
const C();
}
C<T> newC<T>() => const C<T>();
Common fixes
#If the type that will be used for the type parameter can be known at compile time, then remove the use of the type parameter:
class C<T> {
const C();
}
C<int> newC() => const C<int>();
If the type that will be used for the type parameter can't be known until runtime, then remove the keyword const
:
class C<T> {
const C();
}
C<T> newC<T>() => C<T>();
continue_label_invalid
#continue_label_on_switch
)
The label used in a 'continue' statement must be defined on either a loop or a switch member.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the label in a continue
statement resolves to a label on a switch
statement.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the label l
, used to label a switch
statement, is used in the continue
statement:
void f(int i) {
l: switch (i) {
case 0:
continue l;
}
}
Common fixes
#Find a different way to achieve the control flow you need; for example, by introducing a loop that re-executes the switch
statement.
creation_of_struct_or_union
#Subclasses of 'Struct' and 'Union' are backed by native memory, and can't be instantiated by a generative constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a subclass of either Struct
or Union
is instantiated using a generative constructor.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
is being instantiated using a generative constructor:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int32()
external int a;
}
void f() {
C();
}
Common fixes
#If you need to allocate the structure described by the class, then use the ffi
package to do so:
import 'dart:ffi';
import 'package:ffi/ffi.dart';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int32()
external int a;
}
void f() {
final pointer = calloc.allocate<C>(4);
final c = pointer.ref;
print(c);
calloc.free(pointer);
}
creation_with_non_type
#The name '{0}' isn't a class.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance creation using either new
or const
specifies a name that isn't defined as a class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is a function rather than a class:
int f() => 0;
void g() {
new f();
}
Common fixes
#If a class should be created, then replace the invalid name with the name of a valid class:
int f() => 0;
void g() {
new Object();
}
If the name is the name of a function and you want that function to be invoked, then remove the new
or const
keyword:
int f() => 0;
void g() {
f();
}
dead_code
#Dead code.
Dead code: The assigned-to wildcard variable is marked late and can never be referenced so this initializer will never be evaluated.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when code is found that won't be executed because execution will never reach the code.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the invocation of print
occurs after the function has returned:
void f() {
return;
print('here');
}
Common fixes
#If the code isn't needed, then remove it:
void f() {
return;
}
If the code needs to be executed, then either move the code to a place where it will be executed:
void f() {
print('here');
return;
}
Or, rewrite the code before it, so that it can be reached:
void f({bool skipPrinting = true}) {
if (skipPrinting) {
return;
}
print('here');
}
dead_code_catch_following_catch
#Dead code: Catch clauses after a 'catch (e)' or an 'on Object catch (e)' are never reached.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a catch
clause is found that can't be executed because it's after a catch
clause of the form catch (e)
or on Object catch (e)
. The first catch
clause that matches the thrown object is selected, and both of those forms will match any object, so no catch
clauses that follow them will be selected.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
void f() {
try {
} catch (e) {
} on String {
}
}
Common fixes
#If the clause should be selectable, then move the clause before the general clause:
void f() {
try {
} on String {
} catch (e) {
}
}
If the clause doesn't need to be selectable, then remove it:
void f() {
try {
} catch (e) {
}
}
dead_code_on_catch_subtype
#Dead code: This on-catch block won't be executed because '{0}' is a subtype of '{1}' and hence will have been caught already.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a catch
clause is found that can't be executed because it is after a catch
clause that catches either the same type or a supertype of the clause's type. The first catch
clause that matches the thrown object is selected, and the earlier clause always matches anything matchable by the highlighted clause, so the highlighted clause will never be selected.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
void f() {
try {
} on num {
} on int {
}
}
Common fixes
#If the clause should be selectable, then move the clause before the general clause:
void f() {
try {
} on int {
} on num {
}
}
If the clause doesn't need to be selectable, then remove it:
void f() {
try {
} on num {
}
}
dead_null_aware_expression
#The left operand can't be null, so the right operand is never executed.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic in two cases.
The first is when the left operand of an ??
operator can't be null
. The right operand is only evaluated if the left operand has the value null
, and because the left operand can't be null
, the right operand is never evaluated.
The second is when the left-hand side of an assignment using the ??=
operator can't be null
. The right-hand side is only evaluated if the left-hand side has the value null
, and because the left-hand side can't be null
, the right-hand side is never evaluated.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
can't be null
:
int f(int x) {
return x ?? 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because f
can't be null
:
class C {
int f = -1;
void m(int x) {
f ??= x;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the diagnostic is reported for an ??
operator, then remove the ??
operator and the right operand:
int f(int x) {
return x;
}
If the diagnostic is reported for an assignment, and the assignment isn't needed, then remove the assignment:
class C {
int f = -1;
void m(int x) {
}
}
If the assignment is needed, but should be based on a different condition, then rewrite the code to use =
and the different condition:
class C {
int f = -1;
void m(int x) {
if (f < 0) {
f = x;
}
}
}
default_list_constructor
#The default 'List' constructor isn't available when null safety is enabled.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds a use of the default constructor for the class List
in code that has opted in to null safety.
Example
#Assuming the following code is opted in to null safety, it produces this diagnostic because it uses the default List
constructor:
var l = List<int>();
Common fixes
#If no initial size is provided, then convert the code to use a list literal:
var l = <int>[];
If an initial size needs to be provided and there is a single reasonable initial value for the elements, then use List.filled
:
var l = List.filled(3, 0);
If an initial size needs to be provided but each element needs to be computed, then use List.generate
:
var l = List.generate(3, (i) => i);
default_value_in_function_type
#Parameters in a function type can't have default values.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a function type associated with a parameter includes optional parameters that have a default value. This isn't allowed because the default values of parameters aren't part of the function's type, and therefore including them doesn't provide any value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter p
has a default value even though it's part of the type of the parameter g
:
void f(void Function([int p = 0]) g) {
}
Common fixes
#Remove the default value from the function-type's parameter:
void f(void Function([int p]) g) {
}
default_value_in_redirecting_factory_constructor
#Default values aren't allowed in factory constructors that redirect to another constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a factory constructor that redirects to another constructor specifies a default value for an optional parameter.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the factory constructor in A
has a default value for the optional parameter x
:
class A {
factory A([int x = 0]) = B;
}
class B implements A {
B([int x = 1]) {}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the default value from the factory constructor:
class A {
factory A([int x]) = B;
}
class B implements A {
B([int x = 1]) {}
}
Note that this fix might change the value used when the optional parameter is omitted. If that happens, and if that change is a problem, then consider making the optional parameter a required parameter in the factory method:
class A {
factory A(int x) = B;
}
class B implements A {
B([int x = 1]) {}
}
default_value_on_required_parameter
#Required named parameters can't have a default value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a named parameter has both the required
modifier and a default value. If the parameter is required, then a value for the parameter is always provided at the call sites, so the default value can never be used.
Example
#The following code generates this diagnostic:
void log({required String message = 'no message'}) {}
Common fixes
#If the parameter is really required, then remove the default value:
void log({required String message}) {}
If the parameter isn't always required, then remove the required
modifier:
void log({String message = 'no message'}) {}
deferred_import_of_extension
#Imports of deferred libraries must hide all extensions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library that is imported using a deferred import declares an extension that is visible in the importing library. Extension methods are resolved at compile time, and extensions from deferred libraries aren't available at compile time.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that defines a named extension:
class C {}
extension E on String {
int get size => length;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the named extension is visible to the library:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
void f() {
a.C();
}
Common fixes
#If the library must be imported as deferred
, then either add a show
clause listing the names being referenced or add a hide
clause listing all of the named extensions. Adding a show
clause would look like this:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a show C;
void f() {
a.C();
}
Adding a hide
clause would look like this:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a hide E;
void f() {
a.C();
}
With the first fix, the benefit is that if new extensions are added to the imported library, then the extensions won't cause a diagnostic to be generated.
If the library doesn't need to be imported as deferred
, or if you need to make use of the extension method declared in it, then remove the keyword deferred
:
import 'a.dart' as a;
void f() {
a.C();
}
definitely_unassigned_late_local_variable
#The late local variable '{0}' is definitely unassigned at this point.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when definite assignment analysis shows that a local variable that's marked as late
is read before being assigned.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
wasn't assigned a value before being read:
void f(bool b) {
late int x;
print(x);
}
Common fixes
#Assign a value to the variable before reading from it:
void f(bool b) {
late int x;
x = b ? 1 : 0;
print(x);
}
dependencies_field_not_map
#The value of the '{0}' field is expected to be a map.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of either the dependencies
or dev_dependencies
key isn't a map.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of the top-level dependencies
key is a list:
name: example
dependencies:
- meta
Common fixes
#Use a map as the value of the dependencies
key:
name: example
dependencies:
meta: ^1.0.2
deprecated_colon_for_default_value
#Using a colon as the separator before a default value is deprecated and will not be supported in language version 3.0 and later.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a colon (:
) is used as the separator before the default value of an optional named parameter. While this syntax is allowed, it is deprecated in favor of using an equal sign (=
).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because a colon is being used before the default value of the optional parameter i
:
void f({int i : 0}) {}
Common fixes
#Replace the colon with an equal sign.
void f({int i = 0}) {}
deprecated_export_use
#The ability to import '{0}' indirectly is deprecated.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when one library imports a name from a second library, and the second library exports the name from a third library but has indicated that it won't export the third library in the future.
Example
#Given a library a.dart
defining the class A
:
class A {}
And a second library b.dart
that exports a.dart
but has marked the export as being deprecated:
import 'a.dart';
@deprecated
export 'a.dart';
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class A
won't be exported from b.dart
in some future version:
import 'b.dart';
A? a;
Common fixes
#If the name is available from a different library that you can import, then replace the existing import with an import for that library (or add an import for the defining library if you still need the old import):
import 'a.dart';
A? a;
If the name isn't available, then look for instructions from the library author or contact them directly to find out how to update your code.
deprecated_field
#The '{0}' field is no longer used and can be removed.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a key is used in a pubspec.yaml
file that was deprecated. Unused keys take up space and might imply semantics that are no longer valid.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the author
key is no longer being used:
name: example
author: 'Dash'
Common fixes
#Remove the deprecated key:
name: example
deprecated_member_use
#'{0}' is deprecated and shouldn't be used.
'{0}' is deprecated and shouldn't be used. {1}
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a deprecated library or class member is used in a different package.
Example
#If the method m
in the class C
is annotated with @deprecated
, then the following code produces this diagnostic:
void f(C c) {
c.m();
}
Common fixes
#The documentation for declarations that are annotated with @deprecated
should indicate what code to use in place of the deprecated code.
deprecated_member_use_from_same_package
#'{0}' is deprecated and shouldn't be used.
'{0}' is deprecated and shouldn't be used. {1}
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a deprecated library member or class member is used in the same package in which it's declared.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
is deprecated:
@deprecated
var x = 0;
var y = x;
Common fixes
#The fix depends on what's been deprecated and what the replacement is. The documentation for deprecated declarations should indicate what code to use in place of the deprecated code.
deprecated_new_in_comment_reference
#Using the 'new' keyword in a comment reference is deprecated.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a comment reference (the name of a declaration enclosed in square brackets in a documentation comment) uses the keyword new
to refer to a constructor. This form is deprecated.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the unnamed constructor is being referenced using new C
:
/// See [new C].
class C {
C();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor named c
is being referenced using new C.c
:
/// See [new C.c].
class C {
C.c();
}
Common fixes
#If you're referencing a named constructor, then remove the keyword new
:
/// See [C.c].
class C {
C.c();
}
If you're referencing the unnamed constructor, then remove the keyword new
and append .new
after the class name:
/// See [C.new].
class C {
C.c();
}
deprecated_subtype_of_function
#Extending 'Function' is deprecated.
Implementing 'Function' has no effect.
Mixing in 'Function' is deprecated.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the class Function
is used in either the extends
, implements
, or with
clause of a class or mixin. Using the class Function
in this way has no semantic value, so it's effectively dead code.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because Function
is used as the superclass of F
:
class F extends Function {}
Common fixes
#Remove the class Function
from whichever clause it's in, and remove the whole clause if Function
is the only type in the clause:
class F {}
disallowed_type_instantiation_expression
#Only a generic type, generic function, generic instance method, or generic constructor can have type arguments.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an expression with a value that is anything other than one of the allowed kinds of values is followed by type arguments. The allowed kinds of values are:
- generic types,
- generic constructors, and
- generic functions, including top-level functions, static and instance members, and local functions.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because i
is a top-level variable, which isn't one of the allowed cases:
int i = 1;
void f() {
print(i<int>);
}
Common fixes
#If the referenced value is correct, then remove the type arguments:
int i = 1;
void f() {
print(i);
}
division_optimization
#The operator x ~/ y is more efficient than (x / y).toInt().
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the result of dividing two numbers is converted to an integer using toInt
. Dart has a built-in integer division operator that is both more efficient and more concise.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the result of dividing x
and y
is converted to an integer using toInt
:
int divide(int x, int y) => (x / y).toInt();
Common fixes
#Use the integer division operator (~/
):
int divide(int x, int y) => x ~/ y;
duplicate_constructor
#The constructor with name '{0}' is already defined.
The unnamed constructor is already defined.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class declares more than one unnamed constructor or when it declares more than one constructor with the same name.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there are two declarations for the unnamed constructor:
class C {
C();
C();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because there are two declarations for the constructor named m
:
class C {
C.m();
C.m();
}
Common fixes
#If there are multiple unnamed constructors and all of the constructors are needed, then give all of them, or all except one of them, a name:
class C {
C();
C.n();
}
If there are multiple unnamed constructors and all except one of them are unneeded, then remove the constructors that aren't needed:
class C {
C();
}
If there are multiple named constructors and all of the constructors are needed, then rename all except one of them:
class C {
C.m();
C.n();
}
If there are multiple named constructors and all except one of them are unneeded, then remove the constructors that aren't needed:
class C {
C.m();
}
duplicate_definition
#The name '{0}' is already defined.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a name is declared, and there is a previous declaration with the same name in the same scope.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name x
is declared twice:
int x = 0;
int x = 1;
Common fixes
#Choose a different name for one of the declarations.
int x = 0;
int y = 1;
duplicate_export
#Duplicate export.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an export directive is found that is the same as an export before it in the file. The second export doesn't add value and should be removed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the same library is being exported twice:
export 'package:meta/meta.dart';
export 'package:meta/meta.dart';
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary export:
export 'package:meta/meta.dart';
duplicate_field_formal_parameter
#The field '{0}' can't be initialized by multiple parameters in the same constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's more than one initializing formal parameter for the same field in a constructor's parameter list. It isn't useful to assign a value that will immediately be overwritten.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because this.f
appears twice in the parameter list:
class C {
int f;
C(this.f, this.f) {}
}
Common fixes
#Remove one of the initializing formal parameters:
class C {
int f;
C(this.f) {}
}
duplicate_field_name
#The field name '{0}' is already used in this record.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either a record literal or a record type annotation contains a field whose name is the same as a previously declared field in the same literal or type.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the record literal has two fields named a
:
var r = (a: 1, a: 2);
The following code produces this diagnostic because the record type annotation has two fields named a
, one a positional field and the other a named field:
void f((int a, {int a}) r) {}
Common fixes
#Rename one or both of the fields:
var r = (a: 1, b: 2);
duplicate_hidden_name
#Duplicate hidden name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a name occurs multiple times in a hide
clause. Repeating the name is unnecessary.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name min
is hidden more than once:
import 'dart:math' hide min, min;
var x = pi;
Common fixes
#If the name was mistyped in one or more places, then correct the mistyped names:
import 'dart:math' hide max, min;
var x = pi;
If the name wasn't mistyped, then remove the unnecessary name from the list:
import 'dart:math' hide min;
var x = pi;
duplicate_ignore
#The diagnostic '{0}' doesn't need to be ignored here because it's already being ignored.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a diagnostic name appears in an ignore
comment, but the diagnostic is already being ignored, either because it's already included in the same ignore
comment or because it appears in an ignore-in-file
comment.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the diagnostic named unused_local_variable
is already being ignored for the whole file so it doesn't need to be ignored on a specific line:
// ignore_for_file: unused_local_variable
void f() {
// ignore: unused_local_variable
var x = 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the diagnostic named unused_local_variable
is being ignored twice on the same line:
void f() {
// ignore: unused_local_variable, unused_local_variable
var x = 0;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the ignore comment, or remove the unnecessary diagnostic name if the ignore comment is ignoring more than one diagnostic:
// ignore_for_file: unused_local_variable
void f() {
var x = 0;
}
duplicate_import
#Duplicate import.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import directive is found that is the same as an import before it in the file. The second import doesn't add value and should be removed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@sealed class C {}
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary import:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@sealed class C {}
duplicate_named_argument
#The argument for the named parameter '{0}' was already specified.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an invocation has two or more named arguments that have the same name.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there are two arguments with the name a
:
void f(C c) {
c.m(a: 0, a: 1);
}
class C {
void m({int? a, int? b}) {}
}
Common fixes
#If one of the arguments should have a different name, then change the name:
void f(C c) {
c.m(a: 0, b: 1);
}
class C {
void m({int? a, int? b}) {}
}
If one of the arguments is wrong, then remove it:
void f(C c) {
c.m(a: 1);
}
class C {
void m({int? a, int? b}) {}
}
duplicate_part
#The library already contains a part with the URI '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a single file is referenced in multiple part directives.
Example
#Given a file part.dart
containing
part of 'test.dart';
The following code produces this diagnostic because the file part.dart
is included multiple times:
part 'part.dart';
part 'part.dart';
Common fixes
#Remove all except the first of the duplicated part directives:
part 'part.dart';
duplicate_pattern_assignment_variable
#The variable '{0}' is already assigned in this pattern.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a single pattern variable is assigned a value more than once in the same pattern assignment.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
is assigned twice in the pattern (a, a)
:
int f((int, int) r) {
int a;
(a, a) = r;
return a;
}
Common fixes
#If you need to capture all of the values, then use a unique variable for each of the subpatterns being matched:
int f((int, int) r) {
int a, b;
(a, b) = r;
return a + b;
}
If some of the values don't need to be captured, then use a wildcard pattern _
to avoid having to bind the value to a variable:
int f((int, int) r) {
int a;
(_, a) = r;
return a;
}
duplicate_pattern_field
#The field '{0}' is already matched in this pattern.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a record pattern matches the same field more than once, or when an object pattern matches the same getter more than once.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the record field a
is matched twice in the same record pattern:
void f(({int a, int b}) r) {
switch (r) {
case (a: 1, a: 2):
return;
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the getter f
is matched twice in the same object pattern:
void f(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case C(f: 1, f: 2):
return;
}
}
class C {
int? f;
}
Common fixes
#If the pattern should match for more than one value of the duplicated field, then use a logical-or pattern:
void f(({int a, int b}) r) {
switch (r) {
case (a: 1, b: _) || (a: 2, b: _):
break;
}
}
If the pattern should match against multiple fields, then change the name of one of the fields:
void f(({int a, int b}) r) {
switch (r) {
case (a: 1, b: 2):
return;
}
}
duplicate_rest_element_in_pattern
#At most one rest element is allowed in a list or map pattern.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's more than one rest pattern in either a list or map pattern. A rest pattern will capture any values unmatched by other subpatterns, making subsequent rest patterns unnecessary because there's nothing left to capture.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there are two rest patterns in the list pattern:
void f(List<int> x) {
if (x case [0, ..., ...]) {}
}
Common fixes
#Remove all but one of the rest patterns:
void f(List<int> x) {
if (x case [0, ...]) {}
}
duplicate_shown_name
#Duplicate shown name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a name occurs multiple times in a show
clause. Repeating the name is unnecessary.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name min
is shown more than once:
import 'dart:math' show min, min;
var x = min(2, min(0, 1));
Common fixes
#If the name was mistyped in one or more places, then correct the mistyped names:
import 'dart:math' show max, min;
var x = max(2, min(0, 1));
If the name wasn't mistyped, then remove the unnecessary name from the list:
import 'dart:math' show min;
var x = min(2, min(0, 1));
duplicate_variable_pattern
#The variable '{0}' is already defined in this pattern.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a branch of a logical-and pattern declares a variable that is already declared in an earlier branch of the same pattern.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
is declared in both branches of the logical-and pattern:
void f((int, int) r) {
if (r case (var a, 0) && (0, var a)) {
print(a);
}
}
Common fixes
#If you need to capture the matched value in multiple branches, then change the names of the variables so that they are unique:
void f((int, int) r) {
if (r case (var a, 0) && (0, var b)) {
print(a + b);
}
}
If you only need to capture the matched value on one branch, then remove the variable pattern from all but one branch:
void f((int, int) r) {
if (r case (var a, 0) && (0, _)) {
print(a);
}
}
empty_map_pattern
#A map pattern must have at least one entry.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a map pattern is empty.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the map pattern is empty:
void f(Map<int, String> x) {
if (x case {}) {}
}
Common fixes
#If the pattern should match any map, then replace it with an object pattern:
void f(Map<int, String> x) {
if (x case Map()) {}
}
If the pattern should only match an empty map, then check the length in the pattern:
void f(Map<int, String> x) {
if (x case Map(isEmpty: true)) {}
}
empty_record_literal_with_comma
#A record literal without fields can't have a trailing comma.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a record literal that has no fields has a trailing comma. Empty record literals can't contain a comma.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the empty record literal has a trailing comma:
var r = (,);
Common fixes
#If the record is intended to be empty, then remove the comma:
var r = ();
If the record is intended to have one or more fields, then add the expressions used to compute the values of those fields:
var r = (3, 4);
empty_record_type_named_fields_list
#The list of named fields in a record type can't be empty.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a record type has an empty list of named fields.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the record type has an empty list of named fields:
void f((int, int, {}) r) {}
Common fixes
#If the record is intended to have named fields, then add the types and names of the fields:
void f((int, int, {int z}) r) {}
If the record isn't intended to have named fields, then remove the curly braces:
void f((int, int) r) {}
empty_record_type_with_comma
#A record type without fields can't have a trailing comma.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a record type that has no fields has a trailing comma. Empty record types can't contain a comma.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the empty record type has a trailing comma:
void f((,) r) {}
Common fixes
#If the record type is intended to be empty, then remove the comma:
void f(() r) {}
If the record type is intended to have one or more fields, then add the types of those fields:
void f((int, int) r) {}
empty_struct
#The class '{0}' can't be empty because it's a subclass of '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a subclass of Struct
or Union
doesn't have any fields. Having an empty Struct
or Union
isn't supported.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
, which extends Struct
, doesn't declare any fields:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {}
Common fixes
#If the class is intended to be a struct, then declare one or more fields:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int32()
external int x;
}
If the class is intended to be used as a type argument to Pointer
, then make it a subclass of Opaque
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Opaque {}
If the class isn't intended to be a struct, then remove or change the extends clause:
class C {}
enum_constant_same_name_as_enclosing
#The name of the enum value can't be the same as the enum's name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an enum value has the same name as the enum in which it's declared.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the enum value E
has the same name as the enclosing enum E
:
enum E {
E
}
Common fixes
#If the name of the enum is correct, then rename the constant:
enum E {
e
}
If the name of the constant is correct, then rename the enum:
enum F {
E
}
enum_constant_with_non_const_constructor
#The invoked constructor isn't a 'const' constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an enum value is being created using either a factory constructor or a generative constructor that isn't marked as being const
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the enum value e
is being initialized by a factory constructor:
enum E {
e();
factory E() => e;
}
Common fixes
#Use a generative constructor marked as const
:
enum E {
e._();
factory E() => e;
const E._();
}
enum_mixin_with_instance_variable
#Mixins applied to enums can't have instance variables.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a mixin that's applied to an enum declares one or more instance variables. This isn't allowed because the enum values are constant, and there isn't any way for the constructor in the enum to initialize any of the mixin's fields.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the mixin M
defines the instance field x
:
mixin M {
int x = 0;
}
enum E with M {
a
}
Common fixes
#If you need to apply the mixin, then change all instance fields into getter and setter pairs and implement them in the enum if necessary:
mixin M {
int get x => 0;
}
enum E with M {
a
}
If you don't need to apply the mixin, then remove it:
enum E {
a
}
enum_with_abstract_member
#'{0}' must have a method body because '{1}' is an enum.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member of an enum is found that doesn't have a concrete implementation. Enums aren't allowed to contain abstract members.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because m
is an abstract method and E
is an enum:
enum E {
e;
void m();
}
Common fixes
#Provide an implementation for the member:
enum E {
e;
void m() {}
}
enum_with_name_values
#The name 'values' is not a valid name for an enum.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an enum is declared to have the name values
. This isn't allowed because the enum has an implicit static field named values
, and the two would collide.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there's an enum declaration that has the name values
:
enum values {
c
}
Common fixes
#Rename the enum to something other than values
.
equal_elements_in_const_set
#Two elements in a constant set literal can't be equal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when two elements in a constant set literal have the same value. The set can only contain each value once, which means that one of the values is unnecessary.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the string 'a'
is specified twice:
const Set<String> set = {'a', 'a'};
Common fixes
#Remove one of the duplicate values:
const Set<String> set = {'a'};
Note that literal sets preserve the order of their elements, so the choice of which element to remove might affect the order in which elements are returned by an iterator.
equal_elements_in_set
#Two elements in a set literal shouldn't be equal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an element in a non-constant set is the same as a previous element in the same set. If two elements are the same, then the second value is ignored, which makes having both elements pointless and likely signals a bug.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the element 1
appears twice:
const a = 1;
const b = 1;
var s = <int>{a, b};
Common fixes
#If both elements should be included in the set, then change one of the elements:
const a = 1;
const b = 2;
var s = <int>{a, b};
If only one of the elements is needed, then remove the one that isn't needed:
const a = 1;
var s = <int>{a};
Note that literal sets preserve the order of their elements, so the choice of which element to remove might affect the order in which elements are returned by an iterator.
equal_keys_in_const_map
#Two keys in a constant map literal can't be equal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a key in a constant map is the same as a previous key in the same map. If two keys are the same, then the second value would overwrite the first value, which makes having both pairs pointless.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the key 1
is used twice:
const map = <int, String>{1: 'a', 2: 'b', 1: 'c', 4: 'd'};
Common fixes
#If both entries should be included in the map, then change one of the keys to be different:
const map = <int, String>{1: 'a', 2: 'b', 3: 'c', 4: 'd'};
If only one of the entries is needed, then remove the one that isn't needed:
const map = <int, String>{1: 'a', 2: 'b', 4: 'd'};
Note that literal maps preserve the order of their entries, so the choice of which entry to remove might affect the order in which keys and values are returned by an iterator.
equal_keys_in_map
#Two keys in a map literal shouldn't be equal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a key in a non-constant map is the same as a previous key in the same map. If two keys are the same, then the second value overwrites the first value, which makes having both pairs pointless and likely signals a bug.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the keys a
and b
have the same value:
const a = 1;
const b = 1;
var m = <int, String>{a: 'a', b: 'b'};
Common fixes
#If both entries should be included in the map, then change one of the keys:
const a = 1;
const b = 2;
var m = <int, String>{a: 'a', b: 'b'};
If only one of the entries is needed, then remove the one that isn't needed:
const a = 1;
var m = <int, String>{a: 'a'};
Note that literal maps preserve the order of their entries, so the choice of which entry to remove might affect the order in which the keys and values are returned by an iterator.
equal_keys_in_map_pattern
#Two keys in a map pattern can't be equal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a map pattern contains more than one key with the same name. The same key can't be matched twice.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the key 'a'
appears twice:
void f(Map<String, int> x) {
if (x case {'a': 1, 'a': 2}) {}
}
Common fixes
#If you are trying to match two different keys, then change one of the keys in the pattern:
void f(Map<String, int> x) {
if (x case {'a': 1, 'b': 2}) {}
}
If you are trying to match the same key, but allow any one of multiple patterns to match, the use a logical-or pattern:
void f(Map<String, int> x) {
if (x case {'a': 1 || 2}) {}
}
expected_one_list_pattern_type_arguments
#List patterns require one type argument or none, but {0} found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a list pattern has more than one type argument. List patterns can have either zero type arguments or one type argument, but can't have more than one.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the list pattern ([0]
) has two type arguments:
void f(Object x) {
if (x case <int, int>[0]) {}
}
Common fixes
#Remove all but one of the type arguments:
void f(Object x) {
if (x case <int>[0]) {}
}
expected_one_list_type_arguments
#List literals require one type argument or none, but {0} found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a list literal has more than one type argument.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the list literal has two type arguments when it can have at most one:
var l = <int, int>[];
Common fixes
#Remove all except one of the type arguments:
var l = <int>[];
expected_one_set_type_arguments
#Set literals require one type argument or none, but {0} were found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a set literal has more than one type argument.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the set literal has three type arguments when it can have at most one:
var s = <int, String, int>{0, 'a', 1};
Common fixes
#Remove all except one of the type arguments:
var s = <int>{0, 1};
expected_two_map_pattern_type_arguments
#Map patterns require two type arguments or none, but {0} found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a map pattern has either one type argument or more than two type arguments. Map patterns can have either two type arguments or zero type arguments, but can't have any other number.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the map pattern (<int>{}
) has one type argument:
void f(Object x) {
if (x case <int>{0: _}) {}
}
Common fixes
#Add or remove type arguments until there are two, or none:
void f(Object x) {
if (x case <int, int>{0: _}) {}
}
expected_two_map_type_arguments
#Map literals require two type arguments or none, but {0} found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a map literal has either one or more than two type arguments.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the map literal has three type arguments when it can have either two or zero:
var m = <int, String, int>{};
Common fixes
#Remove all except two of the type arguments:
var m = <int, String>{};
export_internal_library
#The library '{0}' is internal and can't be exported.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds an export whose dart:
URI references an internal library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because _interceptors
is an internal library:
export 'dart:_interceptors';
Common fixes
#Remove the export directive.
export_legacy_symbol
#The symbol '{0}' is defined in a legacy library, and can't be re-exported from a library with null safety enabled.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library that was opted in to null safety exports another library, and the exported library is opted out of null safety.
Example
#Given a library that is opted out of null safety:
// @dart = 2.8
String s;
The following code produces this diagnostic because it's exporting symbols from an opted-out library:
export 'optedOut.dart';
class C {}
Common fixes
#If you're able to do so, migrate the exported library so that it doesn't need to opt out:
String? s;
If you can't migrate the library, then remove the export:
class C {}
If the exported library (the one that is opted out) itself exports an opted-in library, then it's valid for your library to indirectly export the symbols from the opted-in library. You can do so by adding a hide combinator to the export directive in your library that hides all of the names declared in the opted-out library.
export_of_non_library
#The exported library '{0}' can't have a part-of directive.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an export directive references a part rather than a library.
Example
#Given a file part.dart
containing
part of lib;
The following code produces this diagnostic because the file part.dart
is a part, and only libraries can be exported:
library lib;
export 'part.dart';
Common fixes
#Either remove the export directive, or change the URI to be the URI of the library containing the part.
expression_in_map
#Expressions can't be used in a map literal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the analyzer finds an expression, rather than a map entry, in what appears to be a map literal.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
var map = <String, int>{'a': 0, 'b': 1, 'c'};
Common fixes
#If the expression is intended to compute either a key or a value in an entry, fix the issue by replacing the expression with the key or the value. For example:
var map = <String, int>{'a': 0, 'b': 1, 'c': 2};
extends_non_class
#Classes can only extend other classes.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extends
clause contains a name that is declared to be something other than a class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is declared to be a function:
void f() {}
class C extends f {}
Common fixes
#If you want the class to extend a class other than Object
, then replace the name in the extends
clause with the name of that class:
void f() {}
class C extends B {}
class B {}
If you want the class to extend Object
, then remove the extends
clause:
void f() {}
class C {}
extension_as_expression
#Extension '{0}' can't be used as an expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of an extension is used in an expression other than in an extension override or to qualify an access to a static member of the extension. Because classes define a type, the name of a class can be used to refer to the instance of Type
representing the type of the class. Extensions, on the other hand, don't define a type and can't be used as a type literal.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because E
is an extension:
extension E on int {
static String m() => '';
}
var x = E;
Common fixes
#Replace the name of the extension with a name that can be referenced, such as a static member defined on the extension:
extension E on int {
static String m() => '';
}
var x = E.m();
extension_conflicting_static_and_instance
#An extension can't define static member '{0}' and an instance member with the same name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension declaration contains both an instance member and a static member that have the same name. The instance member and the static member can't have the same name because it's unclear which member is being referenced by an unqualified use of the name within the body of the extension.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name a
is being used for two different members:
extension E on Object {
int get a => 0;
static int a() => 0;
}
Common fixes
#Rename or remove one of the members:
extension E on Object {
int get a => 0;
static int b() => 0;
}
extension_declares_abstract_member
#Extensions can't declare abstract members.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an abstract declaration is declared in an extension. Extensions can declare only concrete members.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method a
doesn't have a body:
extension E on String {
int a();
}
Common fixes
#Either provide an implementation for the member or remove it.
extension_declares_constructor
#Extensions can't declare constructors.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor declaration is found in an extension. It isn't valid to define a constructor because extensions aren't classes, and it isn't possible to create an instance of an extension.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there is a constructor declaration in E
:
extension E on String {
E() : super();
}
Common fixes
#Remove the constructor or replace it with a static method.
extension_declares_instance_field
#Extensions can't declare instance fields
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance field declaration is found in an extension. It isn't valid to define an instance field because extensions can only add behavior, not state.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because s
is an instance field:
extension E on String {
String s;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the field, make it a static field, or convert it to be a getter, setter, or method.
extension_declares_member_of_object
#Extensions can't declare members with the same name as a member declared by 'Object'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension declaration declares a member with the same name as a member declared in the class Object
. Such a member can never be used because the member in Object
is always found first.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because toString
is defined by Object
:
extension E on String {
String toString() => this;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the member or rename it so that the name doesn't conflict with the member in Object
:
extension E on String {
String displayString() => this;
}
extension_override_access_to_static_member
#An extension override can't be used to access a static member from an extension.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension override is the receiver of the invocation of a static member. Similar to static members in classes, the static members of an extension should be accessed using the name of the extension, not an extension override.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because m
is static:
extension E on String {
static void m() {}
}
void f() {
E('').m();
}
Common fixes
#Replace the extension override with the name of the extension:
extension E on String {
static void m() {}
}
void f() {
E.m();
}
extension_override_argument_not_assignable
#The type of the argument to the extension override '{0}' isn't assignable to the extended type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the argument to an extension override isn't assignable to the type being extended by the extension.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because 3
isn't a String
:
extension E on String {
void method() {}
}
void f() {
E(3).method();
}
Common fixes
#If you're using the correct extension, then update the argument to have the correct type:
extension E on String {
void method() {}
}
void f() {
E(3.toString()).method();
}
If there's a different extension that's valid for the type of the argument, then either replace the name of the extension or unwrap the argument so that the correct extension is found.
extension_override_without_access
#An extension override can only be used to access instance members.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension override is found that isn't being used to access one of the members of the extension. The extension override syntax doesn't have any runtime semantics; it only controls which member is selected at compile time.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because E(i)
isn't an expression:
extension E on int {
int get a => 0;
}
void f(int i) {
print(E(i));
}
Common fixes
#If you want to invoke one of the members of the extension, then add the invocation:
extension E on int {
int get a => 0;
}
void f(int i) {
print(E(i).a);
}
If you don't want to invoke a member, then unwrap the argument:
extension E on int {
int get a => 0;
}
void f(int i) {
print(i);
}
extension_override_with_cascade
#Extension overrides have no value so they can't be used as the receiver of a cascade expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension override is used as the receiver of a cascade expression. The value of a cascade expression e..m
is the value of the receiver e
, but extension overrides aren't expressions and don't have a value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because E(3)
isn't an expression:
extension E on int {
void m() {}
}
f() {
E(3)..m();
}
Common fixes
#Use .
rather than ..
:
extension E on int {
void m() {}
}
f() {
E(3).m();
}
If there are multiple cascaded accesses, you'll need to duplicate the extension override for each one.
extension_type_constructor_with_super_formal_parameter
#Extension type constructors can't declare super formal parameters.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor in an extension type has a super parameter. Super parameters aren't valid because extension types don't have a superclass.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the named constructor n
contains a super parameter:
extension type E(int i) {
E.n(this.i, super.foo);
}
Common fixes
#If you need the parameter, replace the super parameter with a normal parameter:
extension type E(int i) {
E.n(this.i, String foo);
}
If you don't need the parameter, remove the super parameter:
extension type E(int i) {
E.n(this.i);
}
extension_type_constructor_with_super_invocation
#Extension type constructors can't include super initializers.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor in an extension type includes an invocation of a super constructor in the initializer list. Because extension types don't have a superclass, there's no constructor to invoke.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor E.n
invokes a super constructor in its initializer list:
extension type E(int i) {
E.n() : i = 0, super.n();
}
Common fixes
#Remove the invocation of the super constructor:
extension type E(int i) {
E.n() : i = 0;
}
extension_type_declares_instance_field
#Extension types can't declare instance fields.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's a field declaration in the body of an extension type declaration.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension type E
declares a field named f
:
extension type E(int i) {
final int f = 0;
}
Common fixes
#If you don't need the field, then remove it or replace it with a getter and/or setter:
extension type E(int i) {
int get f => 0;
}
If you need the field, then convert the extension type into a class:
class E {
final int i;
final int f = 0;
E(this.i);
}
extension_type_declares_member_of_object
#Extension types can't declare members with the same name as a member declared by 'Object'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the body of an extension type declaration contains a member with the same name as one of the members declared by Object
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class Object
already defines a member named hashCode
:
extension type E(int i) {
int get hashCode => 0;
}
Common fixes
#If you need a member with the implemented semantics, then rename the member:
extension type E(int i) {
int get myHashCode => 0;
}
If you don't need a member with the implemented semantics, then remove the member:
extension type E(int i) {}
extension_type_implements_disallowed_type
#Extension types can't implement '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension type implements a type that it isn't allowed to implement.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because extension types can't implement the type dynamic
:
extension type A(int i) implements dynamic {}
Common fixes
#Remove the disallowed type from the implements clause:
extension type A(int i) {}
extension_type_implements_itself
#The extension type can't implement itself.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension type implements itself, either directly or indirectly.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension type A
directly implements itself:
extension type A(int i) implements A {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension type A
indirectly implements itself (through B
):
extension type A(int i) implements B {}
extension type B(int i) implements A {}
Common fixes
#Break the cycle by removing a type from the implements clause of at least one of the types involved in the cycle:
extension type A(int i) implements B {}
extension type B(int i) {}
extension_type_implements_not_supertype
#'{0}' is not a supertype of '{1}', the representation type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension type implements a type that isn't a supertype of the representation type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension type A
implements String
, but String
isn't a supertype of the representation type int
:
extension type A(int i) implements String {}
Common fixes
#If the representation type is correct, then remove or replace the type in the implements clause:
extension type A(int i) {}
If the representation type isn't correct, then replace it with the correct type:
extension type A(String s) implements String {}
extension_type_implements_representation_not_supertype
#'{0}', the representation type of '{1}', is not a supertype of '{2}', the representation type of '{3}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension type implements another extension type, and the representation type of the implemented extension type isn't a subtype of the representation type of the implementing extension type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension type B
implements A
, but the representation type of A
(num
) isn't a subtype of the representation type of B
(String
):
extension type A(num i) {}
extension type B(String s) implements A {}
Common fixes
#Either change the representation types of the two extension types so that the representation type of the implemented type is a supertype of the representation type of the implementing type:
extension type A(num i) {}
extension type B(int n) implements A {}
Or remove the implemented type from the implements clause:
extension type A(num i) {}
extension type B(String s) {}
extension_type_inherited_member_conflict
#The extension type '{0}' has more than one distinct member named '{1}' from implemented types.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension type implements two or more other types, and at least two of those types declare a member with the same name.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension type C
implements both A
and B
, and both declare a member named m
:
class A {
void m() {}
}
extension type B(A a) {
void m() {}
}
extension type C(A a) implements A, B {}
Common fixes
#If the extension type doesn't need to implement all of the listed types, then remove all but one of the types introducing the conflicting members:
class A {
void m() {}
}
extension type B(A a) {
void m() {}
}
extension type C(A a) implements A {}
If the extension type needs to implement all of the listed types but you can rename the members in those types, then give the conflicting members unique names:
class A {
void m() {}
}
extension type B(A a) {
void n() {}
}
extension type C(A a) implements A, B {}
extension_type_representation_depends_on_itself
#The extension type representation can't depend on itself.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension type has a representation type that depends on the extension type itself, either directly or indirectly.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the representation type of the extension type A
depends on A
directly:
extension type A(A a) {}
The following two code examples produce this diagnostic because the representation type of the extension type A
depends on A
indirectly through the extension type B
:
extension type A(B b) {}
extension type B(A a) {}
extension type A(List<B> b) {}
extension type B(List<A> a) {}
Common fixes
#Remove the dependency by choosing a different representation type for at least one of the types in the cycle:
extension type A(String s) {}
extension_type_representation_type_bottom
#The representation type can't be a bottom type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the representation type of an extension type is the bottom type Never
. The type Never
can't be the representation type of an extension type because there are no values that can be extended.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the representation type of the extension type E
is Never
:
extension type E(Never n) {}
Common fixes
#Replace the extension type with a different type:
extension type E(String s) {}
extension_type_with_abstract_member
#'{0}' must have a method body because '{1}' is an extension type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension type declares an abstract member. Because extension type member references are resolved statically, an abstract member in an extension type could never be executed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
in the extension type E
is abstract:
extension type E(String s) {
void m();
}
Common fixes
#If the member is intended to be executable, then provide an implementation of the member:
extension type E(String s) {
void m() {}
}
If the member isn't intended to be executable, then remove it:
extension type E(String s) {}
external_with_initializer
#External fields can't have initializers.
External variables can't have initializers.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field or variable marked with the keyword external
has an initializer, or when an external field is initialized in a constructor.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the external field x
is assigned a value in an initializer:
class C {
external int x;
C() : x = 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the external field x
has an initializer:
class C {
external final int x = 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the external top level variable x
has an initializer:
external final int x = 0;
Common fixes
#Remove the initializer:
class C {
external final int x;
}
extra_annotation_on_struct_field
#Fields in a struct class must have exactly one annotation indicating the native type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field in a subclass of Struct
has more than one annotation describing the native type of the field.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field x
has two annotations describing the native type of the field:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int32()
@Int16()
external int x;
}
Common fixes
#Remove all but one of the annotations:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int32()
external int x;
}
extra_positional_arguments
#Too many positional arguments: {0} expected, but {1} found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function invocation has more positional arguments than the method or function allows.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
defines 2 parameters but is invoked with 3 arguments:
void f(int a, int b) {}
void g() {
f(1, 2, 3);
}
Common fixes
#Remove the arguments that don't correspond to parameters:
void f(int a, int b) {}
void g() {
f(1, 2);
}
extra_positional_arguments_could_be_named
#Too many positional arguments: {0} expected, but {1} found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function invocation has more positional arguments than the method or function allows, but the method or function defines named parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
defines 2 positional parameters but has a named parameter that could be used for the third argument:
void f(int a, int b, {int? c}) {}
void g() {
f(1, 2, 3);
}
Common fixes
#If some of the arguments should be values for named parameters, then add the names before the arguments:
void f(int a, int b, {int? c}) {}
void g() {
f(1, 2, c: 3);
}
Otherwise, remove the arguments that don't correspond to positional parameters:
void f(int a, int b, {int? c}) {}
void g() {
f(1, 2);
}
extra_size_annotation_carray
#'Array's must have exactly one 'Array' annotation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field in a subclass of Struct
has more than one annotation describing the size of the native array.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field a0
has two annotations that specify the size of the native array:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array(4)
@Array(8)
external Array<Uint8> a0;
}
Common fixes
#Remove all but one of the annotations:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array(8)
external Array<Uint8> a0;
}
ffi_native_invalid_duplicate_default_asset
#There may be at most one @DefaultAsset annotation on a library.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library directive has more than one DefaultAsset
annotation associated with it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the library directive has two DefaultAsset
annotations associated with it:
@DefaultAsset('a')
@DefaultAsset('b')
library;
import 'dart:ffi';
Common fixes
#Remove all but one of the DefaultAsset
annotations:
@DefaultAsset('a')
library;
import 'dart:ffi';
ffi_native_invalid_multiple_annotations
#Native functions and fields must have exactly one @Native
annotation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there is more than one Native
annotation on a single declaration.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
has two Native
annotations associated with it:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Int32 Function(Int32)>()
@Native<Int32 Function(Int32)>(isLeaf: true)
external int f(int v);
Common fixes
#Remove all but one of the annotations:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Int32 Function(Int32)>(isLeaf: true)
external int f(int v);
ffi_native_must_be_external
#Native functions must be declared external.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a function annotated as being @Native
isn't marked as external
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function free
is annotated as being @Native
, but the function isn't marked as external
:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Void Function(Pointer<Void>)>()
void free(Pointer<Void> ptr) {}
Common fixes
#If the function is a native function, then add the modifier external
before the return type:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Void Function(Pointer<Void>)>()
external void free(Pointer<Void> ptr);
ffi_native_unexpected_number_of_parameters
#Unexpected number of Native annotation parameters. Expected {0} but has {1}.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the number of parameters in the function type used as a type argument for the @Native
annotation doesn't match the number of parameters in the function being annotated.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function type used as a type argument for the @Native
annotation (Void Function(Double)
) has one argument and the type of the annotated function (void f(double, double)
) has two arguments:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Void Function(Double)>(symbol: 'f')
external void f(double x, double y);
Common fixes
#If the annotated function is correct, then update the function type in the @Native
annotation to match:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Void Function(Double, Double)>(symbol: 'f')
external void f(double x, double y);
If the function type in the @Native
annotation is correct, then update the annotated function to match:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Void Function(Double)>(symbol: 'f')
external void f(double x);
ffi_native_unexpected_number_of_parameters_with_receiver
#Unexpected number of Native annotation parameters. Expected {0} but has {1}. Native instance method annotation must have receiver as first argument.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type argument used on the @Native
annotation of a native method doesn't include a type for the receiver of the method.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type argument on the @Native
annotation (Void Function(Double)
) doesn't include a type for the receiver of the method:
import 'dart:ffi';
class C {
@Native<Void Function(Double)>()
external void f(double x);
}
Common fixes
#Add an initial parameter whose type is the same as the class in which the native method is being declared:
import 'dart:ffi';
class C {
@Native<Void Function(C, Double)>()
external void f(double x);
}
field_initialized_by_multiple_initializers
#The field '{0}' can't be initialized twice in the same constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the initializer list of a constructor initializes a field more than once. There is no value to allow both initializers because only the last value is preserved.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field f
is being initialized twice:
class C {
int f;
C() : f = 0, f = 1;
}
Common fixes
#Remove one of the initializers:
class C {
int f;
C() : f = 0;
}
field_initialized_in_initializer_and_declaration
#Fields can't be initialized in the constructor if they are final and were already initialized at their declaration.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a final field is initialized in both the declaration of the field and in an initializer in a constructor. Final fields can only be assigned once, so it can't be initialized in both places.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is :
class C {
final int f = 0;
C() : f = 1;
}
Common fixes
#If the initialization doesn't depend on any values passed to the constructor, and if all of the constructors need to initialize the field to the same value, then remove the initializer from the constructor:
class C {
final int f = 0;
C();
}
If the initialization depends on a value passed to the constructor, or if different constructors need to initialize the field differently, then remove the initializer in the field's declaration:
class C {
final int f;
C() : f = 1;
}
field_initialized_in_parameter_and_initializer
#Fields can't be initialized in both the parameter list and the initializers.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field is initialized in both the parameter list and in the initializer list of a constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field f
is initialized both by an initializing formal parameter and in the initializer list:
class C {
int f;
C(this.f) : f = 0;
}
Common fixes
#If the field should be initialized by the parameter, then remove the initialization in the initializer list:
class C {
int f;
C(this.f);
}
If the field should be initialized in the initializer list and the parameter isn't needed, then remove the parameter:
class C {
int f;
C() : f = 0;
}
If the field should be initialized in the initializer list and the parameter is needed, then make it a normal parameter:
class C {
int f;
C(int g) : f = g * 2;
}
field_initializer_factory_constructor
#Initializing formal parameters can't be used in factory constructors.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a factory constructor has an initializing formal parameter. Factory constructors can't assign values to fields because no instance is created; hence, there is no field to assign.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the factory constructor uses an initializing formal parameter:
class C {
int? f;
factory C(this.f) => throw 0;
}
Common fixes
#Replace the initializing formal parameter with a normal parameter:
class C {
int? f;
factory C(int f) => throw 0;
}
field_initializer_in_struct
#Constructors in subclasses of 'Struct' and 'Union' can't have field initializers.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor in a subclass of either Struct
or Union
has one or more field initializers.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
has a constructor with an initializer for the field f
:
// @dart = 2.9
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int32()
int f;
C() : f = 0;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the field initializer:
// @dart = 2.9
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int32()
int f;
C();
}
field_initializer_not_assignable
#The initializer type '{0}' can't be assigned to the field type '{1}' in a const constructor.
The initializer type '{0}' can't be assigned to the field type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the initializer list of a constructor initializes a field to a value that isn't assignable to the field.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because 0
has the type int
, and an int
can't be assigned to a field of type String
:
class C {
String s;
C() : s = 0;
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the field is correct, then change the value assigned to it so that the value has a valid type:
class C {
String s;
C() : s = '0';
}
If the type of the value is correct, then change the type of the field to allow the assignment:
class C {
int s;
C() : s = 0;
}
field_initializer_outside_constructor
#Field formal parameters can only be used in a constructor.
Initializing formal parameters can only be used in constructors.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an initializing formal parameter is used in the parameter list for anything other than a constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the initializing formal parameter this.x
is being used in the method m
:
class A {
int x = 0;
m([this.x = 0]) {}
}
Common fixes
#Replace the initializing formal parameter with a normal parameter and assign the field within the body of the method:
class A {
int x = 0;
m([int x = 0]) {
this.x = x;
}
}
field_initializer_redirecting_constructor
#The redirecting constructor can't have a field initializer.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a redirecting constructor initializes a field in the object. This isn't allowed because the instance that has the field hasn't been created at the point at which it should be initialized.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor C.zero
, which redirects to the constructor C
, has an initializing formal parameter that initializes the field f
:
class C {
int f;
C(this.f);
C.zero(this.f) : this(f);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor C.zero
, which redirects to the constructor C
, has an initializer that initializes the field f
:
class C {
int f;
C(this.f);
C.zero() : f = 0, this(1);
}
Common fixes
#If the initialization is done by an initializing formal parameter, then use a normal parameter:
class C {
int f;
C(this.f);
C.zero(int f) : this(f);
}
If the initialization is done in an initializer, then remove the initializer:
class C {
int f;
C(this.f);
C.zero() : this(0);
}
field_initializing_formal_not_assignable
#The parameter type '{0}' is incompatible with the field type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type of an initializing formal parameter isn't assignable to the type of the field being initialized.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the initializing formal parameter has the type String
, but the type of the field is int
. The parameter must have a type that is a subtype of the field's type.
class C {
int f;
C(String this.f);
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the field is incorrect, then change the type of the field to match the type of the parameter, and consider removing the type from the parameter:
class C {
String f;
C(this.f);
}
If the type of the parameter is incorrect, then remove the type of the parameter:
class C {
int f;
C(this.f);
}
If the types of both the field and the parameter are correct, then use an initializer rather than an initializing formal parameter to convert the parameter value into a value of the correct type:
class C {
int f;
C(String s) : f = int.parse(s);
}
field_in_struct_with_initializer
#Fields in subclasses of 'Struct' and 'Union' can't have initializers.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field in a subclass of Struct
has an initializer.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field p
has an initializer:
// @dart = 2.9
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
Pointer p = nullptr;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the initializer:
// @dart = 2.9
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
Pointer p;
}
field_must_be_external_in_struct
#Fields of 'Struct' and 'Union' subclasses must be marked external.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field in a subclass of either Struct
or Union
isn't marked as being external
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field a
isn't marked as being external
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int16()
int a;
}
Common fixes
#Add the required external
modifier:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int16()
external int a;
}
final_initialized_in_declaration_and_constructor
#'{0}' is final and was given a value when it was declared, so it can't be set to a new value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a final field is initialized twice: once where it's declared and once by a constructor's parameter.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field f
is initialized twice:
class C {
final int f = 0;
C(this.f);
}
Common fixes
#If the field should have the same value for all instances, then remove the initialization in the parameter list:
class C {
final int f = 0;
C();
}
If the field can have different values in different instances, then remove the initialization in the declaration:
class C {
final int f;
C(this.f);
}
final_not_initialized
#The final variable '{0}' must be initialized.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a final field or variable isn't initialized.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
doesn't have an initializer:
final x;
Common fixes
#For variables and static fields, you can add an initializer:
final x = 0;
For instance fields, you can add an initializer as shown in the previous example, or you can initialize the field in every constructor. You can initialize the field by using an initializing formal parameter:
class C {
final int x;
C(this.x);
}
You can also initialize the field by using an initializer in the constructor:
class C {
final int x;
C(int y) : x = y * 2;
}
final_not_initialized_constructor
#All final variables must be initialized, but '{0}' and '{1}' aren't.
All final variables must be initialized, but '{0}' isn't.
All final variables must be initialized, but '{0}', '{1}', and {2} others aren't.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class defines one or more final instance fields without initializers and has at least one constructor that doesn't initialize those fields. All final instance fields must be initialized when the instance is created, either by the field's initializer or by the constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
class C {
final String value;
C();
}
Common fixes
#If the value should be passed in to the constructor directly, then use an initializing formal parameter to initialize the field value
:
class C {
final String value;
C(this.value);
}
If the value should be computed indirectly from a value provided by the caller, then add a parameter and include an initializer:
class C {
final String value;
C(Object o) : value = o.toString();
}
If the value of the field doesn't depend on values that can be passed to the constructor, then add an initializer for the field as part of the field declaration:
class C {
final String value = '';
C();
}
If the value of the field doesn't depend on values that can be passed to the constructor but different constructors need to initialize it to different values, then add an initializer for the field in the initializer list:
class C {
final String value;
C() : value = '';
C.named() : value = 'c';
}
However, if the value is the same for all instances, then consider using a static field instead of an instance field:
class C {
static const String value = '';
C();
}
flutter_field_not_map
#The value of the 'flutter' field is expected to be a map.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of the flutter
key isn't a map.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of the top-level flutter
key is a string:
name: example
flutter: true
Common fixes
#If you need to specify Flutter-specific options, then change the value to be a map:
name: example
flutter:
uses-material-design: true
If you don't need to specify Flutter-specific options, then remove the flutter
key:
name: example
for_in_of_invalid_element_type
#The type '{0}' used in the 'for' loop must implement '{1}' with a type argument that can be assigned to '{2}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the Iterable
or Stream
in a for-in loop has an element type that can't be assigned to the loop variable.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because <String>[]
has an element type of String
, and String
can't be assigned to the type of e
(int
):
void f() {
for (int e in <String>[]) {
print(e);
}
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the loop variable is correct, then update the type of the iterable:
void f() {
for (int e in <int>[]) {
print(e);
}
}
If the type of the iterable is correct, then update the type of the loop variable:
void f() {
for (String e in <String>[]) {
print(e);
}
}
for_in_of_invalid_type
#The type '{0}' used in the 'for' loop must implement '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the expression following in
in a for-in loop has a type that isn't a subclass of Iterable
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because m
is a Map
, and Map
isn't a subclass of Iterable
:
void f(Map<String, String> m) {
for (String s in m) {
print(s);
}
}
Common fixes
#Replace the expression with one that produces an iterable value:
void f(Map<String, String> m) {
for (String s in m.values) {
print(s);
}
}
for_in_with_const_variable
#A for-in loop variable can't be a 'const'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the loop variable declared in a for-in loop is declared to be a const
. The variable can't be a const
because the value can't be computed at compile time.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the loop variable x
is declared to be a const
:
void f() {
for (const x in [0, 1, 2]) {
print(x);
}
}
Common fixes
#If there's a type annotation, then remove the const
modifier from the declaration.
If there's no type, then replace the const
modifier with final
, var
, or a type annotation:
void f() {
for (final x in [0, 1, 2]) {
print(x);
}
}
generic_method_type_instantiation_on_dynamic
#A method tear-off on a receiver whose type is 'dynamic' can't have type arguments.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance method is being torn off from a receiver whose type is dynamic
, and the tear-off includes type arguments. Because the analyzer can't know how many type parameters the method has, or whether it has any type parameters, there's no way it can validate that the type arguments are correct. As a result, the type arguments aren't allowed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of p
is dynamic
and the tear-off of m
has type arguments:
void f(dynamic list) {
list.fold<int>;
}
Common fixes
#If you can use a more specific type than dynamic
, then change the type of the receiver:
void f(List<Object> list) {
list.fold<int>;
}
If you can't use a more specific type, then remove the type arguments:
void f(dynamic list) {
list.cast;
}
generic_struct_subclass
#The class '{0}' can't extend 'Struct' or 'Union' because '{0}' is generic.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a subclass of either Struct
or Union
has a type parameter.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class S
defines the type parameter T
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class S<T> extends Struct {
external Pointer notEmpty;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the type parameters from the class:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class S extends Struct {
external Pointer notEmpty;
}
getter_not_subtype_setter_types
#The return type of getter '{0}' is '{1}' which isn't a subtype of the type '{2}' of its setter '{3}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the return type of a getter isn't a subtype of the type of the parameter of a setter with the same name.
The subtype relationship is a requirement whether the getter and setter are in the same class or whether one of them is in a superclass of the other.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the return type of the getter x
is num
, the parameter type of the setter x
is int
, and num
isn't a subtype of int
:
class C {
num get x => 0;
set x(int y) {}
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the getter is correct, then change the type of the setter:
class C {
num get x => 0;
set x(num y) {}
}
If the type of the setter is correct, then change the type of the getter:
class C {
int get x => 0;
set x(int y) {}
}
illegal_async_generator_return_type
#Functions marked 'async*' must have a return type that is a supertype of 'Stream
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the body of a function has the async*
modifier even though the return type of the function isn't either Stream
or a supertype of Stream
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the body of the function f
has the 'async*' modifier even though the return type int
isn't a supertype of Stream
:
int f() async* {}
Common fixes
#If the function should be asynchronous, then change the return type to be either Stream
or a supertype of Stream
:
Stream<int> f() async* {}
If the function should be synchronous, then remove the async*
modifier:
int f() => 0;
illegal_async_return_type
#Functions marked 'async' must have a return type which is a supertype of 'Future'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the body of a function has the async
modifier even though the return type of the function isn't assignable to Future
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the body of the function f
has the async
modifier even though the return type isn't assignable to Future
:
int f() async {
return 0;
}
Common fixes
#If the function should be asynchronous, then change the return type to be assignable to Future
:
Future<int> f() async {
return 0;
}
If the function should be synchronous, then remove the async
modifier:
int f() => 0;
illegal_concrete_enum_member
#A concrete instance member named '{0}' can't be declared in a class that implements 'Enum'.
A concrete instance member named '{0}' can't be inherited from '{1}' in a class that implements 'Enum'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either an enum declaration, a class that implements Enum
, or a mixin with a superclass constraint of Enum
, declares or inherits a concrete instance member named either index
, hashCode
, or ==
.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the enum E
declares an instance getter named index
:
enum E {
v;
int get index => 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
, which implements Enum
, declares an instance field named hashCode
:
abstract class C implements Enum {
int hashCode = 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
, which indirectly implements Enum
through the class A
, declares an instance getter named hashCode
:
abstract class A implements Enum {}
abstract class C implements A {
int get hashCode => 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the mixin M
, which has Enum
in the on
clause, declares an explicit operator named ==
:
mixin M on Enum {
bool operator ==(Object other) => false;
}
Common fixes
#Rename the conflicting member:
enum E {
v;
int get getIndex => 0;
}
illegal_enum_values
#An instance member named 'values' can't be declared in a class that implements 'Enum'.
An instance member named 'values' can't be inherited from '{0}' in a class that implements 'Enum'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either a class that implements Enum
or a mixin with a superclass constraint of Enum
has an instance member named values
.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
, which implements Enum
, declares an instance field named values
:
abstract class C implements Enum {
int get values => 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class B
, which implements Enum
, inherits an instance method named values
from A
:
abstract class A {
int values() => 0;
}
abstract class B extends A implements Enum {}
Common fixes
#Change the name of the conflicting member:
abstract class C implements Enum {
int get value => 0;
}
illegal_sync_generator_return_type
#Functions marked 'sync*' must have a return type that is a supertype of 'Iterable
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the body of a function has the sync*
modifier even though the return type of the function isn't either Iterable
or a supertype of Iterable
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the body of the function f
has the 'sync*' modifier even though the return type int
isn't a supertype of Iterable
:
int f() sync* {}
Common fixes
#If the function should return an iterable, then change the return type to be either Iterable
or a supertype of Iterable
:
Iterable<int> f() sync* {}
If the function should return a single value, then remove the sync*
modifier:
int f() => 0;
implements_non_class
#Classes and mixins can only implement other classes and mixins.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a name used in the implements
clause of a class or mixin declaration is defined to be something other than a class or mixin.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
is a variable rather than a class or mixin:
var x;
class C implements x {}
Common fixes
#If the name is the name of an existing class or mixin that's already being imported, then add a prefix to the import so that the local definition of the name doesn't shadow the imported name.
If the name is the name of an existing class or mixin that isn't being imported, then add an import, with a prefix, for the library in which it's declared.
Otherwise, either replace the name in the implements
clause with the name of an existing class or mixin, or remove the name from the implements
clause.
implements_repeated
#'{0}' can only be implemented once.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a single class is specified more than once in an implements
clause.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because A
is in the list twice:
class A {}
class B implements A, A {}
Common fixes
#Remove all except one occurrence of the class name:
class A {}
class B implements A {}
implements_super_class
#'{0}' can't be used in both the 'extends' and 'implements' clauses.
'{0}' can't be used in both the 'extends' and 'with' clauses.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class is listed in the extends
clause of a class declaration and also in either the implements
or with
clause of the same declaration.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class A
is used in both the extends
and implements
clauses for the class B
:
class A {}
class B extends A implements A {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class A
is used in both the extends
and with
clauses for the class B
:
mixin class A {}
class B extends A with A {}
Common fixes
#If you want to inherit the implementation from the class, then remove the class from the implements
clause:
class A {}
class B extends A {}
If you don't want to inherit the implementation from the class, then remove the extends
clause:
class A {}
class B implements A {}
implicit_super_initializer_missing_arguments
#The implicitly invoked unnamed constructor from '{0}' has required parameters.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor implicitly invokes the unnamed constructor from the superclass, the unnamed constructor of the superclass has a required parameter, and there's no super parameter corresponding to the required parameter.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the unnamed constructor in the class B
implicitly invokes the unnamed constructor in the class A
, but the constructor in A
has a required positional parameter named x
:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class B extends A {
B();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the unnamed constructor in the class B
implicitly invokes the unnamed constructor in the class A
, but the constructor in A
has a required named parameter named x
:
class A {
A({required int x});
}
class B extends A {
B();
}
Common fixes
#If you can add a parameter to the constructor in the subclass, then add a super parameter corresponding to the required parameter in the superclass' constructor. The new parameter can either be required:
class A {
A({required int x});
}
class B extends A {
B({required super.x});
}
or it can be optional:
class A {
A({required int x});
}
class B extends A {
B({super.x = 0});
}
If you can't add a parameter to the constructor in the subclass, then add an explicit super constructor invocation with the required argument:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class B extends A {
B() : super(0);
}
implicit_this_reference_in_initializer
#The instance member '{0}' can't be accessed in an initializer.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds a reference to an instance member in a constructor's initializer list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because defaultX
is an instance member:
class C {
int x;
C() : x = defaultX;
int get defaultX => 0;
}
Common fixes
#If the member can be made static, then do so:
class C {
int x;
C() : x = defaultX;
static int get defaultX => 0;
}
If not, then replace the reference in the initializer with a different expression that doesn't use an instance member:
class C {
int x;
C() : x = 0;
int get defaultX => 0;
}
import_deferred_library_with_load_function
#The imported library defines a top-level function named 'loadLibrary' that is hidden by deferring this library.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library that declares a function named loadLibrary
is imported using a deferred import. A deferred import introduces an implicit function named loadLibrary
. This function is used to load the contents of the deferred library, and the implicit function hides the explicit declaration in the deferred library.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that defines a function named loadLibrary
:
void loadLibrary(Library library) {}
class Library {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the implicit declaration of a.loadLibrary
is hiding the explicit declaration of loadLibrary
in a.dart
:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
void f() {
a.Library();
}
Common fixes
#If the imported library isn't required to be deferred, then remove the keyword deferred
:
import 'a.dart' as a;
void f() {
a.Library();
}
If the imported library is required to be deferred and you need to reference the imported function, then rename the function in the imported library:
void populateLibrary(Library library) {}
class Library {}
If the imported library is required to be deferred and you don't need to reference the imported function, then add a hide
clause:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a hide loadLibrary;
void f() {
a.Library();
}
import_internal_library
#The library '{0}' is internal and can't be imported.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds an import whose dart:
URI references an internal library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because _interceptors
is an internal library:
import 'dart:_interceptors';
Common fixes
#Remove the import directive.
import_of_legacy_library_into_null_safe
#The library '{0}' is legacy, and shouldn't be imported into a null safe library.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library that is null safe imports a library that isn't null safe.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that contains the following:
// @dart = 2.9
class A {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because a library that null safe is importing a library that isn't null safe:
import 'a.dart';
A? f() => null;
Common fixes
#If you can migrate the imported library to be null safe, then migrate it and update or remove the migrated library's language version.
If you can't migrate the imported library, then the importing library needs to have a language version that is before 2.12, when null safety was enabled by default.
import_of_non_library
#The imported library '{0}' can't have a part-of directive.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a part file is imported into a library.
Example
#Given a part file named part.dart
containing the following:
part of lib;
The following code produces this diagnostic because imported files can't have a part-of directive:
library lib;
import 'part.dart';
Common fixes
#Import the library that contains the part file rather than the part file itself.
inconsistent_inheritance
#Superinterfaces don't have a valid override for '{0}': {1}.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class inherits two or more conflicting signatures for a member and doesn't provide an implementation that satisfies all the inherited signatures.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because C
is inheriting the declaration of m
from A
, and that implementation isn't consistent with the signature of m
that's inherited from B
:
class A {
void m({int? a}) {}
}
class B {
void m({int? b}) {}
}
class C extends A implements B {
}
Common fixes
#Add an implementation of the method that satisfies all the inherited signatures:
class A {
void m({int? a}) {}
}
class B {
void m({int? b}) {}
}
class C extends A implements B {
void m({int? a, int? b}) {}
}
inconsistent_language_version_override
#Parts must have exactly the same language version override as the library.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a part file has a language version override comment that specifies a different language version than the one being used for the library to which the part belongs.
Example
#Given a part file named part.dart
that contains the following:
// @dart = 2.14
part of 'test.dart';
The following code produces this diagnostic because the parts of a library must have the same language version as the defining compilation unit:
// @dart = 2.15
part 'part.dart';
Common fixes
#Remove the language version override from the part file, so that it implicitly uses the same version as the defining compilation unit:
part of 'test.dart';
If necessary, either adjust the language version override in the defining compilation unit to be appropriate for the code in the part, or migrate the code in the part file to be consistent with the new language version.
inconsistent_pattern_variable_logical_or
#The variable '{0}' has a different type and/or finality in this branch of the logical-or pattern.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a pattern variable that is declared on all branches of a logical-or pattern doesn't have the same type on every branch. It is also produced when the variable has a different finality on different branches. A pattern variable declared on multiple branches of a logical-or pattern is required to have the same type and finality in each branch, so that the type and finality of the variable can be known in code that's guarded by the logical-or pattern.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
is defined to be an int
on one branch and a double
on the other:
void f(Object? x) {
if (x case (int a) || (double a)) {
print(a);
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
is final
in the first branch and isn't final
in the second branch:
void f(Object? x) {
if (x case (final int a) || (int a)) {
print(a);
}
}
Common fixes
#If the finality of the variable is different, decide whether it should be final
or not final
and make the cases consistent:
void f(Object? x) {
if (x case (int a) || (int a)) {
print(a);
}
}
If the type of the variable is different and the type isn't critical to the condition being matched, then ensure that the variable has the same type on both branches:
void f(Object? x) {
if (x case (num a) || (num a)) {
print(a);
}
}
If the type of the variable is different and the type is critical to the condition being matched, then consider breaking the condition into multiple if
statements or case
clauses:
void f(Object? x) {
if (x case int a) {
print(a);
} else if (x case double a) {
print(a);
}
}
initializer_for_non_existent_field
#'{0}' isn't a field in the enclosing class.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor initializes a field that isn't declared in the class containing the constructor. Constructors can't initialize fields that aren't declared and fields that are inherited from superclasses.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the initializer is initializing x
, but x
isn't a field in the class:
class C {
int? y;
C() : x = 0;
}
Common fixes
#If a different field should be initialized, then change the name to the name of the field:
class C {
int? y;
C() : y = 0;
}
If the field must be declared, then add a declaration:
class C {
int? x;
int? y;
C() : x = 0;
}
initializer_for_static_field
#'{0}' is a static field in the enclosing class. Fields initialized in a constructor can't be static.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a static field is initialized in a constructor using either an initializing formal parameter or an assignment in the initializer list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the static field a
is being initialized by the initializing formal parameter this.a
:
class C {
static int? a;
C(this.a);
}
Common fixes
#If the field should be an instance field, then remove the keyword static
:
class C {
int? a;
C(this.a);
}
If you intended to initialize an instance field and typed the wrong name, then correct the name of the field being initialized:
class C {
static int? a;
int? b;
C(this.b);
}
If you really want to initialize the static field, then move the initialization into the constructor body:
class C {
static int? a;
C(int? c) {
a = c;
}
}
initializing_formal_for_non_existent_field
#'{0}' isn't a field in the enclosing class.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an initializing formal parameter is found in a constructor in a class that doesn't declare the field being initialized. Constructors can't initialize fields that aren't declared and fields that are inherited from superclasses.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field x
isn't defined:
class C {
int? y;
C(this.x);
}
Common fixes
#If the field name was wrong, then change it to the name of an existing field:
class C {
int? y;
C(this.y);
}
If the field name is correct but hasn't yet been defined, then declare the field:
class C {
int? x;
int? y;
C(this.x);
}
If the parameter is needed but shouldn't initialize a field, then convert it to a normal parameter and use it:
class C {
int y;
C(int x) : y = x * 2;
}
If the parameter isn't needed, then remove it:
class C {
int? y;
C();
}
instance_access_to_static_member
#The static {1} '{0}' can't be accessed through an instance.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an access operator is used to access a static member through an instance of the class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because zero
is a static field, but it's being accessed as if it were an instance field:
void f(C c) {
c.zero;
}
class C {
static int zero = 0;
}
Common fixes
#Use the class to access the static member:
void f(C c) {
C.zero;
}
class C {
static int zero = 0;
}
instance_member_access_from_factory
#Instance members can't be accessed from a factory constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a factory constructor contains an unqualified reference to an instance member. In a generative constructor, the instance of the class is created and initialized before the body of the constructor is executed, so the instance can be bound to this
and accessed just like it would be in an instance method. But, in a factory constructor, the instance isn't created before executing the body, so this
can't be used to reference it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
isn't in scope in the factory constructor:
class C {
int x;
factory C() {
return C._(x);
}
C._(this.x);
}
Common fixes
#Rewrite the code so that it doesn't reference the instance member:
class C {
int x;
factory C() {
return C._(0);
}
C._(this.x);
}
instance_member_access_from_static
#Instance members can't be accessed from a static method.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a static method contains an unqualified reference to an instance member.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the instance field x
is being referenced in a static method:
class C {
int x = 0;
static int m() {
return x;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the method must reference the instance member, then it can't be static, so remove the keyword:
class C {
int x = 0;
int m() {
return x;
}
}
If the method can't be made an instance method, then add a parameter so that an instance of the class can be passed in:
class C {
int x = 0;
static int m(C c) {
return c.x;
}
}
instantiate_abstract_class
#Abstract classes can't be instantiated.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds a constructor invocation and the constructor is declared in an abstract class. Even though you can't create an instance of an abstract class, abstract classes can declare constructors that can be invoked by subclasses.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because C
is an abstract class:
abstract class C {}
var c = new C();
Common fixes
#If there's a concrete subclass of the abstract class that can be used, then create an instance of the concrete subclass.
instantiate_enum
#Enums can't be instantiated.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an enum is instantiated. It's invalid to create an instance of an enum by invoking a constructor; only the instances named in the declaration of the enum can exist.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the enum E
is being instantiated:
// @dart = 2.16
enum E {a}
var e = E();
Common fixes
#If you intend to use an instance of the enum, then reference one of the constants defined in the enum:
// @dart = 2.16
enum E {a}
var e = E.a;
If you intend to use an instance of a class, then use the name of that class in place of the name of the enum.
instantiate_type_alias_expands_to_type_parameter
#Type aliases that expand to a type parameter can't be instantiated.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor invocation is found where the type being instantiated is a type alias for one of the type parameters of the type alias. This isn't allowed because the value of the type parameter is a type rather than a class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because it creates an instance of A
, even though A
is a type alias that is defined to be equivalent to a type parameter:
typedef A<T> = T;
void f() {
const A<int>();
}
Common fixes
#Use either a class name or a type alias defined to be a class, rather than a type alias defined to be a type parameter:
typedef A<T> = C<T>;
void f() {
const A<int>();
}
class C<T> {
const C();
}
integer_literal_imprecise_as_double
#The integer literal is being used as a double, but can't be represented as a 64-bit double without overflow or loss of precision: '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an integer literal is being implicitly converted to a double, but can't be represented as a 64-bit double without overflow or loss of precision. Integer literals are implicitly converted to a double if the context requires the type double
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the integer value 9223372036854775807
can't be represented exactly as a double:
double x = 9223372036854775807;
Common fixes
#If you need to use the exact value, then use the class BigInt
to represent the value:
var x = BigInt.parse('9223372036854775807');
If you need to use a double, then change the value to one that can be represented exactly:
double x = 9223372036854775808;
integer_literal_out_of_range
#The integer literal {0} can't be represented in 64 bits.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an integer literal has a value that is too large (positive) or too small (negative) to be represented in a 64-bit word.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value can't be represented in 64 bits:
var x = 9223372036854775810;
Common fixes
#If you need to represent the current value, then wrap it in an instance of the class BigInt
:
var x = BigInt.parse('9223372036854775810');
invalid_annotation
#Annotation must be either a const variable reference or const constructor invocation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an annotation is found that is using something that is neither a variable marked as const
or the invocation of a const
constructor.
Getters can't be used as annotations.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable v
isn't a const
variable:
var v = 0;
@v
void f() {
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because f
isn't a variable:
@f
void f() {
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because f
isn't a constructor:
@f()
void f() {
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because g
is a getter:
@g
int get g => 0;
Common fixes
#If the annotation is referencing a variable that isn't a const
constructor, add the keyword const
to the variable's declaration:
const v = 0;
@v
void f() {
}
If the annotation isn't referencing a variable, then remove it:
int v = 0;
void f() {
}
invalid_annotation_constant_value_from_deferred_library
#Constant values from a deferred library can't be used in annotations.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constant defined in a library that is imported as a deferred library is referenced in the argument list of an annotation. Annotations are evaluated at compile time, and values from deferred libraries aren't available at compile time.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constant pi
is being referenced in the argument list of an annotation, even though the library that defines it is being imported as a deferred library:
import 'dart:math' deferred as math;
class C {
const C(double d);
}
@C(math.pi)
void f () {}
Common fixes
#If you need to reference the imported constant, then remove the deferred
keyword:
import 'dart:math' as math;
class C {
const C(double d);
}
@C(math.pi)
void f () {}
If the import is required to be deferred and there's another constant that is appropriate, then use that constant in place of the constant from the deferred library.
invalid_annotation_from_deferred_library
#Constant values from a deferred library can't be used as annotations.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constant from a library that is imported using a deferred import is used as an annotation. Annotations are evaluated at compile time, and constants from deferred libraries aren't available at compile time.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constant pi
is being used as an annotation when the library dart:math
is imported as deferred
:
import 'dart:math' deferred as math;
@math.pi
void f() {}
Common fixes
#If you need to reference the constant as an annotation, then remove the keyword deferred
from the import:
import 'dart:math' as math;
@math.pi
void f() {}
If you can use a different constant as an annotation, then replace the annotation with a different constant:
@deprecated
void f() {}
invalid_annotation_target
#The annotation '{0}' can only be used on {1}.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an annotation is applied to a kind of declaration that it doesn't support.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the optionalTypeArgs
annotation isn't defined to be valid for top-level variables:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@optionalTypeArgs
int x = 0;
Common fixes
#Remove the annotation from the declaration.
invalid_assignment
#A value of type '{0}' can't be assigned to a variable of type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the static type of an expression that is assigned to a variable isn't assignable to the type of the variable.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of the initializer (int
) isn't assignable to the type of the variable (String
):
int i = 0;
String s = i;
Common fixes
#If the value being assigned is always assignable at runtime, even though the static types don't reflect that, then add an explicit cast.
Otherwise, change the value being assigned so that it has the expected type. In the previous example, this might look like:
int i = 0;
String s = i.toString();
If you can't change the value, then change the type of the variable to be compatible with the type of the value being assigned:
int i = 0;
int s = i;
invalid_dependency
#Publishable packages can't have '{0}' dependencies.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a publishable package includes a package in the dependencies
list of its pubspec.yaml
file that isn't a pub-hosted dependency.
To learn more about the different types of dependency sources, check out Package dependencies.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the dependency on the package transmogrify
isn't a pub-hosted dependency.
name: example
dependencies:
transmogrify:
path: ../transmogrify
Common fixes
#If you want to publish the package to pub.dev
, then change the dependency to a hosted package that is published on pub.dev
.
If the package isn't intended to be published on pub.dev
, then add a publish_to: none
entry to its pubspec.yaml
file to mark it as not intended to be published:
name: example
publish_to: none
dependencies:
transmogrify:
path: ../transmogrify
invalid_exception_value
#The method {0} can't have an exceptional return value (the second argument) when the return type of the function is either 'void', 'Handle' or 'Pointer'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an invocation of the method Pointer.fromFunction
or NativeCallable.isolateLocal
has a second argument (the exceptional return value) and the type to be returned from the invocation is either void
, Handle
or Pointer
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because a second argument is provided when the return type of f
is void
:
import 'dart:ffi';
typedef T = Void Function(Int8);
void f(int i) {}
void g() {
Pointer.fromFunction<T>(f, 42);
}
Common fixes
#Remove the exception value:
import 'dart:ffi';
typedef T = Void Function(Int8);
void f(int i) {}
void g() {
Pointer.fromFunction<T>(f);
}
invalid_export_of_internal_element
#The member '{0}' can't be exported as a part of a package's public API.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a public library exports a declaration that is marked with the internal
annotation.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
in the src
directory that contains:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@internal class One {}
The following code, when found in a public library produces this diagnostic because the export
directive is exporting a name that is only intended to be used internally:
export 'src/a.dart';
Common fixes
#If the export is needed, then add a hide
clause to hide the internal names:
export 'src/a.dart' hide One;
If the export isn't needed, then remove it.
invalid_export_of_internal_element_indirectly
#The member '{0}' can't be exported as a part of a package's public API, but is indirectly exported as part of the signature of '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a public library exports a top-level function with a return type or at least one parameter type that is marked with the internal
annotation.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
in the src
directory that contains the following:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@internal
typedef IntFunction = int Function();
int f(IntFunction g) => g();
The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
has a parameter of type IntFunction
, and IntFunction
is only intended to be used internally:
export 'src/a.dart' show f;
Common fixes
#If the function must be public, then make all the types in the function's signature public types.
If the function doesn't need to be exported, then stop exporting it, either by removing it from the show
clause, adding it to the hide
clause, or by removing the export.
invalid_extension_argument_count
#Extension overrides must have exactly one argument: the value of 'this' in the extension method.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension override doesn't have exactly one argument. The argument is the expression used to compute the value of this
within the extension method, so there must be one argument.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there are no arguments:
extension E on String {
String join(String other) => '$this $other';
}
void f() {
E().join('b');
}
And, the following code produces this diagnostic because there's more than one argument:
extension E on String {
String join(String other) => '$this $other';
}
void f() {
E('a', 'b').join('c');
}
Common fixes
#Provide one argument for the extension override:
extension E on String {
String join(String other) => '$this $other';
}
void f() {
E('a').join('b');
}
invalid_factory_method_decl
#Factory method '{0}' must have a return type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method that is annotated with the factory
annotation has a return type of void
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method createC
is annotated with the factory
annotation but doesn't return any value:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class Factory {
@factory
void createC() {}
}
class C {}
Common fixes
#Change the return type to something other than void
:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class Factory {
@factory
C createC() => C();
}
class C {}
invalid_factory_method_impl
#Factory method '{0}' doesn't return a newly allocated object.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method that is annotated with the factory
annotation doesn't return a newly allocated object.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method createC
returns the value of a field rather than a newly created instance of C
:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class Factory {
C c = C();
@factory
C createC() => c;
}
class C {}
Common fixes
#Change the method to return a newly created instance of the return type:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class Factory {
@factory
C createC() => C();
}
class C {}
invalid_factory_name_not_a_class
#The name of a factory constructor must be the same as the name of the immediately enclosing class.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a factory constructor isn't the same as the name of the surrounding class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name of the factory constructor (A
) isn't the same as the surrounding class (C
):
class A {}
class C {
factory A() => throw 0;
}
Common fixes
#If the factory returns an instance of the surrounding class, and you intend it to be an unnamed factory constructor, then rename the factory:
class A {}
class C {
factory C() => throw 0;
}
If the factory returns an instance of the surrounding class, and you intend it to be a named factory constructor, then prefix the name of the factory constructor with the name of the surrounding class:
class A {}
class C {
factory C.a() => throw 0;
}
If the factory returns an instance of a different class, then move the factory to that class:
class A {
factory A() => throw 0;
}
class C {}
If the factory returns an instance of a different class, but you can't modify that class or don't want to move the factory, then convert it to be a static method:
class A {}
class C {
static A a() => throw 0;
}
invalid_field_name
#Record field names can't be a dollar sign followed by an integer when the integer is the index of a positional field.
Record field names can't be private.
Record field names can't be the same as a member from 'Object'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either a record literal or a record type annotation has a field whose name is invalid. The name is invalid if it is:
- private (starts with
_
) - the same as one of the members defined on
Object
- the same as the name of a positional field (an exception is made if the field is a positional field with the specified name)
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the record literal has a field named toString
, which is a method defined on Object
:
var r = (a: 1, toString: 4);
The following code produces this diagnostic because the record type annotation has a field named hashCode
, which is a getter defined on Object
:
void f(({int a, int hashCode}) r) {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the record literal has a private field named _a
:
var r = (_a: 1, b: 2);
The following code produces this diagnostic because the record type annotation has a private field named _a
:
void f(({int _a, int b}) r) {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the record literal has a field named $1
, which is also the name of a different positional parameter:
var r = (2, $1: 1);
The following code produces this diagnostic because the record type annotation has a field named $1
, which is also the name of a different positional parameter:
void f((int, String, {int $1}) r) {}
Common fixes
#Rename the field:
var r = (a: 1, d: 4);
invalid_field_type_in_struct
#Fields in struct classes can't have the type '{0}'. They can only be declared as 'int', 'double', 'Array', 'Pointer', or subtype of 'Struct' or 'Union'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field in a subclass of Struct
has a type other than int
, double
, Array
, Pointer
, or subtype of Struct
or Union
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field str
has the type String
, which isn't one of the allowed types for fields in a subclass of Struct
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
external String s;
@Int32()
external int i;
}
Common fixes
#Use one of the allowed types for the field:
import 'dart:ffi';
import 'package:ffi/ffi.dart';
final class C extends Struct {
external Pointer<Utf8> s;
@Int32()
external int i;
}
invalid_implementation_override
#'{1}.{0}' ('{2}') isn't a valid concrete implementation of '{3}.{0}' ('{4}').
The setter '{1}.{0}' ('{2}') isn't a valid concrete implementation of '{3}.{0}' ('{4}').
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when all of the following are true:
- A class defines an abstract member.
- There is a concrete implementation of that member in a superclass.
- The concrete implementation isn't a valid implementation of the abstract method.
The concrete implementation can be invalid because of incompatibilities in either the return type, the types of the method's parameters, or the type parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method A.add
has a parameter of type int
, and the overriding method B.add
has a corresponding parameter of type num
:
class A {
int add(int a) => a;
}
class B extends A {
int add(num a);
}
This is a problem because in an invocation of B.add
like the following:
void f(B b) {
b.add(3.4);
}
B.add
is expecting to be able to take, for example, a double
, but when the method A.add
is executed (because it's the only concrete implementation of add
), a runtime exception will be thrown because a double
can't be assigned to a parameter of type int
.
Common fixes
#If the method in the subclass can conform to the implementation in the superclass, then change the declaration in the subclass (or remove it if it's the same):
class A {
int add(int a) => a;
}
class B extends A {
int add(int a);
}
If the method in the superclass can be generalized to be a valid implementation of the method in the subclass, then change the superclass method:
class A {
int add(num a) => a.floor();
}
class B extends A {
int add(num a);
}
If neither the method in the superclass nor the method in the subclass can be changed, then provide a concrete implementation of the method in the subclass:
class A {
int add(int a) => a;
}
class B extends A {
int add(num a) => a.floor();
}
invalid_inline_function_type
#Inline function types can't be used for parameters in a generic function type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a generic function type has a function-valued parameter that is written using the older inline function type syntax.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter f
, in the generic function type used to define F
, uses the inline function type syntax:
typedef F = int Function(int f(String s));
Common fixes
#Use the generic function syntax for the parameter's type:
typedef F = int Function(int Function(String));
invalid_internal_annotation
#Only public elements in a package's private API can be annotated as being internal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a declaration is annotated with the internal
annotation and that declaration is either in a public library or has a private name.
Example
#The following code, when in a public library, produces this diagnostic because the internal
annotation can't be applied to declarations in a public library:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@internal
class C {}
The following code, whether in a public or internal library, produces this diagnostic because the internal
annotation can't be applied to declarations with private names:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@internal
class _C {}
void f(_C c) {}
Common fixes
#If the declaration has a private name, then remove the annotation:
class _C {}
void f(_C c) {}
If the declaration has a public name and is intended to be internal to the package, then move the annotated declaration into an internal library (in other words, a library inside the src
directory).
Otherwise, remove the use of the annotation:
class C {}
invalid_language_version_override
#The Dart language version override comment can't be followed by any non-whitespace characters.
The Dart language version override comment must be specified with a version number, like '2.0', after the '=' character.
The Dart language version override comment must be specified with an '=' character.
The Dart language version override comment must be specified with exactly two slashes.
The Dart language version override comment must be specified with the word 'dart' in all lower case.
The Dart language version override number can't be prefixed with a letter.
The Dart language version override number must begin with '@dart'.
The language version override can't specify a version greater than the latest known language version: {0}.{1}.
The language version override must be specified before any declaration or directive.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a comment that appears to be an attempt to specify a language version override doesn't conform to the requirements for such a comment. For more information, see Per-library language version selection.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the word dart
must be lowercase in such a comment and because there's no equal sign between the word dart
and the version number:
// @Dart 2.13
Common fixes
#If the comment is intended to be a language version override, then change the comment to follow the correct format:
// @dart = 2.13
invalid_literal_annotation
#Only const constructors can have the @literal
annotation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the literal
annotation is applied to anything other than a const constructor.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor isn't a const
constructor:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
@literal
C();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because x
isn't a constructor:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@literal
var x;
Common fixes
#If the annotation is on a constructor and the constructor should always be invoked with const
, when possible, then mark the constructor with the const
keyword:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
@literal
const C();
}
If the constructor can't be marked as const
, then remove the annotation.
If the annotation is on anything other than a constructor, then remove the annotation:
var x;
invalid_modifier_on_constructor
#The modifier '{0}' can't be applied to the body of a constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the body of a constructor is prefixed by one of the following modifiers: async
, async*
, or sync*
. Constructor bodies must be synchronous.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the body of the constructor for C
is marked as being async
:
class C {
C() async {}
}
Common fixes
#If the constructor can be synchronous, then remove the modifier:
class C {
C();
}
If the constructor can't be synchronous, then use a static method to create the instance instead:
class C {
C();
static Future<C> c() async {
return C();
}
}
invalid_modifier_on_setter
#Setters can't use 'async', 'async*', or 'sync*'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the body of a setter is prefixed by one of the following modifiers: async
, async*
, or sync*
. Setter bodies must be synchronous.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the body of the setter x
is marked as being async
:
class C {
set x(int i) async {}
}
Common fixes
#If the setter can be synchronous, then remove the modifier:
class C {
set x(int i) {}
}
If the setter can't be synchronous, then use a method to set the value instead:
class C {
void x(int i) async {}
}
invalid_non_virtual_annotation
#The annotation '@nonVirtual' can only be applied to a concrete instance member.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the nonVirtual
annotation is found on a declaration other than a member of a class, mixin, or enum, or if the member isn't a concrete instance member.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the annotation is on a class declaration rather than a member inside the class:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@nonVirtual
class C {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
is an abstract method:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
abstract class C {
@nonVirtual
void m();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
is a static method:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
abstract class C {
@nonVirtual
static void m() {}
}
Common fixes
#If the declaration isn't a member of a class, mixin, or enum, then remove the annotation:
class C {}
If the member is intended to be a concrete instance member, then make it so:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
abstract class C {
@nonVirtual
void m() {}
}
If the member is not intended to be a concrete instance member, then remove the annotation:
abstract class C {
static void m() {}
}
invalid_null_aware_operator
#The receiver can't be 'null' because of short-circuiting, so the null-aware operator '{0}' can't be used.
The receiver can't be null, so the null-aware operator '{0}' is unnecessary.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a null-aware operator (?.
, ?..
, ?[
, ?..[
, or ...?
) is used on a receiver that's known to be non-nullable.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because s
can't be null
:
int? getLength(String s) {
return s?.length;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because a
can't be null
:
var a = [];
var b = [...?a];
The following code produces this diagnostic because s?.length
can't return null
:
void f(String? s) {
s?.length?.isEven;
}
The reason s?.length
can't return null
is because the null-aware operator following s
short-circuits the evaluation of both length
and isEven
if s
is null
. In other words, if s
is null
, then neither length
nor isEven
will be invoked, and if s
is non-null
, then length
can't return a null
value. Either way, isEven
can't be invoked on a null
value, so the null-aware operator isn't necessary. See Understanding null safety for more details.
The following code produces this diagnostic because s
can't be null
.
void f(Object? o) {
var s = o as String;
s?.length;
}
The reason s
can't be null, despite the fact that o
can be null
, is because of the cast to String
, which is a non-nullable type. If o
ever has the value null
, the cast will fail and the invocation of length
will not happen.
Common fixes
#Replace the null-aware operator with a non-null-aware equivalent; for example, change ?.
to .
:
int getLength(String s) {
return s.length;
}
(Note that the return type was also changed to be non-nullable, which might not be appropriate in some cases.)
invalid_override
#'{1}.{0}' ('{2}') isn't a valid override of '{3}.{0}' ('{4}').
The setter '{1}.{0}' ('{2}') isn't a valid override of '{3}.{0}' ('{4}').
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member of a class is found that overrides a member from a supertype and the override isn't valid. An override is valid if all of these are true:
- It allows all of the arguments allowed by the overridden member.
- It doesn't require any arguments that aren't required by the overridden member.
- The type of every parameter of the overridden member is assignable to the corresponding parameter of the override.
- The return type of the override is assignable to the return type of the overridden member.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of the parameter s
(String
) isn't assignable to the type of the parameter i
(int
):
class A {
void m(int i) {}
}
class B extends A {
void m(String s) {}
}
Common fixes
#If the invalid method is intended to override the method from the superclass, then change it to conform:
class A {
void m(int i) {}
}
class B extends A {
void m(int i) {}
}
If it isn't intended to override the method from the superclass, then rename it:
class A {
void m(int i) {}
}
class B extends A {
void m2(String s) {}
}
invalid_override_of_non_virtual_member
#The member '{0}' is declared non-virtual in '{1}' and can't be overridden in subclasses.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member of a class, mixin, or enum overrides a member that has the @nonVirtual
annotation on it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
in B
overrides the method m
in A
, and the method m
in A
is annotated with the @nonVirtual
annotation:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class A {
@nonVirtual
void m() {}
}
class B extends A {
@override
void m() {}
}
Common fixes
#If the annotation on the method in the superclass is correct (the method in the superclass is not intended to be overridden), then remove or rename the overriding method:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class A {
@nonVirtual
void m() {}
}
class B extends A {}
If the method in the superclass is intended to be overridden, then remove the @nonVirtual
annotation:
class A {
void m() {}
}
class B extends A {
@override
void m() {}
}
invalid_pattern_variable_in_shared_case_scope
#The variable '{0}' doesn't have the same type and/or finality in all cases that share this body.
The variable '{0}' is available in some, but not all cases that share this body.
The variable '{0}' is not available because there is a label or 'default' case.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when multiple case clauses in a switch statement share a body, and at least one of them declares a variable that is referenced in the shared statements, but the variable is either not declared in all of the case clauses or it is declared in inconsistent ways.
If the variable isn't declared in all of the case clauses, then it won't have a value if one of the clauses that doesn't declare the variable is the one that matches and executes the body. This includes the situation where one of the case clauses is the default
clause.
If the variable is declared in inconsistent ways, either being final
in some cases and not final
in others or having a different type in different cases, then the semantics of what the type or finality of the variable should be are not defined.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
is only declared in one of the case clauses, and won't have a value if the second clause is the one that matched x
:
void f(Object? x) {
switch (x) {
case int a when a > 0:
case 0:
a;
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
isn't declared in the default
clause, and won't have a value if the body is executed because none of the other clauses matched x
:
void f(Object? x) {
switch (x) {
case int a when a > 0:
default:
a;
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
won't have a value if the body is executed because a different group of cases caused control to continue at the label:
void f(Object? x) {
switch (x) {
someLabel:
case int a when a > 0:
a;
case int b when b < 0:
continue someLabel;
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
, while being assigned in all of the case clauses, doesn't have then same type associated with it in every clause:
void f(Object? x) {
switch (x) {
case int a when a < 0:
case num a when a > 0:
a;
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
is final
in the first case clause and isn't final
in the second case clause:
void f(Object? x) {
switch (x) {
case final int a when a < 0:
case int a when a > 0:
a;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the variable isn't declared in all of the cases, and you need to reference it in the statements, then declare it in the other cases:
void f(Object? x) {
switch (x) {
case int a when a > 0:
case int a when a == 0:
a;
}
}
If the variable isn't declared in all of the cases, and you don't need to reference it in the statements, then remove the references to it and remove the declarations from the other cases:
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case > 0:
case 0:
}
}
If the type of the variable is different, decide the type the variable should have and make the cases consistent:
void f(Object? x) {
switch (x) {
case num a when a < 0:
case num a when a > 0:
a;
}
}
If the finality of the variable is different, decide whether it should be final
or not final
and make the cases consistent:
void f(Object? x) {
switch (x) {
case final int a when a < 0:
case final int a when a > 0:
a;
}
}
invalid_platforms_field
#The 'platforms' field must be a map with platforms as keys.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a top-level platforms
field is specified, but its value is not a map with keys. To learn more about specifying your package's supported platforms, check out the documentation on platform declarations.
Example
#The following pubspec.yaml
produces this diagnostic because platforms
should be a map.
name: example
platforms:
- android
- web
- ios
Common fixes
#If you can rely on automatic platform detection, then omit the top-level platforms
field.
name: example
If you need to manually specify the list of supported platforms, then write the platforms
field as a map with platform names as keys.
name: example
platforms:
android:
web:
ios:
invalid_reference_to_generative_enum_constructor
#Generative enum constructors can only be used as targets of redirection.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a generative constructor defined on an enum is used anywhere other than to create one of the enum constants or as the target of a redirection from another constructor in the same enum.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor for E
is being used to create an instance in the function f
:
enum E {
a(0);
const E(int x);
}
E f() => const E(2);
Common fixes
#If there's an enum value with the same value, or if you add such a constant, then reference the constant directly:
enum E {
a(0), b(2);
const E(int x);
}
E f() => E.b;
If you need to use a constructor invocation, then use a factory constructor:
enum E {
a(0);
const E(int x);
factory E.c(int x) => a;
}
E f() => E.c(2);
invalid_reference_to_this
#Invalid reference to 'this' expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when this
is used outside of an instance method or a generative constructor. The reserved word this
is only defined in the context of an instance method, a generative constructor, or the initializer of a late instance field declaration.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because v
is a top-level variable:
C f() => this;
class C {}
Common fixes
#Use a variable of the appropriate type in place of this
, declaring it if necessary:
C f(C c) => c;
class C {}
invalid_return_type_for_catch_error
#A value of type '{0}' can't be returned by the 'onError' handler because it must be assignable to '{1}'.
The return type '{0}' isn't assignable to '{1}', as required by 'Future.catchError'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an invocation of Future.catchError
has an argument whose return type isn't compatible with the type returned by the instance of Future
. At runtime, the method catchError
attempts to return the value from the callback as the result of the future, which results in another exception being thrown.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because future
is declared to return an int
while callback
is declared to return a String
, and String
isn't a subtype of int
:
void f(Future<int> future, String Function(dynamic, StackTrace) callback) {
future.catchError(callback);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the closure being passed to catchError
returns an int
while future
is declared to return a String
:
void f(Future<String> future) {
future.catchError((error, stackTrace) => 3);
}
Common fixes
#If the instance of Future
is declared correctly, then change the callback to match:
void f(Future<int> future, int Function(dynamic, StackTrace) callback) {
future.catchError(callback);
}
If the declaration of the instance of Future
is wrong, then change it to match the callback:
void f(Future<String> future, String Function(dynamic, StackTrace) callback) {
future.catchError(callback);
}
invalid_sealed_annotation
#The annotation '@sealed' can only be applied to classes.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a declaration other than a class declaration has the @sealed
annotation on it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the @sealed
annotation is on a method declaration:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class A {
@sealed
void m() {}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the annotation:
class A {
void m() {}
}
invalid_super_formal_parameter_location
#Super parameters can only be used in non-redirecting generative constructors.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a super parameter is used anywhere other than a non-redirecting generative constructor.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the super parameter x
is in a redirecting generative constructor:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class B extends A {
B.b(super.x) : this._();
B._() : super(0);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the super parameter x
isn't in a generative constructor:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class C extends A {
factory C.c(super.x) => C._();
C._() : super(0);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the super parameter x
is in a method:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class D extends A {
D() : super(0);
void m(super.x) {}
}
Common fixes
#If the function containing the super parameter can be changed to be a non-redirecting generative constructor, then do so:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class B extends A {
B.b(super.x);
}
If the function containing the super parameter can't be changed to be a non-redirecting generative constructor, then remove the super
:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class D extends A {
D() : super(0);
void m(int x) {}
}
invalid_type_argument_in_const_literal
#Constant list literals can't use a type parameter in a type argument, such as '{0}'.
Constant map literals can't use a type parameter in a type argument, such as '{0}'.
Constant set literals can't use a type parameter in a type argument, such as '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type parameter is used in a type argument in a list, map, or set literal that is prefixed by const
. This isn't allowed because the value of the type parameter (the actual type that will be used at runtime) can't be known at compile time.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type parameter T
is being used as a type argument when creating a constant list:
List<T> newList<T>() => const <T>[];
The following code produces this diagnostic because the type parameter T
is being used as a type argument when creating a constant map:
Map<String, T> newSet<T>() => const <String, T>{};
The following code produces this diagnostic because the type parameter T
is being used as a type argument when creating a constant set:
Set<T> newSet<T>() => const <T>{};
Common fixes
#If the type that will be used for the type parameter can be known at compile time, then remove the type parameter:
List<int> newList() => const <int>[];
If the type that will be used for the type parameter can't be known until runtime, then remove the keyword const
:
List<T> newList<T>() => <T>[];
invalid_uri
#Invalid URI syntax: '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a URI in a directive doesn't conform to the syntax of a valid URI.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because '#'
isn't a valid URI:
import '#';
Common fixes
#Replace the invalid URI with a valid URI.
invalid_use_of_covariant_in_extension
#Can't have modifier '{0}' in an extension.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member declared inside an extension uses the keyword covariant
in the declaration of a parameter. Extensions aren't classes and don't have subclasses, so the keyword serves no purpose.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because i
is marked as being covariant:
extension E on String {
void a(covariant int i) {}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the covariant
keyword:
extension E on String {
void a(int i) {}
}
invalid_use_of_internal_member
#The member '{0}' can only be used within its package.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a reference to a declaration that is annotated with the internal
annotation is found outside the package containing the declaration.
Example
#Given a package p
that defines a library containing a declaration marked with the internal
annotation:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@internal
class C {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because it's referencing the class C
, which isn't intended to be used outside the package p
:
import 'package:p/src/p.dart';
void f(C c) {}
Common fixes
#Remove the reference to the internal declaration.
invalid_use_of_null_value
#An expression whose value is always 'null' can't be dereferenced.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an expression whose value will always be null
is dereferenced.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
will always be null
:
int f(Null x) {
return x.length;
}
Common fixes
#If the value is allowed to be something other than null
, then change the type of the expression:
int f(String? x) {
return x!.length;
}
invalid_use_of_type_outside_library
#The class '{0}' can't be extended outside of its library because it's a final class.
The class '{0}' can't be extended outside of its library because it's an interface class.
The class '{0}' can't be extended, implemented, or mixed in outside of its library because it's a sealed class.
The class '{0}' can't be implemented outside of its library because it's a base class.
The class '{0}' can't be implemented outside of its library because it's a final class.
The class '{0}' can't be used as a mixin superclass constraint outside of its library because it's a final class.
The mixin '{0}' can't be implemented outside of its library because it's a base mixin.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extends
, implements
, with
, or on
clause uses a class or mixin in a way that isn't allowed given the modifiers on that class or mixin's declaration.
The message specifies how the declaration is being used and why it isn't allowed.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that defines a base class A
:
base class A {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class B
implements the class A
, but the base
modifier prevents A
from being implemented outside of the library where it's defined:
import 'a.dart';
final class B implements A {}
Common fixes
#Use of this type is restricted outside of its declaring library. If a different, unrestricted type is available that can provide similar functionality, then replace the type:
class B implements C {}
class C {}
If there isn't a different type that would be appropriate, then remove the type, and possibly the whole clause:
class B {}
invalid_use_of_visible_for_overriding_member
#The member '{0}' can only be used for overriding.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance member that is annotated with visibleForOverriding
is referenced outside the library in which it's declared for any reason other than to override it.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
containing the following declaration:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class A {
@visibleForOverriding
void a() {}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
is being invoked even though the only reason it's public is to allow it to be overridden:
import 'a.dart';
class B extends A {
void b() {
a();
}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the invalid use of the member.
invalid_use_of_visible_for_testing_member
#The member '{0}' can only be used within '{1}' or a test.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member annotated with @visibleForTesting
is referenced anywhere other than the library in which it is declared or in a library in the test
directory.
Example
#Given a file c.dart
that contains the following:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
@visibleForTesting
void m() {}
}
The following code, when not inside the test
directory, produces this diagnostic because the method m
is marked as being visible only for tests:
import 'c.dart';
void f(C c) {
c.m();
}
Common fixes
#If the annotated member should not be referenced outside of tests, then remove the reference:
import 'c.dart';
void f(C c) {}
If it's OK to reference the annotated member outside of tests, then remove the annotation:
class C {
void m() {}
}
invalid_visibility_annotation
#The member '{0}' is annotated with '{1}', but this annotation is only meaningful on declarations of public members.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either the visibleForTemplate
or visibleForTesting
annotation is applied to a non-public declaration.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@visibleForTesting
void _someFunction() {}
void f() => _someFunction();
Common fixes
#If the declaration doesn't need to be used by test code, then remove the annotation:
void _someFunction() {}
void f() => _someFunction();
If it does, then make it public:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@visibleForTesting
void someFunction() {}
void f() => someFunction();
invalid_visible_for_overriding_annotation
#The annotation 'visibleForOverriding' can only be applied to a public instance member that can be overridden.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when anything other than a public instance member of a class is annotated with visibleForOverriding
. Because only public instance members can be overridden outside the defining library, there's no value to annotating any other declarations.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the annotation is on a class, and classes can't be overridden:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@visibleForOverriding
class C {}
Common fixes
#Remove the annotation:
class C {}
invalid_visible_outside_template_annotation
#The annotation 'visibleOutsideTemplate' can only be applied to a member of a class, enum, or mixin that is annotated with 'visibleForTemplate'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the @visibleOutsideTemplate
annotation is used incorrectly. This annotation is only meant to annotate members of a class, enum, or mixin that has the @visibleForTemplate
annotation, to opt those members out of the visibility restrictions that @visibleForTemplate
imposes.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there is no @visibleForTemplate
annotation at the class level:
import 'package:angular_meta/angular_meta.dart';
class C {
@visibleOutsideTemplate
int m() {
return 1;
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the annotation is on a class declaration, not a member of a class, enum, or mixin:
import 'package:angular_meta/angular_meta.dart';
@visibleOutsideTemplate
class C {}
Common fixes
#If the class is only visible so that templates can reference it, then add the @visibleForTemplate
annotation to the class:
import 'package:angular_meta/angular_meta.dart';
@visibleForTemplate
class C {
@visibleOutsideTemplate
int m() {
return 1;
}
}
If the @visibleOutsideTemplate
annotation is on anything other than a member of a class, enum, or mixin with the @visibleForTemplate
annotation, remove the annotation:
class C {}
invocation_of_extension_without_call
#The extension '{0}' doesn't define a 'call' method so the override can't be used in an invocation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension override is used to invoke a function but the extension doesn't declare a call
method.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension E
doesn't define a call
method:
extension E on String {}
void f() {
E('')();
}
Common fixes
#If the extension is intended to define a call
method, then declare it:
extension E on String {
int call() => 0;
}
void f() {
E('')();
}
If the extended type defines a call
method, then remove the extension override.
If the call
method isn't defined, then rewrite the code so that it doesn't invoke the call
method.
invocation_of_non_function
#'{0}' isn't a function.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds a function invocation, but the name of the function being invoked is defined to be something other than a function.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because Binary
is the name of a function type, not a function:
typedef Binary = int Function(int, int);
int f() {
return Binary(1, 2);
}
Common fixes
#Replace the name with the name of a function.
invocation_of_non_function_expression
#The expression doesn't evaluate to a function, so it can't be invoked.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a function invocation is found, but the name being referenced isn't the name of a function, or when the expression computing the function doesn't compute a function.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
isn't a function:
int x = 0;
int f() => x;
var y = x();
The following code produces this diagnostic because f()
doesn't return a function:
int x = 0;
int f() => x;
var y = f()();
Common fixes
#If you need to invoke a function, then replace the code before the argument list with the name of a function or with an expression that computes a function:
int x = 0;
int f() => x;
var y = f();
label_in_outer_scope
#Can't reference label '{0}' declared in an outer method.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a break
or continue
statement references a label that is declared in a method or function containing the function in which the break
or continue
statement appears. The break
and continue
statements can't be used to transfer control outside the function that contains them.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the label loop
is declared outside the local function g
:
void f() {
loop:
while (true) {
void g() {
break loop;
}
g();
}
}
Common fixes
#Try rewriting the code so that it isn't necessary to transfer control outside the local function, possibly by inlining the local function:
void f() {
loop:
while (true) {
break loop;
}
}
If that isn't possible, then try rewriting the local function so that a value returned by the function can be used to determine whether control is transferred:
void f() {
loop:
while (true) {
bool g() {
return true;
}
if (g()) {
break loop;
}
}
}
label_undefined
#Can't reference an undefined label '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds a reference to a label that isn't defined in the scope of the break
or continue
statement that is referencing it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the label loop
isn't defined anywhere:
void f() {
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
for (int j = 0; j < 10; j++) {
if (j != 0) {
break loop;
}
}
}
}
Common fixes
#If the label should be on the innermost enclosing do
, for
, switch
, or while
statement, then remove the label:
void f() {
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
for (int j = 0; j < 10; j++) {
if (j != 0) {
break;
}
}
}
}
If the label should be on some other statement, then add the label:
void f() {
loop: for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
for (int j = 0; j < 10; j++) {
if (j != 0) {
break loop;
}
}
}
}
late_final_field_with_const_constructor
#Can't have a late final field in a class with a generative const constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class that has at least one const
constructor also has a field marked both late
and final
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class A
has a const
constructor and the final
field f
is marked as late
:
class A {
late final int f;
const A();
}
Common fixes
#If the field doesn't need to be marked late
, then remove the late
modifier from the field:
class A {
final int f = 0;
const A();
}
If the field must be marked late
, then remove the const
modifier from the constructors:
class A {
late final int f;
A();
}
late_final_local_already_assigned
#The late final local variable is already assigned.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the analyzer can prove that a local variable marked as both late
and final
was already assigned a value at the point where another assignment occurs.
Because final
variables can only be assigned once, subsequent assignments are guaranteed to fail, so they're flagged.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the final
variable v
is assigned a value in two places:
int f() {
late final int v;
v = 0;
v += 1;
return v;
}
Common fixes
#If you need to be able to reassign the variable, then remove the final
keyword:
int f() {
late int v;
v = 0;
v += 1;
return v;
}
If you don't need to reassign the variable, then remove all except the first of the assignments:
int f() {
late final int v;
v = 0;
return v;
}
leaf_call_must_not_return_handle
#FFI leaf call can't return a 'Handle'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of the isLeaf
argument in an invocation of either Pointer.asFunction
or DynamicLibrary.lookupFunction
is true
and the function that would be returned would have a return type of Handle
.
The analyzer also produces this diagnostic when the value of the isLeaf
argument in an Native
annotation is true
and the type argument on the annotation is a function type whose return type is Handle
.
In all of these cases, leaf calls are only supported for the types bool
, int
, float
, double
, and, as a return type void
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function p
returns a Handle
, but the isLeaf
argument is true
:
import 'dart:ffi';
void f(Pointer<NativeFunction<Handle Function()>> p) {
p.asFunction<Object Function()>(isLeaf: true);
}
Common fixes
#If the function returns a handle, then remove the isLeaf
argument:
import 'dart:ffi';
void f(Pointer<NativeFunction<Handle Function()>> p) {
p.asFunction<Object Function()>();
}
If the function returns one of the supported types, then correct the type information:
import 'dart:ffi';
void f(Pointer<NativeFunction<Int32 Function()>> p) {
p.asFunction<int Function()>(isLeaf: true);
}
leaf_call_must_not_take_handle
#FFI leaf call can't take arguments of type 'Handle'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of the isLeaf
argument in an invocation of either Pointer.asFunction
or DynamicLibrary.lookupFunction
is true
and the function that would be returned would have a parameter of type Handle
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function p
has a parameter of type Handle
, but the isLeaf
argument is true
:
import 'dart:ffi';
void f(Pointer<NativeFunction<Void Function(Handle)>> p) {
p.asFunction<void Function(Object)>(isLeaf: true);
}
Common fixes
#If the function has at least one parameter of type Handle
, then remove the isLeaf
argument:
import 'dart:ffi';
void f(Pointer<NativeFunction<Void Function(Handle)>> p) {
p.asFunction<void Function(Object)>();
}
If none of the function's parameters are Handle
s, then correct the type information:
import 'dart:ffi';
void f(Pointer<NativeFunction<Void Function(Int8)>> p) {
p.asFunction<void Function(int)>(isLeaf: true);
}
list_element_type_not_assignable
#The element type '{0}' can't be assigned to the list type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type of an element in a list literal isn't assignable to the element type of the list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because 2.5
is a double, and the list can hold only integers:
List<int> x = [1, 2.5, 3];
Common fixes
#If you intended to add a different object to the list, then replace the element with an expression that computes the intended object:
List<int> x = [1, 2, 3];
If the object shouldn't be in the list, then remove the element:
List<int> x = [1, 3];
If the object being computed is correct, then widen the element type of the list to allow all of the different types of objects it needs to contain:
List<num> x = [1, 2.5, 3];
main_first_positional_parameter_type
#The type of the first positional parameter of the 'main' function must be a supertype of 'List
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the first positional parameter of a function named main
isn't a supertype of List<String>
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because List<int>
isn't a supertype of List<String>
:
void main(List<int> args) {}
Common fixes
#If the function is an entry point, then change the type of the first positional parameter to be a supertype of List<String>
:
void main(List<String> args) {}
If the function isn't an entry point, then change the name of the function:
void f(List<int> args) {}
main_has_required_named_parameters
#The function 'main' can't have any required named parameters.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a function named main
has one or more required named parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function named main
has a required named parameter (x
):
void main({required int x}) {}
Common fixes
#If the function is an entry point, then remove the required
keyword:
void main({int? x}) {}
If the function isn't an entry point, then change the name of the function:
void f({required int x}) {}
main_has_too_many_required_positional_parameters
#The function 'main' can't have more than two required positional parameters.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a function named main
has more than two required positional parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function main
has three required positional parameters:
void main(List<String> args, int x, int y) {}
Common fixes
#If the function is an entry point and the extra parameters aren't used, then remove them:
void main(List<String> args, int x) {}
If the function is an entry point, but the extra parameters used are for when the function isn't being used as an entry point, then make the extra parameters optional:
void main(List<String> args, int x, [int y = 0]) {}
If the function isn't an entry point, then change the name of the function:
void f(List<String> args, int x, int y) {}
main_is_not_function
#The declaration named 'main' must be a function.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library contains a declaration of the name main
that isn't the declaration of a top-level function.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name main
is being used to declare a top-level variable:
var main = 3;
Common fixes
#Use a different name for the declaration:
var mainIndex = 3;
map_entry_not_in_map
#Map entries can only be used in a map literal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a map entry (a key/value pair) is found in a set literal.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the literal has a map entry even though it's a set literal:
var collection = <String>{'a' : 'b'};
Common fixes
#If you intended for the collection to be a map, then change the code so that it is a map. In the previous example, you could do this by adding another type argument:
var collection = <String, String>{'a' : 'b'};
In other cases, you might need to change the explicit type from Set
to Map
.
If you intended for the collection to be a set, then remove the map entry, possibly by replacing the colon with a comma if both values should be included in the set:
var collection = <String>{'a', 'b'};
map_key_type_not_assignable
#The element type '{0}' can't be assigned to the map key type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a key of a key-value pair in a map literal has a type that isn't assignable to the key type of the map.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because 2
is an int
, but the keys of the map are required to be String
s:
var m = <String, String>{2 : 'a'};
Common fixes
#If the type of the map is correct, then change the key to have the correct type:
var m = <String, String>{'2' : 'a'};
If the type of the key is correct, then change the key type of the map:
var m = <int, String>{2 : 'a'};
map_value_type_not_assignable
#The element type '{0}' can't be assigned to the map value type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a value of a key-value pair in a map literal has a type that isn't assignable to the value type of the map.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because 2
is an int
, but/ the values of the map are required to be String
s:
var m = <String, String>{'a' : 2};
Common fixes
#If the type of the map is correct, then change the value to have the correct type:
var m = <String, String>{'a' : '2'};
If the type of the value is correct, then change the value type of the map:
var m = <String, int>{'a' : 2};
mismatched_annotation_on_struct_field
#The annotation doesn't match the declared type of the field.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the annotation on a field in a subclass of Struct
or Union
doesn't match the Dart type of the field.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the annotation Double
doesn't match the Dart type int
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Double()
external int x;
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the field is correct, then change the annotation to match:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int32()
external int x;
}
If the annotation is correct, then change the type of the field to match:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Double()
external double x;
}
missing_annotation_on_struct_field
#Fields of type '{0}' in a subclass of '{1}' must have an annotation indicating the native type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field in a subclass of Struct
or Union
whose type requires an annotation doesn't have one. The Dart types int
, double
, and Array
are used to represent multiple C types, and the annotation specifies which of the compatible C types the field represents.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field x
doesn't have an annotation indicating the underlying width of the integer value:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
external int x;
}
Common fixes
#Add an appropriate annotation to the field:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int64()
external int x;
}
missing_dart_library
#Required library '{0}' is missing.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either the Dart or Flutter SDK isn't installed correctly, and, as a result, one of the dart:
libraries can't be found.
Common fixes
#Reinstall the Dart or Flutter SDK.
missing_default_value_for_parameter
#The parameter '{0}' can't have a value of 'null' because of its type, but the implicit default value is 'null'.
With null safety, use the 'required' keyword, not the '@required' annotation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an optional parameter, whether positional or named, has a potentially non-nullable type and doesn't specify a default value. Optional parameters that have no explicit default value have an implicit default value of null
. If the type of the parameter doesn't allow the parameter to have a value of null
, then the implicit default value isn't valid.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
can't be null
, and no non-null
default value is specified:
void f([int x]) {}
As does this:
void g({int x}) {}
Common fixes
#If you want to use null
to indicate that no value was provided, then you need to make the type nullable:
void f([int? x]) {}
void g({int? x}) {}
If the parameter can't be null, then either provide a default value:
void f([int x = 1]) {}
void g({int x = 2}) {}
or make the parameter a required parameter:
void f(int x) {}
void g({required int x}) {}
missing_dependency
#Missing a dependency on imported package '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's a package that has been imported in the source but is not listed as a dependency of the importing package.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the package path
is not listed as a dependency, while there is an import statement with package path
in the source code of package example
:
name: example
dependencies:
meta: ^1.0.2
Common fixes
#Add the missing package path
to the dependencies
field:
name: example
dependencies:
meta: ^1.0.2
path: any
missing_enum_constant_in_switch
#Missing case clause for '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a switch
statement for an enum doesn't include an option for one of the values in the enum.
Note that null
is always a possible value for an enum and therefore also must be handled.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the enum value e2
isn't handled:
enum E { e1, e2 }
void f(E e) {
switch (e) {
case E.e1:
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#If there's special handling for the missing values, then add a case
clause for each of the missing values:
enum E { e1, e2 }
void f(E e) {
switch (e) {
case E.e1:
break;
case E.e2:
break;
}
}
If the missing values should be handled the same way, then add a default
clause:
enum E { e1, e2 }
void f(E e) {
switch (e) {
case E.e1:
break;
default:
break;
}
}
missing_exception_value
#The method {0} must have an exceptional return value (the second argument) when the return type of the function is neither 'void', 'Handle', nor 'Pointer'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an invocation of the method Pointer.fromFunction
or NativeCallable.isolateLocal
doesn't have a second argument (the exceptional return value) when the type to be returned from the invocation is neither void
, Handle
, nor Pointer
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type returned by f
is expected to be an 8-bit integer but the call to fromFunction
doesn't include an exceptional return argument:
import 'dart:ffi';
int f(int i) => i * 2;
void g() {
Pointer.fromFunction<Int8 Function(Int8)>(f);
}
Common fixes
#Add an exceptional return type:
import 'dart:ffi';
int f(int i) => i * 2;
void g() {
Pointer.fromFunction<Int8 Function(Int8)>(f, 0);
}
missing_field_type_in_struct
#Fields in struct classes must have an explicitly declared type of 'int', 'double' or 'Pointer'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field in a subclass of Struct
or Union
doesn't have a type annotation. Every field must have an explicit type, and the type must either be int
, double
, Pointer
, or a subclass of either Struct
or Union
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field str
doesn't have a type annotation:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
external var str;
@Int32()
external int i;
}
Common fixes
#Explicitly specify the type of the field:
import 'dart:ffi';
import 'package:ffi/ffi.dart';
final class C extends Struct {
external Pointer<Utf8> str;
@Int32()
external int i;
}
missing_name
#The 'name' field is required but missing.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's no top-level name
key. The name
key provides the name of the package, which is required.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the package doesn't have a name:
dependencies:
meta: ^1.0.2
Common fixes
#Add the top-level key name
with a value that's the name of the package:
name: example
dependencies:
meta: ^1.0.2
missing_named_pattern_field_name
#The getter name is not specified explicitly, and the pattern is not a variable.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when, within an object pattern, the specification of a property and the pattern used to match the property's value doesn't have either:
- a getter name before the colon
- a variable pattern from which the getter name can be inferred
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there is no getter name before the colon and no variable pattern after the colon in the object pattern (C(:0)
):
abstract class C {
int get f;
}
void f(C c) {
switch (c) {
case C(:0):
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#If you need to use the actual value of the property within the pattern's scope, then add a variable pattern where the name of the variable is the same as the name of the property being matched:
abstract class C {
int get f;
}
void f(C c) {
switch (c) {
case C(:var f) when f == 0:
print(f);
}
}
If you don't need to use the actual value of the property within the pattern's scope, then add the name of the property being matched before the colon:
abstract class C {
int get f;
}
void f(C c) {
switch (c) {
case C(f: 0):
break;
}
}
missing_override_of_must_be_overridden
#Missing concrete implementation of '{0}'.
Missing concrete implementations of '{0}' and '{1}'.
Missing concrete implementations of '{0}', '{1}', and {2} more.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance member that has the @mustBeOverridden
annotation isn't overridden in a subclass.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class B
doesn't have an override of the inherited method A.m
when A.m
is annotated with @mustBeOverridden
:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class A {
@mustBeOverridden
void m() {}
}
class B extends A {}
Common fixes
#If the annotation is appropriate for the member, then override the member in the subclass:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class A {
@mustBeOverridden
void m() {}
}
class B extends A {
@override
void m() {}
}
If the annotation isn't appropriate for the member, then remove the annotation:
class A {
void m() {}
}
class B extends A {}
missing_required_argument
#The named parameter '{0}' is required, but there's no corresponding argument.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an invocation of a function is missing a required named parameter.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the invocation of f
doesn't include a value for the required named parameter end
:
void f(int start, {required int end}) {}
void g() {
f(3);
}
Common fixes
#Add a named argument corresponding to the missing required parameter:
void f(int start, {required int end}) {}
void g() {
f(3, end: 5);
}
missing_required_param
#The parameter '{0}' is required.
The parameter '{0}' is required. {1}.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function with a named parameter that is annotated as being required is invoked without providing a value for the parameter.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the named parameter x
is required:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
void f({@required int? x}) {}
void g() {
f();
}
Common fixes
#Provide the required value:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
void f({@required int? x}) {}
void g() {
f(x: 2);
}
missing_return
#This function has a return type of '{0}', but doesn't end with a return statement.
Description
#Any function or method that doesn't end with either an explicit return or a throw implicitly returns null
. This is rarely the desired behavior. The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds an implicit return.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
doesn't end with a return:
int f(int x) {
if (x < 0) {
return 0;
}
}
Common fixes
#Add a return
statement that makes the return value explicit, even if null
is the appropriate value.
missing_size_annotation_carray
#Fields of type 'Array' must have exactly one 'Array' annotation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field in a subclass of either Struct
or Union
has a type of Array
but doesn't have a single Array
annotation indicating the dimensions of the array.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field a0
doesn't have an Array
annotation:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
external Array<Uint8> a0;
}
Common fixes
#Ensure that there's exactly one Array
annotation on the field:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array(8)
external Array<Uint8> a0;
}
missing_variable_pattern
#Variable pattern '{0}' is missing in this branch of the logical-or pattern.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when one branch of a logical-or pattern doesn't declare a variable that is declared on the other branch of the same pattern.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the right-hand side of the logical-or pattern doesn't declare the variable a
:
void f((int, int) r) {
if (r case (var a, 0) || (0, _)) {
print(a);
}
}
Common fixes
#If the variable needs to be referenced in the controlled statements, then add a declaration of the variable to every branch of the logical-or pattern:
void f((int, int) r) {
if (r case (var a, 0) || (0, var a)) {
print(a);
}
}
If the variable doesn't need to be referenced in the controlled statements, then remove the declaration of the variable from every branch of the logical-or pattern:
void f((int, int) r) {
if (r case (_, 0) || (0, _)) {
print('found a zero');
}
}
If the variable needs to be referenced if one branch of the pattern matches but not when the other matches, then break the pattern into two pieces:
void f((int, int) r) {
switch (r) {
case (var a, 0):
print(a);
case (0, _):
print('found a zero');
}
}
mixin_application_concrete_super_invoked_member_type
#The super-invoked member '{0}' has the type '{1}', and the concrete member in the class has the type '{2}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a mixin that invokes a method using super
is used in a class where the concrete implementation of that method has a different signature than the signature defined for that method by the mixin's on
type. The reason this is an error is because the invocation in the mixin might invoke the method in a way that's incompatible with the method that will actually be executed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
uses the mixin M
, the mixin M
invokes foo
using super
, and the abstract version of foo
declared in I
(the mixin's on
type) doesn't have the same signature as the concrete version of foo
declared in A
:
class I {
void foo([int? p]) {}
}
class A {
void foo(int p) {}
}
abstract class B extends A implements I {
@override
void foo([int? p]);
}
mixin M on I {
void bar() {
super.foo(42);
}
}
abstract class C extends B with M {}
Common fixes
#If the class doesn't need to use the mixin, then remove it from the with
clause:
class I {
void foo([int? p]) {}
}
class A {
void foo(int? p) {}
}
abstract class B extends A implements I {
@override
void foo([int? p]);
}
mixin M on I {
void bar() {
super.foo(42);
}
}
abstract class C extends B {}
If the class needs to use the mixin, then ensure that there's a concrete implementation of the method that conforms to the signature expected by the mixin:
class I {
void foo([int? p]) {}
}
class A {
void foo(int? p) {}
}
abstract class B extends A implements I {
@override
void foo([int? p]) {
super.foo(p);
}
}
mixin M on I {
void bar() {
super.foo(42);
}
}
abstract class C extends B with M {}
mixin_application_not_implemented_interface
#'{0}' can't be mixed onto '{1}' because '{1}' doesn't implement '{2}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a mixin that has a superclass constraint is used in a mixin application with a superclass that doesn't implement the required constraint.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the mixin M
requires that the class to which it's applied be a subclass of A
, but Object
isn't a subclass of A
:
class A {}
mixin M on A {}
class X = Object with M;
Common fixes
#If you need to use the mixin, then change the superclass to be either the same as or a subclass of the superclass constraint:
class A {}
mixin M on A {}
class X = A with M;
mixin_application_no_concrete_super_invoked_member
#The class doesn't have a concrete implementation of the super-invoked member '{0}'.
The class doesn't have a concrete implementation of the super-invoked setter '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a mixin application contains an invocation of a member from its superclass, and there's no concrete member of that name in the mixin application's superclass.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the mixin M
contains the invocation super.m()
, and the class A
, which is the superclass of the mixin application A+M
, doesn't define a concrete implementation of m
:
abstract class A {
void m();
}
mixin M on A {
void bar() {
super.m();
}
}
abstract class B extends A with M {}
Common fixes
#If you intended to apply the mixin M
to a different class, one that has a concrete implementation of m
, then change the superclass of B
to that class:
abstract class A {
void m();
}
mixin M on A {
void bar() {
super.m();
}
}
class C implements A {
void m() {}
}
abstract class B extends C with M {}
If you need to make B
a subclass of A
, then add a concrete implementation of m
in A
:
abstract class A {
void m() {}
}
mixin M on A {
void bar() {
super.m();
}
}
abstract class B extends A with M {}
mixin_class_declaration_extends_not_object
#The class '{0}' can't be declared a mixin because it extends a class other than 'Object'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class that is marked with the mixin
modifier extends a class other than Object
. A mixin class can't have a superclass other than Object
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class B
, which has the modifier mixin
, extends A
:
class A {}
mixin class B extends A {}
Common fixes
#If you want the class to be used as a mixin, then change the superclass to Object
, either explicitly or by removing the extends clause:
class A {}
mixin class B {}
If the class needs to have a superclass other than Object
, then remove the mixin
modifier:
class A {}
class B extends A {}
If you need both a mixin and a subclass of a class other than Object
, then move the members of the subclass to a new mixin, remove the mixin
modifier from the subclass, and apply the new mixin to the subclass:
class A {}
class B extends A with M {}
mixin M {}
Depending on the members of the subclass this might require adding an on
clause to the mixin.
mixin_class_declares_constructor
#The class '{0}' can't be used as a mixin because it declares a constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class is used as a mixin and the mixed-in class defines a constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class A
, which defines a constructor, is being used as a mixin:
//@dart=2.19
class A {
A();
}
class B with A {}
Common fixes
#If it's possible to convert the class to a mixin, then do so:
mixin A {
}
class B with A {}
If the class can't be a mixin and it's possible to remove the constructor, then do so:
//@dart=2.19
class A {
}
class B with A {}
If the class can't be a mixin and you can't remove the constructor, then try extending or implementing the class rather than mixing it in:
class A {
A();
}
class B extends A {}
mixin_inherits_from_not_object
#The class '{0}' can't be used as a mixin because it extends a class other than 'Object'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class that extends a class other than Object
is used as a mixin.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class B
, which extends A
, is being used as a mixin by C
:
//@dart=2.19
class A {}
class B extends A {}
class C with B {}
Common fixes
#If the class being used as a mixin can be changed to extend Object
, then change it:
//@dart=2.19
class A {}
class B {}
class C with B {}
If the class being used as a mixin can't be changed and the class that's using it extends Object
, then extend the class being used as a mixin:
class A {}
class B extends A {}
class C extends B {}
If the class doesn't extend Object
or if you want to be able to mix in the behavior from B
in other places, then create a real mixin:
class A {}
mixin M on A {}
class B extends A with M {}
class C extends A with M {}
mixin_instantiate
#Mixins can't be instantiated.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a mixin is instantiated.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the mixin M
is being instantiated:
mixin M {}
var m = M();
Common fixes
#If you intend to use an instance of a class, then use the name of that class in place of the name of the mixin.
mixin_of_non_class
#Classes can only mix in mixins and classes.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a name in a with
clause is defined to be something other than a mixin or a class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because F
is defined to be a function type:
typedef F = int Function(String);
class C with F {}
Common fixes
#Remove the invalid name from the list, possibly replacing it with the name of the intended mixin or class:
typedef F = int Function(String);
class C {}
mixin_on_sealed_class
#The class '{0}' shouldn't be used as a mixin constraint because it is sealed, and any class mixing in this mixin must have '{0}' as a superclass.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the superclass constraint of a mixin is a class from a different package that was marked as sealed
. Classes that are sealed can't be extended, implemented, mixed in, or used as a superclass constraint.
Example
#If the package p
defines a sealed class:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@sealed
class C {}
Then, the following code, when in a package other than p
, produces this diagnostic:
import 'package:p/p.dart';
mixin M on C {}
Common fixes
#If the classes that use the mixin don't need to be subclasses of the sealed class, then consider adding a field and delegating to the wrapped instance of the sealed class.
mixin_super_class_constraint_deferred_class
#Deferred classes can't be used as superclass constraints.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a superclass constraint of a mixin is imported from a deferred library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the superclass constraint of math.Random
is imported from a deferred library:
import 'dart:async' deferred as async;
mixin M<T> on async.Stream<T> {}
Common fixes
#If the import doesn't need to be deferred, then remove the deferred
keyword:
import 'dart:async' as async;
mixin M<T> on async.Stream<T> {}
If the import does need to be deferred, then remove the superclass constraint:
mixin M<T> {}
mixin_super_class_constraint_non_interface
#Only classes and mixins can be used as superclass constraints.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type following the on
keyword in a mixin declaration is neither a class nor a mixin.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because F
is neither a class nor a mixin:
typedef F = void Function();
mixin M on F {}
Common fixes
#If the type was intended to be a class but was mistyped, then replace the name.
Otherwise, remove the type from the on
clause.
multiple_redirecting_constructor_invocations
#Constructors can have only one 'this' redirection, at most.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor redirects to more than one other constructor in the same class (using this
).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the unnamed constructor in C
is redirecting to both this.a
and this.b
:
class C {
C() : this.a(), this.b();
C.a();
C.b();
}
Common fixes
#Remove all but one of the redirections:
class C {
C() : this.a();
C.a();
C.b();
}
multiple_super_initializers
#A constructor can have at most one 'super' initializer.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the initializer list of a constructor contains more than one invocation of a constructor from the superclass. The initializer list is required to have exactly one such call, which can either be explicit or implicit.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the initializer list for B
's constructor invokes both the constructor one
and the constructor two
from the superclass A
:
class A {
int? x;
String? s;
A.one(this.x);
A.two(this.s);
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.one(0), super.two('');
}
Common fixes
#If one of the super constructors will initialize the instance fully, then remove the other:
class A {
int? x;
String? s;
A.one(this.x);
A.two(this.s);
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.one(0);
}
If the initialization achieved by one of the super constructors can be performed in the body of the constructor, then remove its super invocation and perform the initialization in the body:
class A {
int? x;
String? s;
A.one(this.x);
A.two(this.s);
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.one(0) {
s = '';
}
}
If the initialization can only be performed in a constructor in the superclass, then either add a new constructor or modify one of the existing constructors so there's a constructor that allows all the required initialization to occur in a single call:
class A {
int? x;
String? s;
A.one(this.x);
A.two(this.s);
A.three(this.x, this.s);
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.three(0, '');
}
must_be_a_native_function_type
#The type '{0}' given to '{1}' must be a valid 'dart:ffi' native function type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an invocation of either Pointer.fromFunction
, DynamicLibrary.lookupFunction
, or a NativeCallable
constructor, has a type argument(whether explicit or inferred) that isn't a native function type.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type T
can be any subclass of Function
but the type argument for fromFunction
is required to be a native function type:
import 'dart:ffi';
int f(int i) => i * 2;
class C<T extends Function> {
void g() {
Pointer.fromFunction<T>(f, 0);
}
}
Common fixes
#Use a native function type as the type argument to the invocation:
import 'dart:ffi';
int f(int i) => i * 2;
class C<T extends Function> {
void g() {
Pointer.fromFunction<Int32 Function(Int32)>(f, 0);
}
}
must_be_a_subtype
#The type '{0}' must be a subtype of '{1}' for '{2}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic in two cases:
- In an invocation of
Pointer.fromFunction
, or aNativeCallable
constructor where the type argument (whether explicit or inferred) isn't a supertype of the type of the function passed as the first argument to the method. - In an invocation of
DynamicLibrary.lookupFunction
where the first type argument isn't a supertype of the second type argument.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of the function f
(String Function(int)
) isn't a subtype of the type argument T
(Int8 Function(Int8)
):
import 'dart:ffi';
typedef T = Int8 Function(Int8);
double f(double i) => i;
void g() {
Pointer.fromFunction<T>(f, 5.0);
}
Common fixes
#If the function is correct, then change the type argument to match:
import 'dart:ffi';
typedef T = Float Function(Float);
double f(double i) => i;
void g() {
Pointer.fromFunction<T>(f, 5.0);
}
If the type argument is correct, then change the function to match:
import 'dart:ffi';
typedef T = Int8 Function(Int8);
int f(int i) => i;
void g() {
Pointer.fromFunction<T>(f, 5);
}
must_be_immutable
#This class (or a class that this class inherits from) is marked as '@immutable', but one or more of its instance fields aren't final: {0}
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an immutable class defines one or more instance fields that aren't final. A class is immutable if it's marked as being immutable using the annotation immutable
or if it's a subclass of an immutable class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field x
isn't final:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@immutable
class C {
int x;
C(this.x);
}
Common fixes
#If instances of the class should be immutable, then add the keyword final
to all non-final field declarations:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@immutable
class C {
final int x;
C(this.x);
}
If the instances of the class should be mutable, then remove the annotation, or choose a different superclass if the annotation is inherited:
class C {
int x;
C(this.x);
}
must_call_super
#This method overrides a method annotated as '@mustCallSuper' in '{0}', but doesn't invoke the overridden method.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method that overrides a method that is annotated as mustCallSuper
doesn't invoke the overridden method as required.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
in B
doesn't invoke the overridden method m
in A
:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class A {
@mustCallSuper
m() {}
}
class B extends A {
@override
m() {}
}
Common fixes
#Add an invocation of the overridden method in the overriding method:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class A {
@mustCallSuper
m() {}
}
class B extends A {
@override
m() {
super.m();
}
}
must_return_void
#The return type of the function passed to 'NativeCallable.listener' must be 'void' rather than '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when you pass a function that doesn't return void
to the NativeCallable.listener
constructor.
NativeCallable.listener
creates a native callable that can be invoked from any thread. The native code that invokes the callable sends a message back to the isolate that created the callable, and doesn't wait for a response. So it isn't possible to return a result from the callable.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
returns int
rather than void
.
import 'dart:ffi';
int f(int i) => i * 2;
void g() {
NativeCallable<Int32 Function(Int32)>.listener(f);
}
Common fixes
#Change the return type of the function to void
.
import 'dart:ffi';
void f(int i) => print(i * 2);
void g() {
NativeCallable<Void Function(Int32)>.listener(f);
}
name_not_string
#The value of the 'name' field is required to be a string.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the top-level name
key has a value that isn't a string.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value following the name
key is a list:
name:
- example
Common fixes
#Replace the value with a string:
name: example
native_field_invalid_type
#'{0}' is an unsupported type for native fields. Native fields only support pointers, arrays or numeric and compound types.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an @Native
-annotated field has a type not supported for native fields.
Native fields support pointers, arrays, numeric types and subtypes of Compound
(i.e., structs or unions). Other subtypes of NativeType
, such as Handle
or NativeFunction
are not allowed as native fields.
Native functions should be used with external functions instead of external fields.
Handles are unsupported because there is no way to transparently load and store Dart objects into pointers.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field free
uses an unsupported native type, NativeFunction
:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<NativeFunction<Void Function()>>()
external void Function() free;
Common fixes
#If you meant to bind to an existing native function with a NativeFunction
field, use @Native
methods instead:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Void Function(Pointer<Void>)>()
external void free(Pointer<Void> ptr);
To bind to a field storing a function pointer in C, use a pointer type for the Dart field:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native()
external Pointer<NativeFunction<Void Function(Pointer<Void>)>> free;
native_field_missing_type
#The native type of this field could not be inferred and must be specified in the annotation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an @Native
-annotated field requires a type hint on the annotation to infer the native type.
Dart types like int
and double
have multiple possible native representations. Since the native type needs to be known at compile time to generate the correct load and stores when accessing the field, an explicit type must be given.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field f
has the type int
(for which multiple native representations exist), but no explicit type parameter on the Native
annotation:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native()
external int f;
Common fixes
#To fix this diagnostic, find out the correct native representation from the native declaration of the field. Then, add the corresponding type to the annotation. For instance, if f
was declared as an uint8_t
in C, the Dart field should be declared as:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Native<Uint8>()
external int f;
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
native_field_not_static
#Native fields must be static.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance field in a class has been annotated with @Native
. Native fields refer to global variables in C, C++ or other native languages, whereas instance fields in Dart are specific to an instance of that class. Hence, native fields must be static.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field f
in the class C
is @Native
, but not static
:
import 'dart:ffi';
class C {
@Native<Int>()
external int f;
}
Common fixes
#Either make the field static:
import 'dart:ffi';
class C {
@Native<Int>()
external static int f;
}
Or move it out of a class, in which case no explicit static
modifier is required:
import 'dart:ffi';
class C {
}
@Native<Int>()
external int f;
If you meant to annotate an instance field that should be part of a struct, omit the @Native
annotation:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int()
external int f;
}
new_with_undefined_constructor_default
#The class '{0}' doesn't have an unnamed constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an unnamed constructor is invoked on a class that defines named constructors but the class doesn't have an unnamed constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because A
doesn't define an unnamed constructor:
class A {
A.a();
}
A f() => A();
Common fixes
#If one of the named constructors does what you need, then use it:
class A {
A.a();
}
A f() => A.a();
If none of the named constructors does what you need, and you're able to add an unnamed constructor, then add the constructor:
class A {
A();
A.a();
}
A f() => A();
non_abstract_class_inherits_abstract_member
#Missing concrete implementation of '{0}'.
Missing concrete implementations of '{0}' and '{1}'.
Missing concrete implementations of '{0}', '{1}', '{2}', '{3}', and {4} more.
Missing concrete implementations of '{0}', '{1}', '{2}', and '{3}'.
Missing concrete implementations of '{0}', '{1}', and '{2}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a concrete class inherits one or more abstract members, and doesn't provide or inherit an implementation for at least one of those abstract members.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class B
doesn't have a concrete implementation of m
:
abstract class A {
void m();
}
class B extends A {}
Common fixes
#If the subclass can provide a concrete implementation for some or all of the abstract inherited members, then add the concrete implementations:
abstract class A {
void m();
}
class B extends A {
void m() {}
}
If there is a mixin that provides an implementation of the inherited methods, then apply the mixin to the subclass:
abstract class A {
void m();
}
class B extends A with M {}
mixin M {
void m() {}
}
If the subclass can't provide a concrete implementation for all of the abstract inherited members, then mark the subclass as being abstract:
abstract class A {
void m();
}
abstract class B extends A {}
non_bool_condition
#Conditions must have a static type of 'bool'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a condition, such as an if
or while
loop, doesn't have the static type bool
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
has the static type int
:
void f(int x) {
if (x) {
// ...
}
}
Common fixes
#Change the condition so that it produces a Boolean value:
void f(int x) {
if (x == 0) {
// ...
}
}
non_bool_expression
#The expression in an assert must be of type 'bool'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the first expression in an assert has a type other than bool
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of p
is int
, but a bool
is required:
void f(int p) {
assert(p);
}
Common fixes
#Change the expression so that it has the type bool
:
void f(int p) {
assert(p > 0);
}
non_bool_negation_expression
#A negation operand must have a static type of 'bool'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the operand of the unary negation operator (!
) doesn't have the type bool
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
is an int
when it must be a bool
:
int x = 0;
bool y = !x;
Common fixes
#Replace the operand with an expression that has the type bool
:
int x = 0;
bool y = !(x > 0);
non_bool_operand
#The operands of the operator '{0}' must be assignable to 'bool'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when one of the operands of either the &&
or ||
operator doesn't have the type bool
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because a
isn't a Boolean value:
int a = 3;
bool b = a || a > 1;
Common fixes
#Change the operand to a Boolean value:
int a = 3;
bool b = a == 0 || a > 1;
non_constant_annotation_constructor
#Annotation creation can only call a const constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an annotation is the invocation of an existing constructor even though the invoked constructor isn't a const constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor for C
isn't a const constructor:
@C()
void f() {
}
class C {
C();
}
Common fixes
#If it's valid for the class to have a const constructor, then create a const constructor that can be used for the annotation:
@C()
void f() {
}
class C {
const C();
}
If it isn't valid for the class to have a const constructor, then either remove the annotation or use a different class for the annotation.
non_constant_case_expression
#Case expressions must be constant.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the expression in a case
clause isn't a constant expression.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because j
isn't a constant:
void f(int i, int j) {
switch (i) {
case j:
// ...
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#Either make the expression a constant expression, or rewrite the switch
statement as a sequence of if
statements:
void f(int i, int j) {
if (i == j) {
// ...
}
}
non_constant_case_expression_from_deferred_library
#Constant values from a deferred library can't be used as a case expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the expression in a case clause references a constant from a library that is imported using a deferred import. In order for switch statements to be compiled efficiently, the constants referenced in case clauses need to be available at compile time, and constants from deferred libraries aren't available at compile time.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that defines the constant zero
:
const zero = 0;
The following code produces this diagnostic because the library a.dart
is imported using a deferred
import, and the constant a.zero
, declared in the imported library, is used in a case clause:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case a.zero:
// ...
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#If you need to reference the constant from the imported library, then remove the deferred
keyword:
import 'a.dart' as a;
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case a.zero:
// ...
break;
}
}
If you need to reference the constant from the imported library and also need the imported library to be deferred, then rewrite the switch statement as a sequence of if
statements:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
void f(int x) {
if (x == a.zero) {
// ...
}
}
If you don't need to reference the constant, then replace the case expression:
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case 0:
// ...
break;
}
}
non_constant_default_value
#The default value of an optional parameter must be constant.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an optional parameter, either named or positional, has a default value that isn't a compile-time constant.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
var defaultValue = 3;
void f([int value = defaultValue]) {}
Common fixes
#If the default value can be converted to be a constant, then convert it:
const defaultValue = 3;
void f([int value = defaultValue]) {}
If the default value needs to change over time, then apply the default value inside the function:
var defaultValue = 3;
void f([int? value]) {
value ??= defaultValue;
}
non_constant_default_value_from_deferred_library
#Constant values from a deferred library can't be used as a default parameter value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the default value of an optional parameter uses a constant from a library imported using a deferred import. Default values need to be available at compile time, and constants from deferred libraries aren't available at compile time.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that defines the constant zero
:
const zero = 0;
The following code produces this diagnostic because zero
is declared in a library imported using a deferred import:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
void f({int x = a.zero}) {}
Common fixes
#If you need to reference the constant from the imported library, then remove the deferred
keyword:
import 'a.dart' as a;
void f({int x = a.zero}) {}
If you don't need to reference the constant, then replace the default value:
void f({int x = 0}) {}
non_constant_list_element
#The values in a const list literal must be constants.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an element in a constant list literal isn't a constant value. The list literal can be constant either explicitly (because it's prefixed by the const
keyword) or implicitly (because it appears in a constant context).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
isn't a constant, even though it appears in an implicitly constant list literal:
var x = 2;
var y = const <int>[0, 1, x];
Common fixes
#If the list needs to be a constant list, then convert the element to be a constant. In the example above, you might add the const
keyword to the declaration of x
:
const x = 2;
var y = const <int>[0, 1, x];
If the expression can't be made a constant, then the list can't be a constant either, so you must change the code so that the list isn't a constant. In the example above this means removing the const
keyword before the list literal:
var x = 2;
var y = <int>[0, 1, x];
non_constant_map_element
#The elements in a const map literal must be constant.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an if
element or a spread element in a constant map isn't a constant element.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because it's attempting to spread a non-constant map:
var notConst = <int, int>{};
var map = const <int, int>{...notConst};
Similarly, the following code produces this diagnostic because the condition in the if
element isn't a constant expression:
bool notConst = true;
var map = const <int, int>{if (notConst) 1 : 2};
Common fixes
#If the map needs to be a constant map, then make the elements constants. In the spread example, you might do that by making the collection being spread a constant:
const notConst = <int, int>{};
var map = const <int, int>{...notConst};
If the map doesn't need to be a constant map, then remove the const
keyword:
bool notConst = true;
var map = <int, int>{if (notConst) 1 : 2};
non_constant_map_key
#The keys in a const map literal must be constant.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a key in a constant map literal isn't a constant value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because a
isn't a constant:
var a = 'a';
var m = const {a: 0};
Common fixes
#If the map needs to be a constant map, then make the key a constant:
const a = 'a';
var m = const {a: 0};
If the map doesn't need to be a constant map, then remove the const
keyword:
var a = 'a';
var m = {a: 0};
non_constant_map_pattern_key
#Key expressions in map patterns must be constants.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a key in a map pattern isn't a constant expression.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the key A()
isn't a constant:
void f(Object x) {
if (x case {A(): 0}) {}
}
class A {
const A();
}
Common fixes
#Use a constant for the key:
void f(Object x) {
if (x case {const A(): 0}) {}
}
class A {
const A();
}
non_constant_map_value
#The values in a const map literal must be constant.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a value in a constant map literal isn't a constant value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because a
isn't a constant:
var a = 'a';
var m = const {0: a};
Common fixes
#If the map needs to be a constant map, then make the key a constant:
const a = 'a';
var m = const {0: a};
If the map doesn't need to be a constant map, then remove the const
keyword:
var a = 'a';
var m = {0: a};
non_constant_relational_pattern_expression
#The relational pattern expression must be a constant.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value in a relational pattern expression isn't a constant expression.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the operand of the >
operator, a
, isn't a constant:
final a = 0;
void f(int x) {
if (x case > a) {}
}
Common fixes
#Replace the value with a constant expression:
const a = 0;
void f(int x) {
if (x case > a) {}
}
non_constant_set_element
#The values in a const set literal must be constants.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constant set literal contains an element that isn't a compile-time constant.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because i
isn't a constant:
var i = 0;
var s = const {i};
Common fixes
#If the element can be changed to be a constant, then change it:
const i = 0;
var s = const {i};
If the element can't be a constant, then remove the keyword const
:
var i = 0;
var s = {i};
non_constant_type_argument
#The type arguments to '{0}' must be known at compile time, so they can't be type parameters.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type arguments to a method are required to be known at compile time, but a type parameter, whose value can't be known at compile time, is used as a type argument.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type argument to Pointer.asFunction
must be known at compile time, but the type parameter R
, which isn't known at compile time, is being used as the type argument:
import 'dart:ffi';
typedef T = int Function(int);
class C<R extends T> {
void m(Pointer<NativeFunction<T>> p) {
p.asFunction<R>();
}
}
Common fixes
#Remove any uses of type parameters:
import 'dart:ffi';
class C {
void m(Pointer<NativeFunction<Int64 Function(Int64)>> p) {
p.asFunction<int Function(int)>();
}
}
non_const_argument_for_const_parameter
#Argument '{0}' must be a constant.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a parameter is annotated with the mustBeConst
annotation and the corresponding argument is not a constant expression.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic on the invocation of the function f
because the value of the argument passed to the function g
isn't a constant:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart' show mustBeConst;
int f(int value) => g(value);
int g(@mustBeConst int value) => value + 1;
Common fixes
#If a suitable constant is available to use, then replace the argument with a constant:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart' show mustBeConst;
const v = 3;
int f() => g(v);
int g(@mustBeConst int value) => value + 1;
non_const_call_to_literal_constructor
#This instance creation must be 'const', because the {0} constructor is marked as '@literal'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor that has the literal
annotation is invoked without using the const
keyword, but all of the arguments to the constructor are constants. The annotation indicates that the constructor should be used to create a constant value whenever possible.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
@literal
const C();
}
C f() => C();
Common fixes
#Add the keyword const
before the constructor invocation:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
@literal
const C();
}
void f() => const C();
non_const_generative_enum_constructor
#Generative enum constructors must be 'const'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an enum declaration contains a generative constructor that isn't marked as const
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor in E
isn't marked as being const
:
enum E {
e;
E();
}
Common fixes
#Add the const
keyword before the constructor:
enum E {
e;
const E();
}
non_covariant_type_parameter_position_in_representation_type
#An extension type parameter can't be used in a non-covariant position of its representation type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type parameter of an extension type is used in a non-covariant position in the representation type of that extension type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type parameter T
is used as a parameter type in the function type void Function(T)
, and parameters are not covariant:
extension type A<T>(void Function(T) f) {}
Common fixes
#Remove the use of the type parameter:
extension type A(void Function(String) f) {}
non_exhaustive_switch_expression
#The type '{0}' is not exhaustively matched by the switch cases since it doesn't match '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a switch
expression is missing a case for one or more of the possible values that could flow through it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the switch expression doesn't have a case for the value E.three
:
enum E { one, two, three }
String f(E e) => switch (e) {
E.one => 'one',
E.two => 'two',
};
Common fixes
#If the missing values are distinctly meaningful to the switch expression, then add a case for each of the values missing a match:
enum E { one, two, three }
String f(E e) => switch (e) {
E.one => 'one',
E.two => 'two',
E.three => 'three',
};
If the missing values don't need to be matched, then add a wildcard pattern that returns a simple default:
enum E { one, two, three }
String f(E e) => switch (e) {
E.one => 'one',
E.two => 'two',
_ => 'unknown',
};
Be aware that a wildcard pattern will handle any values added to the type in the future. You will lose the ability to have the compiler warn you if the switch
needs to be updated to account for newly added types.
non_exhaustive_switch_statement
#The type '{0}' is not exhaustively matched by the switch cases since it doesn't match '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a switch
statement switching over an exhaustive type is missing a case for one or more of the possible values that could flow through it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the switch statement doesn't have a case for the value E.three
, and E
is an exhaustive type:
enum E { one, two, three }
void f(E e) {
switch (e) {
case E.one:
case E.two:
}
}
Common fixes
#Add a case for each of the constants that aren't currently being matched:
enum E { one, two, three }
void f(E e) {
switch (e) {
case E.one:
case E.two:
break;
case E.three:
}
}
If the missing values don't need to be matched, then add a default
clause or a wildcard pattern:
enum E { one, two, three }
void f(E e) {
switch (e) {
case E.one:
case E.two:
break;
default:
}
}
But be aware that adding a default
clause or wildcard pattern will cause any future values of the exhaustive type to also be handled, so you will have lost the ability for the compiler to warn you if the switch
needs to be updated.
non_final_field_in_enum
#Enums can only declare final fields.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance field in an enum isn't marked as final
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field f
isn't a final field:
enum E {
c;
int f = 0;
}
Common fixes
#If the field must be defined for the enum, then mark the field as being final
:
enum E {
c;
final int f = 0;
}
If the field can be removed, then remove it:
enum E {
c
}
non_generative_constructor
#The generative constructor '{0}' is expected, but a factory was found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the initializer list of a constructor invokes a constructor from the superclass, and the invoked constructor is a factory constructor. Only a generative constructor can be invoked in the initializer list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the invocation of the constructor super.one()
is invoking a factory constructor:
class A {
factory A.one() = B;
A.two();
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.one();
}
Common fixes
#Change the super invocation to invoke a generative constructor:
class A {
factory A.one() = B;
A.two();
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.two();
}
If the generative constructor is the unnamed constructor, and if there are no arguments being passed to it, then you can remove the super invocation.
non_generative_implicit_constructor
#The unnamed constructor of superclass '{0}' (called by the default constructor of '{1}') must be a generative constructor, but factory found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class has an implicit generative constructor and the superclass has an explicit unnamed factory constructor. The implicit constructor in the subclass implicitly invokes the unnamed constructor in the superclass, but generative constructors can only invoke another generative constructor, not a factory constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the implicit constructor in B
invokes the unnamed constructor in A
, but the constructor in A
is a factory constructor, when a generative constructor is required:
class A {
factory A() => throw 0;
A.named();
}
class B extends A {}
Common fixes
#If the unnamed constructor in the superclass can be a generative constructor, then change it to be a generative constructor:
class A {
A();
A.named();
}
class B extends A { }
If the unnamed constructor can't be a generative constructor and there are other generative constructors in the superclass, then explicitly invoke one of them:
class A {
factory A() => throw 0;
A.named();
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.named();
}
If there are no generative constructors that can be used and none can be added, then implement the superclass rather than extending it:
class A {
factory A() => throw 0;
A.named();
}
class B implements A {}
non_native_function_type_argument_to_pointer
#Can't invoke 'asFunction' because the function signature '{0}' for the pointer isn't a valid C function signature.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the method asFunction
is invoked on a pointer to a native function, but the signature of the native function isn't a valid C function signature.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because function signature associated with the pointer p
(FNative
) isn't a valid C function signature:
import 'dart:ffi';
typedef FNative = int Function(int);
typedef F = int Function(int);
class C {
void f(Pointer<NativeFunction<FNative>> p) {
p.asFunction<F>();
}
}
Common fixes
#Make the NativeFunction
signature a valid C signature:
import 'dart:ffi';
typedef FNative = Int8 Function(Int8);
typedef F = int Function(int);
class C {
void f(Pointer<NativeFunction<FNative>> p) {
p.asFunction<F>();
}
}
non_positive_array_dimension
#Array dimensions must be positive numbers.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a dimension given in an Array
annotation is less than or equal to zero (0
).
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because an array dimension of -1
was provided:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class MyStruct extends Struct {
@Array(-8)
external Array<Uint8> a0;
}
Common fixes
#Change the dimension to be a positive integer:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class MyStruct extends Struct {
@Array(8)
external Array<Uint8> a0;
}
If this is a variable length inline array, change the annotation to Array.variable()
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class MyStruct extends Struct {
@Array.variable()
external Array<Uint8> a0;
}
non_sized_type_argument
#The type '{1}' isn't a valid type argument for '{0}'. The type argument must be a native integer, 'Float', 'Double', 'Pointer', or subtype of 'Struct', 'Union', or 'AbiSpecificInteger'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type argument for the class Array
isn't one of the valid types: either a native integer, Float
, Double
, Pointer
, or subtype of Struct
, Union
, or AbiSpecificInteger
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type argument to Array
is Void
, and Void
isn't one of the valid types:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array(8)
external Array<Void> a0;
}
Common fixes
#Change the type argument to one of the valid types:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array(8)
external Array<Uint8> a0;
}
non_sync_factory
#Factory bodies can't use 'async', 'async*', or 'sync*'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the body of a factory constructor is marked with async
, async*
, or sync*
. All constructors, including factory constructors, are required to return an instance of the class in which they're declared, not a Future
, Stream
, or Iterator
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the body of the factory constructor is marked with async
:
class C {
factory C() async {
return C._();
}
C._();
}
Common fixes
#If the member must be declared as a factory constructor, then remove the keyword appearing before the body:
class C {
factory C() {
return C._();
}
C._();
}
If the member must return something other than an instance of the enclosing class, then make the member a static method:
class C {
static Future<C> m() async {
return C._();
}
C._();
}
non_type_as_type_argument
#The name '{0}' isn't a type, so it can't be used as a type argument.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an identifier that isn't a type is used as a type argument.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
is a variable, not a type:
var x = 0;
List<x> xList = [];
Common fixes
#Change the type argument to be a type:
var x = 0;
List<int> xList = [];
non_type_in_catch_clause
#The name '{0}' isn't a type and can't be used in an on-catch clause.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the identifier following the on
in a catch
clause is defined to be something other than a type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is a function, not a type:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} on f {
// ...
}
}
Common fixes
#Change the name to the type of object that should be caught:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} on FormatException {
// ...
}
}
non_void_return_for_operator
#The return type of the operator []= must be 'void'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a declaration of the operator []=
has a return type other than void
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the declaration of the operator []=
has a return type of int
:
class C {
int operator []=(int index, int value) => 0;
}
Common fixes
#Change the return type to void
:
class C {
void operator []=(int index, int value) => 0;
}
non_void_return_for_setter
#The return type of the setter must be 'void' or absent.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a setter is defined with a return type other than void
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the setter p
has a return type of int
:
class C {
int set p(int i) => 0;
}
Common fixes
#Change the return type to void
or omit the return type:
class C {
set p(int i) => 0;
}
not_assigned_potentially_non_nullable_local_variable
#The non-nullable local variable '{0}' must be assigned before it can be used.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a local variable is referenced and has all these characteristics:
- Has a type that's potentially non-nullable.
- Doesn't have an initializer.
- Isn't marked as
late
. - The analyzer can't prove that the local variable will be assigned before the reference based on the specification of definite assignment.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
can't have a value of null
, but is referenced before a value was assigned to it:
String f() {
int x;
return x.toString();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the assignment to x
might not be executed, so it might have a value of null
:
int g(bool b) {
int x;
if (b) {
x = 1;
}
return x * 2;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the analyzer can't prove, based on definite assignment analysis, that x
won't be referenced without having a value assigned to it:
int h(bool b) {
int x;
if (b) {
x = 1;
}
if (b) {
return x * 2;
}
return 0;
}
Common fixes
#If null
is a valid value, then make the variable nullable:
String f() {
int? x;
return x!.toString();
}
If null
isn't a valid value, and there's a reasonable default value, then add an initializer:
int g(bool b) {
int x = 2;
if (b) {
x = 1;
}
return x * 2;
}
Otherwise, ensure that a value was assigned on every possible code path before the value is accessed:
int g(bool b) {
int x;
if (b) {
x = 1;
} else {
x = 2;
}
return x * 2;
}
You can also mark the variable as late
, which removes the diagnostic, but if the variable isn't assigned a value before it's accessed, then it results in an exception being thrown at runtime. This approach should only be used if you're sure that the variable will always be assigned, even though the analyzer can't prove it based on definite assignment analysis.
int h(bool b) {
late int x;
if (b) {
x = 1;
}
if (b) {
return x * 2;
}
return 0;
}
not_a_type
#{0} isn't a type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a name is used as a type but declared to be something other than a type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is a function:
f() {}
g(f v) {}
Common fixes
#Replace the name with the name of a type.
not_binary_operator
#'{0}' isn't a binary operator.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an operator that can only be used as a unary operator is used as a binary operator.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the operator ~
can only be used as a unary operator:
var a = 5 ~ 3;
Common fixes
#Replace the operator with the correct binary operator:
var a = 5 - 3;
not_enough_positional_arguments
#1 positional argument expected by '{0}', but 0 found.
1 positional argument expected, but 0 found.
{0} positional arguments expected by '{2}', but {1} found.
{0} positional arguments expected, but {1} found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function invocation has fewer positional arguments than the number of required positional parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
declares two required parameters, but only one argument is provided:
void f(int a, int b) {}
void g() {
f(0);
}
Common fixes
#Add arguments corresponding to the remaining parameters:
void f(int a, int b) {}
void g() {
f(0, 1);
}
not_initialized_non_nullable_instance_field
#Non-nullable instance field '{0}' must be initialized.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a field is declared and has all these characteristics:
- Has a type that's potentially non-nullable
- Doesn't have an initializer
- Isn't marked as
late
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
is implicitly initialized to null
when it isn't allowed to be null
:
class C {
int x;
}
Similarly, the following code produces this diagnostic because x
is implicitly initialized to null
, when it isn't allowed to be null
, by one of the constructors, even though it's initialized by other constructors:
class C {
int x;
C(this.x);
C.n();
}
Common fixes
#If there's a reasonable default value for the field that's the same for all instances, then add an initializer expression:
class C {
int x = 0;
}
If the value of the field should be provided when an instance is created, then add a constructor that sets the value of the field or update an existing constructor:
class C {
int x;
C(this.x);
}
You can also mark the field as late
, which removes the diagnostic, but if the field isn't assigned a value before it's accessed, then it results in an exception being thrown at runtime. This approach should only be used if you're sure that the field will always be assigned before it's referenced.
class C {
late int x;
}
not_initialized_non_nullable_variable
#The non-nullable variable '{0}' must be initialized.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a static field or top-level variable has a type that's non-nullable and doesn't have an initializer. Fields and variables that don't have an initializer are normally initialized to null
, but the type of the field or variable doesn't allow it to be set to null
, so an explicit initializer must be provided.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field f
can't be initialized to null
:
class C {
static int f;
}
Similarly, the following code produces this diagnostic because the top-level variable v
can't be initialized to null
:
int v;
Common fixes
#If the field or variable can't be initialized to null
, then add an initializer that sets it to a non-null value:
class C {
static int f = 0;
}
If the field or variable should be initialized to null
, then change the type to be nullable:
int? v;
If the field or variable can't be initialized in the declaration but will always be initialized before it's referenced, then mark it as being late
:
class C {
static late int f;
}
not_iterable_spread
#Spread elements in list or set literals must implement 'Iterable'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the static type of the expression of a spread element that appears in either a list literal or a set literal doesn't implement the type Iterable
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic:
var m = <String, int>{'a': 0, 'b': 1};
var s = <String>{...m};
Common fixes
#The most common fix is to replace the expression with one that produces an iterable object:
var m = <String, int>{'a': 0, 'b': 1};
var s = <String>{...m.keys};
not_map_spread
#Spread elements in map literals must implement 'Map'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the static type of the expression of a spread element that appears in a map literal doesn't implement the type Map
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because l
isn't a Map
:
var l = <String>['a', 'b'];
var m = <int, String>{...l};
Common fixes
#The most common fix is to replace the expression with one that produces a map:
var l = <String>['a', 'b'];
var m = <int, String>{...l.asMap()};
no_annotation_constructor_arguments
#Annotation creation must have arguments.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an annotation consists of a single identifier, but that identifier is the name of a class rather than a variable. To create an instance of the class, the identifier must be followed by an argument list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because C
is a class, and a class can't be used as an annotation without invoking a const
constructor from the class:
class C {
const C();
}
@C
var x;
Common fixes
#Add the missing argument list:
class C {
const C();
}
@C()
var x;
no_combined_super_signature
#Can't infer missing types in '{0}' from overridden methods: {1}.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there is a method declaration for which one or more types needs to be inferred, and those types can't be inferred because none of the overridden methods has a function type that is a supertype of all the other overridden methods, as specified by override inference.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
declared in the class C
is missing both the return type and the type of the parameter a
, and neither of the missing types can be inferred for it:
abstract class A {
A m(String a);
}
abstract class B {
B m(int a);
}
abstract class C implements A, B {
m(a);
}
In this example, override inference can't be performed because the overridden methods are incompatible in these ways:
- Neither parameter type (
String
andint
) is a supertype of the other. - Neither return type is a subtype of the other.
Common fixes
#If possible, add types to the method in the subclass that are consistent with the types from all the overridden methods:
abstract class A {
A m(String a);
}
abstract class B {
B m(int a);
}
abstract class C implements A, B {
C m(Object a);
}
no_generative_constructors_in_superclass
#The class '{0}' can't extend '{1}' because '{1}' only has factory constructors (no generative constructors), and '{0}' has at least one generative constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class that has at least one generative constructor (whether explicit or implicit) has a superclass that doesn't have any generative constructors. Every generative constructor, except the one defined in Object
, invokes, either explicitly or implicitly, one of the generative constructors from its superclass.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class B
has an implicit generative constructor that can't invoke a generative constructor from A
because A
doesn't have any generative constructors:
class A {
factory A.none() => throw '';
}
class B extends A {}
Common fixes
#If the superclass should have a generative constructor, then add one:
class A {
A();
factory A.none() => throw '';
}
class B extends A {}
If the subclass shouldn't have a generative constructor, then remove it by adding a factory constructor:
class A {
factory A.none() => throw '';
}
class B extends A {
factory B.none() => throw '';
}
If the subclass must have a generative constructor but the superclass can't have one, then implement the superclass instead:
class A {
factory A.none() => throw '';
}
class B implements A {}
nullable_type_in_catch_clause
#A potentially nullable type can't be used in an 'on' clause because it isn't valid to throw a nullable expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type following on
in a catch
clause is a nullable type. It isn't valid to specify a nullable type because it isn't possible to catch null
(because it's a runtime error to throw null
).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the exception type is specified to allow null
when null
can't be thrown:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} on FormatException? {
}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the question mark from the type:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} on FormatException {
}
}
nullable_type_in_extends_clause
#A class can't extend a nullable type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class declaration uses an extends
clause to specify a superclass, and the superclass is followed by a ?
.
It isn't valid to specify a nullable superclass because doing so would have no meaning; it wouldn't change either the interface or implementation being inherited by the class containing the extends
clause.
Note, however, that it is valid to use a nullable type as a type argument to the superclass, such as class A extends B<C?> {}
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because A?
is a nullable type, and nullable types can't be used in an extends
clause:
class A {}
class B extends A? {}
Common fixes
#Remove the question mark from the type:
class A {}
class B extends A {}
nullable_type_in_implements_clause
#A class, mixin, or extension type can't implement a nullable type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class, mixin, or extension type declaration has an implements
clause, and an interface is followed by a ?
.
It isn't valid to specify a nullable interface because doing so would have no meaning; it wouldn't change the interface being inherited by the class containing the implements
clause.
Note, however, that it is valid to use a nullable type as a type argument to the interface, such as class A implements B<C?> {}
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because A?
is a nullable type, and nullable types can't be used in an implements
clause:
class A {}
class B implements A? {}
Common fixes
#Remove the question mark from the type:
class A {}
class B implements A {}
nullable_type_in_on_clause
#A mixin can't have a nullable type as a superclass constraint.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a mixin declaration uses an on
clause to specify a superclass constraint, and the class that's specified is followed by a ?
.
It isn't valid to specify a nullable superclass constraint because doing so would have no meaning; it wouldn't change the interface being depended on by the mixin containing the on
clause.
Note, however, that it is valid to use a nullable type as a type argument to the superclass constraint, such as mixin A on B<C?> {}
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because A?
is a nullable type and nullable types can't be used in an on
clause:
class C {}
mixin M on C? {}
Common fixes
#Remove the question mark from the type:
class C {}
mixin M on C {}
nullable_type_in_with_clause
#A class or mixin can't mix in a nullable type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class or mixin declaration has a with
clause, and a mixin is followed by a ?
.
It isn't valid to specify a nullable mixin because doing so would have no meaning; it wouldn't change either the interface or implementation being inherited by the class containing the with
clause.
Note, however, that it is valid to use a nullable type as a type argument to the mixin, such as class A with B<C?> {}
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because A?
is a nullable type, and nullable types can't be used in a with
clause:
mixin M {}
class C with M? {}
Common fixes
#Remove the question mark from the type:
mixin M {}
class C with M {}
null_argument_to_non_null_type
#'{0}' shouldn't be called with a 'null' argument for the non-nullable type argument '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when null
is passed to either the constructor Future.value
or the method Completer.complete
when the type argument used to create the instance was non-nullable. Even though the type system can't express this restriction, passing in a null
results in a runtime exception.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because null
is being passed to the constructor Future.value
even though the type argument is the non-nullable type String
:
Future<String> f() {
return Future.value(null);
}
Common fixes
#Pass in a non-null value:
Future<String> f() {
return Future.value('');
}
null_check_always_fails
#This null-check will always throw an exception because the expression will always evaluate to 'null'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the null check operator (!
) is used on an expression whose value can only be null
. In such a case the operator always throws an exception, which likely isn't the intended behavior.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function g
will always return null
, which means that the null check in f
will always throw:
void f() {
g()!;
}
Null g() => null;
Common fixes
#If you intend to always throw an exception, then replace the null check with an explicit throw
expression to make the intent more clear:
void f() {
g();
throw TypeError();
}
Null g() => null;
obsolete_colon_for_default_value
#Using a colon as the separator before a default value is no longer supported.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a colon (:
) is used as the separator before the default value of an optional named parameter. While this syntax used to be allowed, it was removed in favor of using an equal sign (=
).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because a colon is being used before the default value of the optional parameter i
:
void f({int i : 0}) {}
Common fixes
#Replace the colon with an equal sign:
void f({int i = 0}) {}
on_repeated
#The type '{0}' can be included in the superclass constraints only once.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the same type is listed in the superclass constraints of a mixin multiple times.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because A
is included twice in the superclass constraints for M
:
mixin M on A, A {
}
class A {}
class B {}
Common fixes
#If a different type should be included in the superclass constraints, then replace one of the occurrences with the other type:
mixin M on A, B {
}
class A {}
class B {}
If no other type was intended, then remove the repeated type name:
mixin M on A {
}
class A {}
class B {}
optional_parameter_in_operator
#Optional parameters aren't allowed when defining an operator.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when one or more of the parameters in an operator declaration are optional.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter other
is an optional parameter:
class C {
C operator +([C? other]) => this;
}
Common fixes
#Make all of the parameters be required parameters:
class C {
C operator +(C other) => this;
}
override_on_non_overriding_member
#The field doesn't override an inherited getter or setter.
The getter doesn't override an inherited getter.
The method doesn't override an inherited method.
The setter doesn't override an inherited setter.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class member is annotated with the @override
annotation, but the member isn't declared in any of the supertypes of the class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because m
isn't declared in any of the supertypes of C
:
class C {
@override
String m() => '';
}
Common fixes
#If the member is intended to override a member with a different name, then update the member to have the same name:
class C {
@override
String toString() => '';
}
If the member is intended to override a member that was removed from the superclass, then consider removing the member from the subclass.
If the member can't be removed, then remove the annotation.
packed_annotation
#Structs must have at most one 'Packed' annotation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a subclass of Struct
has more than one Packed
annotation.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
, which is a subclass of Struct
, has two Packed
annotations:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Packed(1)
@Packed(1)
final class C extends Struct {
external Pointer<Uint8> notEmpty;
}
Common fixes
#Remove all but one of the annotations:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Packed(1)
final class C extends Struct {
external Pointer<Uint8> notEmpty;
}
packed_annotation_alignment
#Only packing to 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 bytes is supported.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the argument to the Packed
annotation isn't one of the allowed values: 1, 2, 4, 8, or 16.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the argument to the Packed
annotation (3
) isn't one of the allowed values:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Packed(3)
final class C extends Struct {
external Pointer<Uint8> notEmpty;
}
Common fixes
#Change the alignment to be one of the allowed values:
import 'dart:ffi';
@Packed(4)
final class C extends Struct {
external Pointer<Uint8> notEmpty;
}
part_of_different_library
#Expected this library to be part of '{0}', not '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library attempts to include a file as a part of itself when the other file is a part of a different library.
Example
#Given a file part.dart
containing
part of 'library.dart';
The following code, in any file other than library.dart
, produces this diagnostic because it attempts to include part.dart
as a part of itself when part.dart
is a part of a different library:
part 'package:a/part.dart';
Common fixes
#If the library should be using a different file as a part, then change the URI in the part directive to be the URI of the other file.
If the part file should be a part of this library, then update the URI (or library name) in the part-of directive to be the URI (or name) of the correct library.
part_of_non_part
#The included part '{0}' must have a part-of directive.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a part directive is found and the referenced file doesn't have a part-of directive.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
containing:
class A {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because a.dart
doesn't contain a part-of directive:
part 'a.dart';
Common fixes
#If the referenced file is intended to be a part of another library, then add a part-of directive to the file:
part of 'test.dart';
class A {}
If the referenced file is intended to be a library, then replace the part directive with an import directive:
import 'a.dart';
part_of_unnamed_library
#The library is unnamed. A URI is expected, not a library name '{0}', in the part-of directive.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library that doesn't have a library
directive (and hence has no name) contains a part
directive and the part of
directive in the part file uses a name to specify the library that it's a part of.
Example
#Given a part file named part_file.dart
containing the following code:
part of lib;
The following code produces this diagnostic because the library including the part file doesn't have a name even though the part file uses a name to specify which library it's a part of:
part 'part_file.dart';
Common fixes
#Change the part of
directive in the part file to specify its library by URI:
part of 'test.dart';
path_does_not_exist
#The path '{0}' doesn't exist.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a dependency has a path
key referencing a directory that doesn't exist.
Example
#Assuming that the directory doesNotExist
doesn't exist, the following code produces this diagnostic because it's listed as the path of a package:
name: example
dependencies:
local_package:
path: doesNotExist
Common fixes
#If the path is correct, then create a directory at that path.
If the path isn't correct, then change the path to match the path to the root of the package.
path_not_posix
#The path '{0}' isn't a POSIX-style path.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a dependency has a path
key whose value is a string, but isn't a POSIX-style path.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the path following the path
key is a Windows path:
name: example
dependencies:
local_package:
path: E:\local_package
Common fixes
#Convert the path to a POSIX path.
path_pubspec_does_not_exist
#The directory '{0}' doesn't contain a pubspec.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a dependency has a path
key that references a directory that doesn't contain a pubspec.yaml
file.
Example
#Assuming that the directory local_package
doesn't contain a file pubspec.yaml
, the following code produces this diagnostic because it's listed as the path of a package:
name: example
dependencies:
local_package:
path: local_package
Common fixes
#If the path is intended to be the root of a package, then add a pubspec.yaml
file in the directory:
name: local_package
If the path is wrong, then replace it with the correct path.
pattern_assignment_not_local_variable
#Only local variables can be assigned in pattern assignments.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a pattern assignment assigns a value to anything other than a local variable. Patterns can't assign to fields or top-level variables.
Example
#If the code is cleaner when destructuring with a pattern, then rewrite the code to assign the value to a local variable in a pattern declaration, assigning the non-local variable separately:
class C {
var x = 0;
void f((int, int) r) {
(x, _) = r;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the code is cleaner when using a pattern assignment, then rewrite the code to assign the value to a local variable, assigning the non-local variable separately:
class C {
var x = 0;
void f((int, int) r) {
var (a, _) = r;
x = a;
}
}
If the code is cleaner without using a pattern assignment, then rewrite the code to not use a pattern assignment:
class C {
var x = 0;
void f((int, int) r) {
x = r.$1;
}
}
pattern_constant_from_deferred_library
#Constant values from a deferred library can't be used in patterns.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a pattern contains a value declared in a different library, and that library is imported using a deferred import. Constants are evaluated at compile time, but values from deferred libraries aren't available at compile time.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that defines the constant zero
:
const zero = 0;
The following code produces this diagnostic because the constant pattern a.zero
is imported using a deferred import:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case a.zero:
// ...
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#If you need to reference the constant from the imported library, then remove the deferred
keyword:
import 'a.dart' as a;
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case a.zero:
// ...
break;
}
}
If you need to reference the constant from the imported library and also need the imported library to be deferred, then rewrite the switch statement as a sequence of if
statements:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
void f(int x) {
if (x == a.zero) {
// ...
}
}
If you don't need to reference the constant, then replace the case expression:
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case 0:
// ...
break;
}
}
pattern_type_mismatch_in_irrefutable_context
#The matched value of type '{0}' isn't assignable to the required type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type of the value on the right-hand side of a pattern assignment or pattern declaration doesn't match the type required by the pattern being used to match it.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
might not be a String
and hence might not match the object pattern:
void f(Object x) {
var String(length: a) = x;
print(a);
}
Common fixes
#Change the code so that the type of the expression on the right-hand side matches the type required by the pattern:
void f(String x) {
var String(length: a) = x;
print(a);
}
pattern_variable_assignment_inside_guard
#Pattern variables can't be assigned inside the guard of the enclosing guarded pattern.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a pattern variable is assigned a value inside a guard (when
) clause.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable a
is assigned a value inside the guard clause:
void f(int x) {
if (x case var a when (a = 1) > 0) {
print(a);
}
}
Common fixes
#If there's a value you need to capture, then assign it to a different variable:
void f(int x) {
var b;
if (x case var a when (b = 1) > 0) {
print(a + b);
}
}
If there isn't a value you need to capture, then remove the assignment:
void f(int x) {
if (x case var a when 1 > 0) {
print(a);
}
}
platform_value_disallowed
#Keys in the platforms
field can't have values.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a key in the platforms
map has a value. To learn more about specifying your package's supported platforms, check out the documentation on platform declarations.
Example
#The following pubspec.yaml
produces this diagnostic because the key web
has a value.
name: example
platforms:
web: "chrome"
Common fixes
#Omit the value and leave the key without a value:
name: example
platforms:
web:
Values for keys in the platforms
field are currently reserved for potential future behavior.
positional_field_in_object_pattern
#Object patterns can only use named fields.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an object pattern contains a field without specifying the getter name. Object pattern fields match against values that the object's getters return. Without a getter name specified, the pattern field can't access a value to attempt to match against.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the object pattern String(1)
doesn't specify which getter of String
to access and compare with the value 1
:
void f(Object o) {
if (o case String(1)) {}
}
Common fixes
#Add the getter name to access the value, followed by a colon before the pattern to match against:
void f(Object o) {
if (o case String(length: 1)) {}
}
positional_super_formal_parameter_with_positional_argument
#Positional super parameters can't be used when the super constructor invocation has a positional argument.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when some, but not all, of the positional parameters provided to the constructor of the superclass are using a super parameter.
Positional super parameters are associated with positional parameters in the super constructor by their index. That is, the first super parameter is associated with the first positional parameter in the super constructor, the second with the second, and so on. The same is true for positional arguments. Having both positional super parameters and positional arguments means that there are two values associated with the same parameter in the superclass's constructor, and hence isn't allowed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor B.new
is using a super parameter to pass one of the required positional parameters to the super constructor in A
, but is explicitly passing the other in the super constructor invocation:
class A {
A(int x, int y);
}
class B extends A {
B(int x, super.y) : super(x);
}
Common fixes
#If all the positional parameters can be super parameters, then convert the normal positional parameters to be super parameters:
class A {
A(int x, int y);
}
class B extends A {
B(super.x, super.y);
}
If some positional parameters can't be super parameters, then convert the super parameters to be normal parameters:
class A {
A(int x, int y);
}
class B extends A {
B(int x, int y) : super(x, y);
}
prefix_collides_with_top_level_member
#The name '{0}' is already used as an import prefix and can't be used to name a top-level element.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a name is used as both an import prefix and the name of a top-level declaration in the same library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is used as both an import prefix and the name of a function:
import 'dart:math' as f;
int f() => f.min(0, 1);
Common fixes
#If you want to use the name for the import prefix, then rename the top-level declaration:
import 'dart:math' as f;
int g() => f.min(0, 1);
If you want to use the name for the top-level declaration, then rename the import prefix:
import 'dart:math' as math;
int f() => math.min(0, 1);
prefix_identifier_not_followed_by_dot
#The name '{0}' refers to an import prefix, so it must be followed by '.'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import prefix is used by itself, without accessing any of the names declared in the libraries associated with the prefix. Prefixes aren't variables, and therefore can't be used as a value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the prefix math
is being used as if it were a variable:
import 'dart:math' as math;
void f() {
print(math);
}
Common fixes
#If the code is incomplete, then reference something in one of the libraries associated with the prefix:
import 'dart:math' as math;
void f() {
print(math.pi);
}
If the name is wrong, then correct the name.
prefix_shadowed_by_local_declaration
#The prefix '{0}' can't be used here because it's shadowed by a local declaration.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import prefix is used in a context where it isn't visible because it was shadowed by a local declaration.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the prefix a
is being used to access the class Future
, but isn't visible because it's shadowed by the parameter a
:
import 'dart:async' as a;
a.Future? f(int a) {
a.Future? x;
return x;
}
Common fixes
#Rename either the prefix:
import 'dart:async' as p;
p.Future? f(int a) {
p.Future? x;
return x;
}
Or rename the local variable:
import 'dart:async' as a;
a.Future? f(int p) {
a.Future? x;
return x;
}
private_collision_in_mixin_application
#The private name '{0}', defined by '{1}', conflicts with the same name defined by '{2}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when two mixins that define the same private member are used together in a single class in a library other than the one that defines the mixins.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
containing the following code:
mixin A {
void _foo() {}
}
mixin B {
void _foo() {}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the mixins A
and B
both define the method _foo
:
import 'a.dart';
class C extends Object with A, B {}
Common fixes
#If you don't need both of the mixins, then remove one of them from the with
clause:
import 'a.dart';
class C extends Object with A, B {}
If you need both of the mixins, then rename the conflicting member in one of the two mixins.
private_optional_parameter
#Named parameters can't start with an underscore.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a named parameter starts with an underscore.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the named parameter _x
starts with an underscore:
class C {
void m({int _x = 0}) {}
}
Common fixes
#Rename the parameter so that it doesn't start with an underscore:
class C {
void m({int x = 0}) {}
}
private_setter
#The setter '{0}' is private and can't be accessed outside the library that declares it.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a private setter is used in a library where it isn't visible.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that contains the following:
class A {
static int _f = 0;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because it references the private setter _f
even though the setter isn't visible:
import 'a.dart';
void f() {
A._f = 0;
}
Common fixes
#If you're able to make the setter public, then do so:
class A {
static int f = 0;
}
If you aren't able to make the setter public, then find a different way to implement the code.
read_potentially_unassigned_final
#The final variable '{0}' can't be read because it's potentially unassigned at this point.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a final local variable that isn't initialized at the declaration site is read at a point where the compiler can't prove that the variable is always initialized before it's referenced.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the final local variable x
is read (on line 3) when it's possible that it hasn't yet been initialized:
int f() {
final int x;
return x;
}
Common fixes
#Ensure that the variable has been initialized before it's read:
int f(bool b) {
final int x;
if (b) {
x = 0;
} else {
x = 1;
}
return x;
}
record_literal_one_positional_no_trailing_comma
#A record literal with exactly one positional field requires a trailing comma.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a record literal with a single positional field doesn't have a trailing comma after the field.
In some locations a record literal with a single positional field could also be a parenthesized expression. A trailing comma is required to disambiguate these two valid interpretations.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the record literal has one positional field but doesn't have a trailing comma:
var r = const (1);
Common fixes
#Add a trailing comma:
var r = const (1,);
record_type_one_positional_no_trailing_comma
#A record type with exactly one positional field requires a trailing comma.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a record type annotation with a single positional field doesn't have a trailing comma after the field.
In some locations a record type with a single positional field could also be a parenthesized expression. A trailing comma is required to disambiguate these two valid interpretations.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the record type has one positional field, but doesn't have a trailing comma:
void f((int) r) {}
Common fixes
#Add a trailing comma:
void f((int,) r) {}
recursive_compile_time_constant
#The compile-time constant expression depends on itself.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of a compile-time constant is defined in terms of itself, either directly or indirectly, creating an infinite loop.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic twice because both of the constants are defined in terms of the other:
const secondsPerHour = minutesPerHour * 60;
const minutesPerHour = secondsPerHour / 60;
Common fixes
#Break the cycle by finding an alternative way of defining at least one of the constants:
const secondsPerHour = minutesPerHour * 60;
const minutesPerHour = 60;
recursive_constructor_redirect
#Constructors can't redirect to themselves either directly or indirectly.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor redirects to itself, either directly or indirectly, creating an infinite loop.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the generative constructors C.a
and C.b
each redirect to the other:
class C {
C.a() : this.b();
C.b() : this.a();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the factory constructors A
and B
each redirect to the other:
abstract class A {
factory A() = B;
}
class B implements A {
factory B() = A;
B.named();
}
Common fixes
#In the case of generative constructors, break the cycle by finding defining at least one of the constructors to not redirect to another constructor:
class C {
C.a() : this.b();
C.b();
}
In the case of factory constructors, break the cycle by defining at least one of the factory constructors to do one of the following:
- Redirect to a generative constructor:
abstract class A {
factory A() = B;
}
class B implements A {
factory B() = B.named;
B.named();
}
- Not redirect to another constructor:
abstract class A {
factory A() = B;
}
class B implements A {
factory B() {
return B.named();
}
B.named();
}
- Not be a factory constructor:
abstract class A {
factory A() = B;
}
class B implements A {
B();
B.named();
}
recursive_interface_inheritance
#'{0}' can't be a superinterface of itself: {1}.
'{0}' can't extend itself.
'{0}' can't implement itself.
'{0}' can't use itself as a mixin.
'{0}' can't use itself as a superclass constraint.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's a circularity in the type hierarchy. This happens when a type, either directly or indirectly, is declared to be a subtype of itself.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class A
is declared to be a subtype of B
, and B
is a subtype of A
:
class A extends B {}
class B implements A {}
Common fixes
#Change the type hierarchy so that there's no circularity.
redeclare_on_non_redeclaring_member
#The {0} doesn't redeclare a {0} declared in a superinterface.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member of an extension type is annotated with @redeclare
, but none of the implemented interfaces has a member with the same name.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the member n
declared by the extension type E
is annotated with @redeclare
, but C
doesn't have a member named n
:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
void m() {}
}
extension type E(C c) implements C {
@redeclare
void n() {}
}
Common fixes
#If the annotated member has the right name, then remove the annotation:
class C {
void m() {}
}
extension type E(C c) implements C {
void n() {}
}
If the annotated member is suppose to replace a member from the implemented interfaces, then change the name of the annotated member to match the member being replaced:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
void m() {}
}
extension type E(C c) implements C {
@redeclare
void m() {}
}
redirect_generative_to_missing_constructor
#The constructor '{0}' couldn't be found in '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a generative constructor redirects to a constructor that isn't defined.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor C.a
redirects to the constructor C.b
, but C.b
isn't defined:
class C {
C.a() : this.b();
}
Common fixes
#If the missing constructor must be called, then define it:
class C {
C.a() : this.b();
C.b();
}
If the missing constructor doesn't need to be called, then remove the redirect:
class C {
C.a();
}
redirect_generative_to_non_generative_constructor
#Generative constructors can't redirect to a factory constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a generative constructor redirects to a factory constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the generative constructor C.a
redirects to the factory constructor C.b
:
class C {
C.a() : this.b();
factory C.b() => C.a();
}
Common fixes
#If the generative constructor doesn't need to redirect to another constructor, then remove the redirect.
class C {
C.a();
factory C.b() => C.a();
}
If the generative constructor must redirect to another constructor, then make the other constructor be a generative (non-factory) constructor:
class C {
C.a() : this.b();
C.b();
}
redirect_to_abstract_class_constructor
#The redirecting constructor '{0}' can't redirect to a constructor of the abstract class '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor redirects to a constructor in an abstract class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the factory constructor in A
redirects to a constructor in B
, but B
is an abstract class:
class A {
factory A() = B;
}
abstract class B implements A {}
Common fixes
#If the code redirects to the correct constructor, then change the class so that it isn't abstract:
class A {
factory A() = B;
}
class B implements A {}
Otherwise, change the factory constructor so that it either redirects to a constructor in a concrete class, or has a concrete implementation.
redirect_to_invalid_function_type
#The redirected constructor '{0}' has incompatible parameters with '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a factory constructor attempts to redirect to another constructor, but the two have incompatible parameters. The parameters are compatible if all of the parameters of the redirecting constructor can be passed to the other constructor and if the other constructor doesn't require any parameters that aren't declared by the redirecting constructor.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor for A
doesn't declare a parameter that the constructor for B
requires:
abstract class A {
factory A() = B;
}
class B implements A {
B(int x);
B.zero();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor for A
declares a named parameter (y
) that the constructor for B
doesn't allow:
abstract class A {
factory A(int x, {int y}) = B;
}
class B implements A {
B(int x);
}
Common fixes
#If there's a different constructor that is compatible with the redirecting constructor, then redirect to that constructor:
abstract class A {
factory A() = B.zero;
}
class B implements A {
B(int x);
B.zero();
}
Otherwise, update the redirecting constructor to be compatible:
abstract class A {
factory A(int x) = B;
}
class B implements A {
B(int x);
}
redirect_to_invalid_return_type
#The return type '{0}' of the redirected constructor isn't a subtype of '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a factory constructor redirects to a constructor whose return type isn't a subtype of the type that the factory constructor is declared to produce.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because A
isn't a subclass of C
, which means that the value returned by the constructor A()
couldn't be returned from the constructor C()
:
class A {}
class B implements C {}
class C {
factory C() = A;
}
Common fixes
#If the factory constructor is redirecting to a constructor in the wrong class, then update the factory constructor to redirect to the correct constructor:
class A {}
class B implements C {}
class C {
factory C() = B;
}
If the class defining the constructor being redirected to is the class that should be returned, then make it a subtype of the factory's return type:
class A implements C {}
class B implements C {}
class C {
factory C() = A;
}
redirect_to_missing_constructor
#The constructor '{0}' couldn't be found in '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor redirects to a constructor that doesn't exist.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the factory constructor in A
redirects to a constructor in B
that doesn't exist:
class A {
factory A() = B.name;
}
class B implements A {
B();
}
Common fixes
#If the constructor being redirected to is correct, then define the constructor:
class A {
factory A() = B.name;
}
class B implements A {
B();
B.name();
}
If a different constructor should be invoked, then update the redirect:
class A {
factory A() = B;
}
class B implements A {
B();
}
redirect_to_non_class
#The name '{0}' isn't a type and can't be used in a redirected constructor.
Description
#One way to implement a factory constructor is to redirect to another constructor by referencing the name of the constructor. The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the redirect is to something other than a constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is a function:
C f() => throw 0;
class C {
factory C() = f;
}
Common fixes
#If the constructor isn't defined, then either define it or replace it with a constructor that is defined.
If the constructor is defined but the class that defines it isn't visible, then you probably need to add an import.
If you're trying to return the value returned by a function, then rewrite the constructor to return the value from the constructor's body:
C f() => throw 0;
class C {
factory C() => f();
}
redirect_to_non_const_constructor
#A constant redirecting constructor can't redirect to a non-constant constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor marked as const
redirects to a constructor that isn't marked as const
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor C.a
is marked as const
but redirects to the constructor C.b
, which isn't:
class C {
const C.a() : this.b();
C.b();
}
Common fixes
#If the non-constant constructor can be marked as const
, then mark it as const
:
class C {
const C.a() : this.b();
const C.b();
}
If the non-constant constructor can't be marked as const
, then either remove the redirect or remove const
from the redirecting constructor:
class C {
C.a() : this.b();
C.b();
}
redirect_to_type_alias_expands_to_type_parameter
#A redirecting constructor can't redirect to a type alias that expands to a type parameter.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a redirecting factory constructor redirects to a type alias, and the type alias expands to one of the type parameters of the type alias. This isn't allowed because the value of the type parameter is a type rather than a class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the redirect to B<A>
is to a type alias whose value is T
, even though it looks like the value should be A
:
class A implements C {}
typedef B<T> = T;
abstract class C {
factory C() = B<A>;
}
Common fixes
#Use either a class name or a type alias that is defined to be a class rather than a type alias defined to be a type parameter:
class A implements C {}
abstract class C {
factory C() = A;
}
referenced_before_declaration
#Local variable '{0}' can't be referenced before it is declared.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a variable is referenced before it's declared. In Dart, variables are visible everywhere in the block in which they are declared, but can only be referenced after they are declared.
The analyzer also produces a context message that indicates where the declaration is located.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because i
is used before it is declared:
void f() {
print(i);
int i = 5;
}
Common fixes
#If you intended to reference the local variable, move the declaration before the first reference:
void f() {
int i = 5;
print(i);
}
If you intended to reference a name from an outer scope, such as a parameter, instance field or top-level variable, then rename the local declaration so that it doesn't hide the outer variable.
void f(int i) {
print(i);
int x = 5;
print(x);
}
refutable_pattern_in_irrefutable_context
#Refutable patterns can't be used in an irrefutable context.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a refutable pattern is used in a context where only an irrefutable pattern is allowed.
The refutable patterns that are disallowed are:
- logical-or
- relational
- null-check
- constant
The contexts that are checked are:
- pattern-based variable declarations
- pattern-based for loops
- assignments with a pattern on the left-hand side
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the null-check pattern, which is a refutable pattern, is in a pattern-based variable declaration, which doesn't allow refutable patterns:
void f(int? x) {
var (_?) = x;
}
Common fixes
#Rewrite the code to not use a refutable pattern in an irrefutable context.
relational_pattern_operand_type_not_assignable
#The constant expression type '{0}' is not assignable to the parameter type '{1}' of the '{2}' operator.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the operand of a relational pattern has a type that isn't assignable to the parameter of the operator that will be invoked.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the operand in the relational pattern (0
) is an int
, but the >
operator defined in C
expects an object of type C
:
class C {
const C();
bool operator >(C other) => true;
}
void f(C c) {
switch (c) {
case > 0:
print('positive');
}
}
Common fixes
#If the switch is using the correct value, then change the case to compare the value to the right type of object:
class C {
const C();
bool operator >(C other) => true;
}
void f(C c) {
switch (c) {
case > const C():
print('positive');
}
}
If the switch is using the wrong value, then change the expression used to compute the value being matched:
class C {
const C();
bool operator >(C other) => true;
int get toInt => 0;
}
void f(C c) {
switch (c.toInt) {
case > 0:
print('positive');
}
}
relational_pattern_operator_return_type_not_assignable_to_bool
#The return type of operators used in relational patterns must be assignable to 'bool'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a relational pattern references an operator that doesn't produce a value of type bool
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the operator >
, used in the relational pattern > c2
, returns a value of type int
rather than a bool
:
class C {
const C();
int operator >(C c) => 3;
bool operator <(C c) => false;
}
const C c2 = C();
void f(C c1) {
if (c1 case > c2) {}
}
Common fixes
#If there's a different operator that should be used, then change the operator:
class C {
const C();
int operator >(C c) => 3;
bool operator <(C c) => false;
}
const C c2 = C();
void f(C c1) {
if (c1 case < c2) {}
}
If the operator is expected to return bool
, then update the declaration of the operator:
class C {
const C();
bool operator >(C c) => true;
bool operator <(C c) => false;
}
const C c2 = C();
void f(C c1) {
if (c1 case > c2) {}
}
rest_element_in_map_pattern
#A map pattern can't contain a rest pattern.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a map pattern contains a rest pattern. Map patterns match a map with more keys than those explicitly given in the pattern (as long as the given keys match), so a rest pattern is unnecessary.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the map pattern contains a rest pattern:
void f(Map<int, String> x) {
if (x case {0: _, ...}) {}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the rest pattern:
void f(Map<int, String> x) {
if (x case {0: _}) {}
}
rethrow_outside_catch
#A rethrow must be inside of a catch clause.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a rethrow
statement is outside a catch
clause. The rethrow
statement is used to throw a caught exception again, but there's no caught exception outside of a catch
clause.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because therethrow
statement is outside of a catch
clause:
void f() {
rethrow;
}
Common fixes
#If you're trying to rethrow an exception, then wrap the rethrow
statement in a catch
clause:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} catch (exception) {
rethrow;
}
}
If you're trying to throw a new exception, then replace the rethrow
statement with a throw
expression:
void f() {
throw UnsupportedError('Not yet implemented');
}
return_in_generative_constructor
#Constructors can't return values.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a generative constructor contains a return
statement that specifies a value to be returned. Generative constructors always return the object that was created, and therefore can't return a different object.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the return
statement has an expression:
class C {
C() {
return this;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the constructor should create a new instance, then remove either the return
statement or the expression:
class C {
C();
}
If the constructor shouldn't create a new instance, then convert it to be a factory constructor:
class C {
factory C() {
return _instance;
}
static C _instance = C._();
C._();
}
return_in_generator
#Can't return a value from a generator function that uses the 'async*' or 'sync*' modifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a generator function (one whose body is marked with either async*
or sync*
) uses either a return
statement to return a value or implicitly returns a value because of using =>
. In any of these cases, they should use yield
instead of return
.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method f
is a generator and is using return
to return a value:
Iterable<int> f() sync* {
return 3;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
is a generator and is implicitly returning a value:
Stream<int> f() async* => 3;
Common fixes
#If the function is using =>
for the body of the function, then convert it to a block function body, and use yield
to return a value:
Stream<int> f() async* {
yield 3;
}
If the method is intended to be a generator, then use yield
to return a value:
Iterable<int> f() sync* {
yield 3;
}
If the method isn't intended to be a generator, then remove the modifier from the body (or use async
if you're returning a future):
int f() {
return 3;
}
return_of_do_not_store
#'{0}' is annotated with 'doNotStore' and shouldn't be returned unless '{1}' is also annotated.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a value that is annotated with the doNotStore
annotation is returned from a method, getter, or function that doesn't have the same annotation.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the result of invoking f
shouldn't be stored, but the function g
isn't annotated to preserve that semantic:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@doNotStore
int f() => 0;
int g() => f();
Common fixes
#If the value that shouldn't be stored is the correct value to return, then mark the function with the doNotStore
annotation:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@doNotStore
int f() => 0;
@doNotStore
int g() => f();
Otherwise, return a different value from the function:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@doNotStore
int f() => 0;
int g() => 0;
return_of_invalid_type
#A value of type '{0}' can't be returned from the constructor '{2}' because it has a return type of '{1}'.
A value of type '{0}' can't be returned from the function '{2}' because it has a return type of '{1}'.
A value of type '{0}' can't be returned from the method '{2}' because it has a return type of '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function returns a value whose type isn't assignable to the declared return type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
has a return type of String
but is returning an int
:
String f() => 3;
Common fixes
#If the return type is correct, then replace the value being returned with a value of the correct type, possibly by converting the existing value:
String f() => 3.toString();
If the value is correct, then change the return type to match:
int f() => 3;
return_of_invalid_type_from_closure
#The returned type '{0}' isn't returnable from a '{1}' function, as required by the closure's context.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the static type of a returned expression isn't assignable to the return type that the closure is required to have.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
is defined to be a function that returns a String
, but the closure assigned to it returns an int
:
String Function(String) f = (s) => 3;
Common fixes
#If the return type is correct, then replace the returned value with a value of the correct type, possibly by converting the existing value:
String Function(String) f = (s) => 3.toString();
return_without_value
#The return value is missing after 'return'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds a return
statement without an expression in a function that declares a return type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
is expected to return an int
, but no value is being returned:
int f() {
return;
}
Common fixes
#Add an expression that computes the value to be returned:
int f() {
return 0;
}
sdk_version_async_exported_from_core
#The class '{0}' wasn't exported from 'dart:core' until version 2.1, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either the class Future
or Stream
is referenced in a library that doesn't import dart:async
in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.1.0. In earlier versions, these classes weren't defined in dart:core
, so the import was necessary.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.1.0:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.0.0 <2.4.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
void f(Future f) {}
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the classes to be referenced:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.1.0 <2.4.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then import the dart:async
library.
import 'dart:async';
void f(Future f) {}
sdk_version_as_expression_in_const_context
#The use of an as expression in a constant expression wasn't supported until version 2.3.2, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an as
expression inside a constant context is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.3.2. Using an as
expression in a constant context wasn't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.3.2:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.1.0 <2.4.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
const num n = 3;
const int i = n as int;
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the expression to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.3.2 <2.4.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then either rewrite the code to not use an as
expression, or change the code so that the as
expression isn't in a constant context:
num x = 3;
int y = x as int;
sdk_version_bool_operator_in_const_context
#The use of the operator '{0}' for 'bool' operands in a constant context wasn't supported until version 2.3.2, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when any use of the &
, |
, or ^
operators on the class bool
inside a constant context is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.3.2. Using these operators in a constant context wasn't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.3.2:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.1.0 <2.4.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
const bool a = true;
const bool b = false;
const bool c = a & b;
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the operators to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.3.2 <2.4.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then either rewrite the code to not use these operators, or change the code so that the expression isn't in a constant context:
const bool a = true;
const bool b = false;
bool c = a & b;
sdk_version_constructor_tearoffs
#Tearing off a constructor requires the 'constructor-tearoffs' language feature.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor tear-off is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.15. Constructor tear-offs weren't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.15:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.9.0 <2.15.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
var setConstructor = Set.identity;
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the operator to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.15.0 <2.16.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then rewrite the code to not use constructor tear-offs:
var setConstructor = () => Set.identity();
sdk_version_eq_eq_operator_in_const_context
#Using the operator '==' for non-primitive types wasn't supported until version 2.3.2, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the operator ==
is used on a non-primitive type inside a constant context is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.3.2. Using this operator in a constant context wasn't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.3.2:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.1.0 <2.4.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
class C {}
const C a = null;
const C b = null;
const bool same = a == b;
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the operator to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.3.2 <2.4.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then either rewrite the code to not use the ==
operator, or change the code so that the expression isn't in a constant context:
class C {}
const C a = null;
const C b = null;
bool same = a == b;
sdk_version_extension_methods
#Extension methods weren't supported until version 2.6.0, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension declaration or an extension override is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.6.0. Using extensions wasn't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.6.0:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.4.0 <2.7.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
extension E on String {
void sayHello() {
print('Hello $this');
}
}
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the syntax to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.6.0 <2.7.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then rewrite the code to not make use of extensions. The most common way to do this is to rewrite the members of the extension as top-level functions (or methods) that take the value that would have been bound to this
as a parameter:
void sayHello(String s) {
print('Hello $s');
}
sdk_version_gt_gt_gt_operator
#The operator '>>>' wasn't supported until version 2.14.0, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the operator >>>
is used in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.14.0. This operator wasn't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.14.0:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.0.0 <2.15.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
int x = 3 >>> 4;
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the operator to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.14.0 <2.15.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then rewrite the code to not use the >>>
operator:
int x = logicalShiftRight(3, 4);
int logicalShiftRight(int leftOperand, int rightOperand) {
int divisor = 1 << rightOperand;
if (divisor == 0) {
return 0;
}
return leftOperand ~/ divisor;
}
sdk_version_is_expression_in_const_context
#The use of an is expression in a constant context wasn't supported until version 2.3.2, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an is
expression inside a constant context is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.3.2. Using an is
expression in a constant context wasn't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.3.2:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.1.0 <2.4.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
const Object x = 4;
const y = x is int ? 0 : 1;
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the expression to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.3.2 <2.4.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then either rewrite the code to not use the is
operator, or, if that isn't possible, change the code so that the is
expression isn't in a constant context:
const Object x = 4;
var y = x is int ? 0 : 1;
sdk_version_never
#The type 'Never' wasn't supported until version 2.12.0, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a reference to the class Never
is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.12.0. This class wasn't defined in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.12.0:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.5.0 <2.6.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
Never n;
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the type to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.12.0 <2.13.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then rewrite the code to not reference this class:
dynamic x;
sdk_version_set_literal
#Set literals weren't supported until version 2.2, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a set literal is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.2.0. Set literals weren't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.2.0:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.1.0 <2.4.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
var s = <int>{};
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the syntax to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.2.0 <2.4.0'
If you do need to support older versions of the SDK, then replace the set literal with code that creates the set without the use of a literal:
var s = new Set<int>();
sdk_version_ui_as_code
#The for, if, and spread elements weren't supported until version 2.3.0, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a for, if, or spread element is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.3.0. Using a for, if, or spread element wasn't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.3.0:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.2.0 <2.4.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
var digits = [for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) i];
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the syntax to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.3.0 <2.4.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then rewrite the code to not make use of those elements:
var digits = _initializeDigits();
List<int> _initializeDigits() {
var digits = <int>[];
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
digits.add(i);
}
return digits;
}
sdk_version_ui_as_code_in_const_context
#The if and spread elements weren't supported in constant expressions until version 2.5.0, but this code is required to be able to run on earlier versions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an if or spread element inside a constant context is found in code that has an SDK constraint whose lower bound is less than 2.5.0. Using an if or spread element inside a constant context wasn't supported in earlier versions, so this code won't be able to run against earlier versions of the SDK.
Example
#Here's an example of a pubspec that defines an SDK constraint with a lower bound of less than 2.5.0:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.4.0 <2.6.0'
In the package that has that pubspec, code like the following produces this diagnostic:
const a = [1, 2];
const b = [...a];
Common fixes
#If you don't need to support older versions of the SDK, then you can increase the SDK constraint to allow the syntax to be used:
environment:
sdk: '>=2.5.0 <2.6.0'
If you need to support older versions of the SDK, then rewrite the code to not make use of those elements:
const a = [1, 2];
const b = [1, 2];
If that isn't possible, change the code so that the element isn't in a constant context:
const a = [1, 2];
var b = [...a];
set_element_type_not_assignable
#The element type '{0}' can't be assigned to the set type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an element in a set literal has a type that isn't assignable to the element type of the set.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of the string literal '0'
is String
, which isn't assignable to int
, the element type of the set:
var s = <int>{'0'};
Common fixes
#If the element type of the set literal is wrong, then change the element type of the set:
var s = <String>{'0'};
If the type of the element is wrong, then change the element:
var s = <int>{'0'.length};
shared_deferred_prefix
#The prefix of a deferred import can't be used in other import directives.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a prefix in a deferred import is also used as a prefix in other imports (whether deferred or not). The prefix in a deferred import can't be shared with other imports because the prefix is used to load the imported library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the prefix x
is used as the prefix for a deferred import and is also used for one other import:
import 'dart:math' deferred as x;
import 'dart:convert' as x;
var y = x.json.encode(x.min(0, 1));
Common fixes
#If you can use a different name for the deferred import, then do so:
import 'dart:math' deferred as math;
import 'dart:convert' as x;
var y = x.json.encode(math.min(0, 1));
If you can use a different name for the other imports, then do so:
import 'dart:math' deferred as x;
import 'dart:convert' as convert;
var y = convert.json.encode(x.min(0, 1));
size_annotation_dimensions
#'Array's must have an 'Array' annotation that matches the dimensions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the number of dimensions specified in an Array
annotation doesn't match the number of nested arrays specified by the type of a field.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field a0
has a type with three nested arrays, but only two dimensions are given in the Array
annotation:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array(8, 8)
external Array<Array<Array<Uint8>>> a0;
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the field is correct, then fix the annotation to have the required number of dimensions:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array(8, 8, 4)
external Array<Array<Array<Uint8>>> a0;
}
If the type of the field is wrong, then fix the type of the field:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array(8, 8)
external Array<Array<Uint8>> a0;
}
static_access_to_instance_member
#Instance member '{0}' can't be accessed using static access.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class name is used to access an instance field. Instance fields don't exist on a class; they exist only on an instance of the class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
is an instance field:
class C {
static int a = 0;
int b = 0;
}
int f() => C.b;
Common fixes
#If you intend to access a static field, then change the name of the field to an existing static field:
class C {
static int a = 0;
int b = 0;
}
int f() => C.a;
If you intend to access the instance field, then use an instance of the class to access the field:
class C {
static int a = 0;
int b = 0;
}
int f(C c) => c.b;
subtype_of_base_or_final_is_not_base_final_or_sealed
#The mixin '{0}' must be 'base' because the supertype '{1}' is 'base'.
The mixin '{0}' must be 'base' because the supertype '{1}' is 'final'.
The type '{0}' must be 'base', 'final' or 'sealed' because the supertype '{1}' is 'base'.
The type '{0}' must be 'base', 'final' or 'sealed' because the supertype '{1}' is 'final'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class or mixin has a direct or indirect supertype that is either base
or final
, but the class or mixin itself isn't marked either base
, final
, or sealed
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class B
is a subtype of A
, and A
is a base
class, but B
is neither base
, final
or sealed
:
base class A {}
class B extends A {}
Common fixes
#Add either base
, final
or sealed
to the class or mixin declaration:
base class A {}
final class B extends A {}
subtype_of_deferred_class
#Classes and mixins can't implement deferred classes.
Classes can't extend deferred classes.
Classes can't mixin deferred classes.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type (class or mixin) is a subtype of a class from a library being imported using a deferred import. The supertypes of a type must be compiled at the same time as the type, and classes from deferred libraries aren't compiled until the library is loaded.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that defines the class A
:
class A {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the superclass of B
is declared in a deferred library:
import 'a.dart' deferred as a;
class B extends a.A {}
Common fixes
#If you need to create a subtype of a type from the deferred library, then remove the deferred
keyword:
import 'a.dart' as a;
class B extends a.A {}
subtype_of_disallowed_type
#'{0}' can't be used as a superclass constraint.
Classes and mixins can't implement '{0}'.
Classes can't extend '{0}'.
Classes can't mixin '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when one of the restricted classes is used in either an extends
, implements
, with
, or on
clause. The classes bool
, double
, FutureOr
, int
, Null
, num
, and String
are all restricted in this way, to allow for more efficient implementations.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because String
is used in an extends
clause:
class A extends String {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because String
is used in an implements
clause:
class B implements String {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because String
is used in a with
clause:
class C with String {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because String
is used in an on
clause:
mixin M on String {}
Common fixes
#If a different type should be specified, then replace the type:
class A extends Object {}
If there isn't a different type that would be appropriate, then remove the type, and possibly the whole clause:
class B {}
subtype_of_ffi_class
#The class '{0}' can't extend '{1}'.
The class '{0}' can't implement '{1}'.
The class '{0}' can't mix in '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class extends any FFI class other than Struct
or Union
, or implements or mixes in any FFI class. Struct
and Union
are the only FFI classes that can be subtyped, and then only by extending them.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
extends Double
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Double {}
Common fixes
#If the class should extend either Struct
or Union
, then change the declaration of the class:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Int32()
external int i;
}
If the class shouldn't extend either Struct
or Union
, then remove any references to FFI classes:
final class C {}
subtype_of_sealed_class
#The class '{0}' shouldn't be extended, mixed in, or implemented because it's sealed.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a sealed class (one that either has the sealed
annotation or inherits or mixes in a sealed class) is referenced in either the extends
, implements
, or with
clause of a class or mixin declaration if the declaration isn't in the same package as the sealed class.
Example
#Given a library in a package other than the package being analyzed that contains the following:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class A {}
@sealed
class B {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because C
, which isn't in the same package as B
, is extending the sealed class B
:
import 'package:a/a.dart';
class C extends B {}
Common fixes
#If the class doesn't need to be a subtype of the sealed class, then change the declaration so that it isn't:
import 'package:a/a.dart';
class B extends A {}
If the class needs to be a subtype of the sealed class, then either change the sealed class so that it's no longer sealed or move the subclass into the same package as the sealed class.
subtype_of_struct_class
#The class '{0}' can't extend '{1}' because '{1}' is a subtype of 'Struct', 'Union', or 'AbiSpecificInteger'.
The class '{0}' can't implement '{1}' because '{1}' is a subtype of 'Struct', 'Union', or 'AbiSpecificInteger'.
The class '{0}' can't mix in '{1}' because '{1}' is a subtype of 'Struct', 'Union', or 'AbiSpecificInteger'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class extends, implements, or mixes in a class that extends either Struct
or Union
. Classes can only extend either Struct
or Union
directly.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
extends S
, and S
extends Struct
:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class S extends Struct {
external Pointer f;
}
final class C extends S {
external Pointer g;
}
Common fixes
#If you're trying to define a struct or union that shares some fields declared by a different struct or union, then extend Struct
or Union
directly and copy the shared fields:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class S extends Struct {
external Pointer f;
}
final class C extends Struct {
external Pointer f;
external Pointer g;
}
supertype_expands_to_type_parameter
#A type alias that expands to a type parameter can't be implemented.
A type alias that expands to a type parameter can't be mixed in.
A type alias that expands to a type parameter can't be used as a superclass constraint.
A type alias that expands to a type parameter can't be used as a superclass.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type alias that expands to a type parameter is used in an extends
, implements
, with
, or on
clause.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type alias T
, which expands to the type parameter S
, is used in the extends
clause of the class C
:
typedef T<S> = S;
class C extends T<Object> {}
Common fixes
#Use the value of the type argument directly:
typedef T<S> = S;
class C extends Object {}
super_formal_parameter_type_is_not_subtype_of_associated
#The type '{0}' of this parameter isn't a subtype of the type '{1}' of the associated super constructor parameter.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type of a super parameter isn't a subtype of the corresponding parameter from the super constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of the super parameter x
in the constructor for B
isn't a subtype of the parameter x
in the constructor for A
:
class A {
A(num x);
}
class B extends A {
B(String super.x);
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the super parameter can be the same as the parameter from the super constructor, then remove the type annotation from the super parameter (if the type is implicit, it is inferred from the type in the super constructor):
class A {
A(num x);
}
class B extends A {
B(super.x);
}
If the type of the super parameter can be a subtype of the corresponding parameter's type, then change the type of the super parameter:
class A {
A(num x);
}
class B extends A {
B(int super.x);
}
If the type of the super parameter can't be changed, then use a normal parameter instead of a super parameter:
class A {
A(num x);
}
class B extends A {
B(String x) : super(x.length);
}
super_formal_parameter_without_associated_named
#No associated named super constructor parameter.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's a named super parameter in a constructor and the implicitly or explicitly invoked super constructor doesn't have a named parameter with the same name.
Named super parameters are associated by name with named parameters in the super constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor in A
doesn't have a parameter named y
:
class A {
A({int? x});
}
class B extends A {
B({super.y});
}
Common fixes
#If the super parameter should be associated with an existing parameter from the super constructor, then change the name to match the name of the corresponding parameter:
class A {
A({int? x});
}
class B extends A {
B({super.x});
}
If the super parameter should be associated with a parameter that hasn't yet been added to the super constructor, then add it:
class A {
A({int? x, int? y});
}
class B extends A {
B({super.y});
}
If the super parameter doesn't correspond to a named parameter from the super constructor, then change it to be a normal parameter:
class A {
A({int? x});
}
class B extends A {
B({int? y});
}
super_formal_parameter_without_associated_positional
#No associated positional super constructor parameter.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's a positional super parameter in a constructor and the implicitly or explicitly invoked super constructor doesn't have a positional parameter at the corresponding index.
Positional super parameters are associated with positional parameters in the super constructor by their index. That is, the first super parameter is associated with the first positional parameter in the super constructor, the second with the second, and so on.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor in B
has a positional super parameter, but there's no positional parameter in the super constructor in A
:
class A {
A({int? x});
}
class B extends A {
B(super.x);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor in B
has two positional super parameters, but there's only one positional parameter in the super constructor in A
, which means that there's no corresponding parameter for y
:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class B extends A {
B(super.x, super.y);
}
Common fixes
#If the super constructor should have a positional parameter corresponding to the super parameter, then update the super constructor appropriately:
class A {
A(int x, int y);
}
class B extends A {
B(super.x, super.y);
}
If the super constructor is correct, or can't be changed, then convert the super parameter into a normal parameter:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class B extends A {
B(super.x, int y);
}
super_invocation_not_last
#invalid_super_invocation
)
The superconstructor call must be last in an initializer list: '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the initializer list of a constructor contains an invocation of a constructor in the superclass, but the invocation isn't the last item in the initializer list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the invocation of the superclass' constructor isn't the last item in the initializer list:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class B extends A {
B(int x) : super(x), assert(x >= 0);
}
Common fixes
#Move the invocation of the superclass' constructor to the end of the initializer list:
class A {
A(int x);
}
class B extends A {
B(int x) : assert(x >= 0), super(x);
}
super_in_enum_constructor
#The enum constructor can't have a 'super' initializer.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the initializer list in a constructor in an enum contains an invocation of a super constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor in the enum E
has a super constructor invocation in the initializer list:
enum E {
e;
const E() : super();
}
Common fixes
#Remove the super constructor invocation:
enum E {
e;
const E();
}
super_in_extension
#The 'super' keyword can't be used in an extension because an extension doesn't have a superclass.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member declared inside an extension uses the super
keyword . Extensions aren't classes and don't have superclasses, so the super
keyword serves no purpose.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because super
can't be used in an extension:
extension E on Object {
String get displayString => super.toString();
}
Common fixes
#Remove the super
keyword :
extension E on Object {
String get displayString => toString();
}
super_in_extension_type
#The 'super' keyword can't be used in an extension type because an extension type doesn't have a superclass.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when super
is used in an instance member of an extension type. Extension types don't have superclasses, so there's no inherited member that could be invoked.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because :
extension type E(String s) {
void m() {
super.m();
}
}
Common fixes
#Replace or remove the super
invocation:
extension type E(String s) {
void m() {
s.toLowerCase();
}
}
super_in_invalid_context
#Invalid context for 'super' invocation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the keyword super
is used outside of an instance method.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because super
is used in a top-level function:
void f() {
super.f();
}
Common fixes
#Rewrite the code to not use super
.
super_in_redirecting_constructor
#The redirecting constructor can't have a 'super' initializer.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor that redirects to another constructor also attempts to invoke a constructor from the superclass. The superclass constructor will be invoked when the constructor that the redirecting constructor is redirected to is invoked.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor C.a
both redirects to C.b
and invokes a constructor from the superclass:
class C {
C.a() : this.b(), super();
C.b();
}
Common fixes
#Remove the invocation of the super
constructor:
class C {
C.a() : this.b();
C.b();
}
switch_case_completes_normally
#The 'case' shouldn't complete normally.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the statements following a case
label in a switch
statement could fall through to the next case
or default
label.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the case
label with a value of zero (0
) falls through to the default
statements:
void f(int a) {
switch (a) {
case 0:
print(0);
default:
return;
}
}
Common fixes
#Change the flow of control so that the case
won't fall through. There are several ways that this can be done, including adding one of the following at the end of the current list of statements:
- a
return
statement, - a
throw
expression, - a
break
statement, - a
continue
, or - an invocation of a function or method whose return type is
Never
.
switch_expression_not_assignable
#Type '{0}' of the switch expression isn't assignable to the type '{1}' of case expressions.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type of the expression in a switch
statement isn't assignable to the type of the expressions in the case
clauses.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of s
(String
) isn't assignable to the type of 0
(int
):
void f(String s) {
switch (s) {
case 0:
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the case
expressions is correct, then change the expression in the switch
statement to have the correct type:
void f(String s) {
switch (int.parse(s)) {
case 0:
break;
}
}
If the type of the switch
expression is correct, then change the case
expressions to have the correct type:
void f(String s) {
switch (s) {
case '0':
break;
}
}
tearoff_of_generative_constructor_of_abstract_class
#A generative constructor of an abstract class can't be torn off.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a generative constructor from an abstract class is being torn off. This isn't allowed because it isn't valid to create an instance of an abstract class, which means that there isn't any valid use for the torn off constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor C.new
is being torn off and the class C
is an abstract class:
abstract class C {
C();
}
void f() {
C.new;
}
Common fixes
#Tear off the constructor of a concrete class.
text_direction_code_point_in_comment
#The Unicode code point 'U+{0}' changes the appearance of text from how it's interpreted by the compiler.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it encounters source that contains text direction Unicode code points. These code points cause source code in either a string literal or a comment to be interpreted and compiled differently than how it appears in editors, leading to possible security vulnerabilities.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic twice because there are hidden characters at the start and end of the label string:
var label = 'Interactive text';
Common fixes
#If the code points are intended to be included in the string literal, then escape them:
var label = '\u202AInteractive text\u202C';
If the code points aren't intended to be included in the string literal, then remove them:
var label = 'Interactive text';
text_direction_code_point_in_literal
#The Unicode code point 'U+{0}' changes the appearance of text from how it's interpreted by the compiler.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it encounters source that contains text direction Unicode code points. These code points cause source code in either a string literal or a comment to be interpreted and compiled differently than how it appears in editors, leading to possible security vulnerabilities.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic twice because there are hidden characters at the start and end of the label string:
var label = 'Interactive text';
Common fixes
#If the code points are intended to be included in the string literal, then escape them:
var label = '\u202AInteractive text\u202C';
If the code points aren't intended to be included in the string literal, then remove them:
var label = 'Interactive text';
throw_of_invalid_type
#The type '{0}' of the thrown expression must be assignable to 'Object'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type of the expression in a throw expression isn't assignable to Object
. It isn't valid to throw null
, so it isn't valid to use an expression that might evaluate to null
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because s
might be null
:
void f(String? s) {
throw s;
}
Common fixes
#Add an explicit null-check to the expression:
void f(String? s) {
throw s!;
}
top_level_cycle
#The type of '{0}' can't be inferred because it depends on itself through the cycle: {1}.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a top-level variable has no type annotation and the variable's initializer refers to the variable, either directly or indirectly.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variables x
and y
are defined in terms of each other, and neither has an explicit type, so the type of the other can't be inferred:
var x = y;
var y = x;
Common fixes
#If the two variables don't need to refer to each other, then break the cycle:
var x = 0;
var y = x;
If the two variables need to refer to each other, then give at least one of them an explicit type:
int x = y;
var y = x;
Note, however, that while this code doesn't produce any diagnostics, it will produce a stack overflow at runtime unless at least one of the variables is assigned a value that doesn't depend on the other variables before any of the variables in the cycle are referenced.
type_alias_cannot_reference_itself
#Typedefs can't reference themselves directly or recursively via another typedef.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a typedef refers to itself, either directly or indirectly.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because F
depends on itself indirectly through G
:
typedef F = void Function(G);
typedef G = void Function(F);
Common fixes
#Change one or more of the typedefs in the cycle so that none of them refer to themselves:
typedef F = void Function(G);
typedef G = void Function(int);
type_annotation_deferred_class
#The deferred type '{0}' can't be used in a declaration, cast, or type test.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type annotation is in a variable declaration, or the type used in a cast (as
) or type test (is
) is a type declared in a library that is imported using a deferred import. These types are required to be available at compile time, but aren't.
For more information, check out Lazily loading a library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of the parameter f
is imported from a deferred library:
import 'dart:io' deferred as io;
void f(io.File f) {}
Common fixes
#If you need to reference the imported type, then remove the deferred
keyword:
import 'dart:io' as io;
void f(io.File f) {}
If the import is required to be deferred and there's another type that is appropriate, then use that type in place of the type from the deferred library.
type_argument_not_matching_bounds
#'{0}' doesn't conform to the bound '{2}' of the type parameter '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type argument isn't the same as or a subclass of the bounds of the corresponding type parameter.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because String
isn't a subclass of num
:
class A<E extends num> {}
var a = A<String>();
Common fixes
#Change the type argument to be a subclass of the bounds:
class A<E extends num> {}
var a = A<int>();
type_check_with_null
#Tests for non-null should be done with '!= null'.
Tests for null should be done with '== null'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's a type check (using the as
operator) where the type is Null
. There's only one value whose type is Null
, so the code is both more readable and more performant when it tests for null
explicitly.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the code is testing to see whether the value of s
is null
by using a type check:
void f(String? s) {
if (s is Null) {
return;
}
print(s);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the code is testing to see whether the value of s
is something other than null
by using a type check:
void f(String? s) {
if (s is! Null) {
print(s);
}
}
Common fixes
#Replace the type check with the equivalent comparison with null
:
void f(String? s) {
if (s == null) {
return;
}
print(s);
}
type_parameter_referenced_by_static
#Static members can't reference type parameters of the class.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a static member references a type parameter that is declared for the class. Type parameters only have meaning for instances of the class.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the static method hasType
has a reference to the type parameter T
:
class C<T> {
static bool hasType(Object o) => o is T;
}
Common fixes
#If the member can be an instance member, then remove the keyword static
:
class C<T> {
bool hasType(Object o) => o is T;
}
If the member must be a static member, then make the member be generic:
class C<T> {
static bool hasType<S>(Object o) => o is S;
}
Note, however, that there isn't a relationship between T
and S
, so this second option changes the semantics from what was likely to be intended.
type_parameter_supertype_of_its_bound
#'{0}' can't be a supertype of its upper bound.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the bound of a type parameter (the type following the extends
keyword) is either directly or indirectly the type parameter itself. Stating that the type parameter must be the same as itself or a subtype of itself or a subtype of itself isn't helpful because it will always be the same as itself.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the bound of T
is T
:
class C<T extends T> {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the bound of T1
is T2
, and the bound of T2
is T1
, effectively making the bound of T1
be T1
:
class C<T1 extends T2, T2 extends T1> {}
Common fixes
#If the type parameter needs to be a subclass of some type, then replace the bound with the required type:
class C<T extends num> {}
If the type parameter can be any type, then remove the extends
clause:
class C<T> {}
type_test_with_non_type
#The name '{0}' isn't a type and can't be used in an 'is' expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the right-hand side of an is
or is!
test isn't a type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the right-hand side is a parameter, not a type:
typedef B = int Function(int);
void f(Object a, B b) {
if (a is b) {
return;
}
}
Common fixes
#If you intended to use a type test, then replace the right-hand side with a type:
typedef B = int Function(int);
void f(Object a, B b) {
if (a is B) {
return;
}
}
If you intended to use a different kind of test, then change the test:
typedef B = int Function(int);
void f(Object a, B b) {
if (a == b) {
return;
}
}
type_test_with_undefined_name
#The name '{0}' isn't defined, so it can't be used in an 'is' expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name following the is
in a type test expression isn't defined.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name Srting
isn't defined:
void f(Object o) {
if (o is Srting) {
// ...
}
}
Common fixes
#Replace the name with the name of a type:
void f(Object o) {
if (o is String) {
// ...
}
}
unchecked_use_of_nullable_value
#A nullable expression can't be used as a condition.
A nullable expression can't be used as an iterator in a for-in loop.
A nullable expression can't be used in a spread.
A nullable expression can't be used in a yield-each statement.
The function can't be unconditionally invoked because it can be 'null'.
The method '{0}' can't be unconditionally invoked because the receiver can be 'null'.
The operator '{0}' can't be unconditionally invoked because the receiver can be 'null'.
The property '{0}' can't be unconditionally accessed because the receiver can be 'null'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an expression whose type is potentially non-nullable is dereferenced without first verifying that the value isn't null
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because s
can be null
at the point where it's referenced:
void f(String? s) {
if (s.length > 3) {
// ...
}
}
Common fixes
#If the value really can be null
, then add a test to ensure that members are only accessed when the value isn't null
:
void f(String? s) {
if (s != null && s.length > 3) {
// ...
}
}
If the expression is a variable and the value should never be null
, then change the type of the variable to be non-nullable:
void f(String s) {
if (s.length > 3) {
// ...
}
}
If you believe that the value of the expression should never be null
, but you can't change the type of the variable, and you're willing to risk having an exception thrown at runtime if you're wrong, then you can assert that the value isn't null:
void f(String? s) {
if (s!.length > 3) {
// ...
}
}
undefined_annotation
#Undefined name '{0}' used as an annotation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a name that isn't defined is used as an annotation.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name undefined
isn't defined:
@undefined
void f() {}
Common fixes
#If the name is correct, but it isn't declared yet, then declare the name as a constant value:
const undefined = 'undefined';
@undefined
void f() {}
If the name is wrong, replace the name with the name of a valid constant:
@deprecated
void f() {}
Otherwise, remove the annotation.
undefined_class
#Undefined class '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it encounters an identifier that appears to be the name of a class but either isn't defined or isn't visible in the scope in which it's being referenced.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because Piont
isn't defined:
class Point {}
void f(Piont p) {}
Common fixes
#If the identifier isn't defined, then either define it or replace it with the name of a class that is defined. The example above can be corrected by fixing the spelling of the class:
class Point {}
void f(Point p) {}
If the class is defined but isn't visible, then you probably need to add an import.
undefined_constructor_in_initializer
#The class '{0}' doesn't have a constructor named '{1}'.
The class '{0}' doesn't have an unnamed constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a superclass constructor is invoked in the initializer list of a constructor, but the superclass doesn't define the constructor being invoked.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because A
doesn't have an unnamed constructor:
class A {
A.n();
}
class B extends A {
B() : super();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because A
doesn't have a constructor named m
:
class A {
A.n();
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.m();
}
Common fixes
#If the superclass defines a constructor that should be invoked, then change the constructor being invoked:
class A {
A.n();
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.n();
}
If the superclass doesn't define an appropriate constructor, then define the constructor being invoked:
class A {
A.m();
A.n();
}
class B extends A {
B() : super.m();
}
undefined_enum_constant
#There's no constant named '{0}' in '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it encounters an identifier that appears to be the name of an enum value, and the name either isn't defined or isn't visible in the scope in which it's being referenced.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because E
doesn't define a constant named c
:
enum E {a, b}
var e = E.c;
Common fixes
#If the constant should be defined, then add it to the declaration of the enum:
enum E {a, b, c}
var e = E.c;
If the constant shouldn't be defined, then change the name to the name of an existing constant:
enum E {a, b}
var e = E.b;
undefined_enum_constructor
#The enum doesn't have a constructor named '{0}'.
The enum doesn't have an unnamed constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the constructor invoked to initialize an enum value doesn't exist.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the enum value c
is being initialized by the unnamed constructor, but there's no unnamed constructor defined in E
:
enum E {
c();
const E.x();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the enum value c
is being initialized by the constructor named x
, but there's no constructor named x
defined in E
:
enum E {
c.x();
const E.y();
}
Common fixes
#If the enum value is being initialized by the unnamed constructor and one of the named constructors should have been used, then add the name of the constructor:
enum E {
c.x();
const E.x();
}
If the enum value is being initialized by the unnamed constructor and none of the named constructors are appropriate, then define the unnamed constructor:
enum E {
c();
const E();
}
If the enum value is being initialized by a named constructor and one of the existing constructors should have been used, then change the name of the constructor being invoked (or remove it if the unnamed constructor should be used):
enum E {
c.y();
const E();
const E.y();
}
If the enum value is being initialized by a named constructor and none of the existing constructors should have been used, then define a constructor with the name that was used:
enum E {
c.x();
const E.x();
}
undefined_extension_getter
#The getter '{0}' isn't defined for the extension '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension override is used to invoke a getter, but the getter isn't defined by the specified extension. The analyzer also produces this diagnostic when a static getter is referenced but isn't defined by the specified extension.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension E
doesn't declare an instance getter named b
:
extension E on String {
String get a => 'a';
}
extension F on String {
String get b => 'b';
}
void f() {
E('c').b;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension E
doesn't declare a static getter named a
:
extension E on String {}
var x = E.a;
Common fixes
#If the name of the getter is incorrect, then change it to the name of an existing getter:
extension E on String {
String get a => 'a';
}
extension F on String {
String get b => 'b';
}
void f() {
E('c').a;
}
If the name of the getter is correct but the name of the extension is wrong, then change the name of the extension to the correct name:
extension E on String {
String get a => 'a';
}
extension F on String {
String get b => 'b';
}
void f() {
F('c').b;
}
If the name of the getter and extension are both correct, but the getter isn't defined, then define the getter:
extension E on String {
String get a => 'a';
String get b => 'z';
}
extension F on String {
String get b => 'b';
}
void f() {
E('c').b;
}
undefined_extension_method
#The method '{0}' isn't defined for the extension '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension override is used to invoke a method, but the method isn't defined by the specified extension. The analyzer also produces this diagnostic when a static method is referenced but isn't defined by the specified extension.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension E
doesn't declare an instance method named b
:
extension E on String {
String a() => 'a';
}
extension F on String {
String b() => 'b';
}
void f() {
E('c').b();
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension E
doesn't declare a static method named a
:
extension E on String {}
var x = E.a();
Common fixes
#If the name of the method is incorrect, then change it to the name of an existing method:
extension E on String {
String a() => 'a';
}
extension F on String {
String b() => 'b';
}
void f() {
E('c').a();
}
If the name of the method is correct, but the name of the extension is wrong, then change the name of the extension to the correct name:
extension E on String {
String a() => 'a';
}
extension F on String {
String b() => 'b';
}
void f() {
F('c').b();
}
If the name of the method and extension are both correct, but the method isn't defined, then define the method:
extension E on String {
String a() => 'a';
String b() => 'z';
}
extension F on String {
String b() => 'b';
}
void f() {
E('c').b();
}
undefined_extension_operator
#The operator '{0}' isn't defined for the extension '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an operator is invoked on a specific extension when that extension doesn't implement the operator.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension E
doesn't define the operator *
:
var x = E('') * 4;
extension E on String {}
Common fixes
#If the extension is expected to implement the operator, then add an implementation of the operator to the extension:
var x = E('') * 4;
extension E on String {
int operator *(int multiplier) => length * multiplier;
}
If the operator is defined by a different extension, then change the name of the extension to the name of the one that defines the operator.
If the operator is defined on the argument of the extension override, then remove the extension override:
var x = '' * 4;
extension E on String {}
undefined_extension_setter
#The setter '{0}' isn't defined for the extension '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension override is used to invoke a setter, but the setter isn't defined by the specified extension. The analyzer also produces this diagnostic when a static setter is referenced but isn't defined by the specified extension.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension E
doesn't declare an instance setter named b
:
extension E on String {
set a(String v) {}
}
extension F on String {
set b(String v) {}
}
void f() {
E('c').b = 'd';
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension E
doesn't declare a static setter named a
:
extension E on String {}
void f() {
E.a = 3;
}
Common fixes
#If the name of the setter is incorrect, then change it to the name of an existing setter:
extension E on String {
set a(String v) {}
}
extension F on String {
set b(String v) {}
}
void f() {
E('c').a = 'd';
}
If the name of the setter is correct, but the name of the extension is wrong, then change the name of the extension to the correct name:
extension E on String {
set a(String v) {}
}
extension F on String {
set b(String v) {}
}
void f() {
F('c').b = 'd';
}
If the name of the setter and extension are both correct, but the setter isn't defined, then define the setter:
extension E on String {
set a(String v) {}
set b(String v) {}
}
extension F on String {
set b(String v) {}
}
void f() {
E('c').b = 'd';
}
undefined_function
#The function '{0}' isn't defined.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it encounters an identifier that appears to be the name of a function but either isn't defined or isn't visible in the scope in which it's being referenced.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name emty
isn't defined:
List<int> empty() => [];
void main() {
print(emty());
}
Common fixes
#If the identifier isn't defined, then either define it or replace it with the name of a function that is defined. The example above can be corrected by fixing the spelling of the function:
List<int> empty() => [];
void main() {
print(empty());
}
If the function is defined but isn't visible, then you probably need to add an import or re-arrange your code to make the function visible.
undefined_getter
#The getter '{0}' isn't defined for the '{1}' function type.
The getter '{0}' isn't defined for the type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it encounters an identifier that appears to be the name of a getter but either isn't defined or isn't visible in the scope in which it's being referenced.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because String
has no member named len
:
int f(String s) => s.len;
Common fixes
#If the identifier isn't defined, then either define it or replace it with the name of a getter that is defined. The example above can be corrected by fixing the spelling of the getter:
int f(String s) => s.length;
undefined_hidden_name
#The library '{0}' doesn't export a member with the hidden name '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a hide combinator includes a name that isn't defined by the library being imported.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because dart:math
doesn't define the name String
:
import 'dart:math' hide String, max;
var x = min(0, 1);
Common fixes
#If a different name should be hidden, then correct the name. Otherwise, remove the name from the list:
import 'dart:math' hide max;
var x = min(0, 1);
undefined_identifier
#Undefined name '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it encounters an identifier that either isn't defined or isn't visible in the scope in which it's being referenced.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name rihgt
isn't defined:
int min(int left, int right) => left <= rihgt ? left : right;
Common fixes
#If the identifier isn't defined, then either define it or replace it with an identifier that is defined. The example above can be corrected by fixing the spelling of the variable:
int min(int left, int right) => left <= right ? left : right;
If the identifier is defined but isn't visible, then you probably need to add an import or re-arrange your code to make the identifier visible.
undefined_identifier_await
#Undefined name 'await' in function body not marked with 'async'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name await
is used in a method or function body without being declared, and the body isn't marked with the async
keyword. The name await
only introduces an await expression in an asynchronous function.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name await
is used in the body of f
even though the body of f
isn't marked with the async
keyword:
void f(p) { await p; }
Common fixes
#Add the keyword async
to the function body:
void f(p) async { await p; }
undefined_method
#The method '{0}' isn't defined for the '{1}' function type.
The method '{0}' isn't defined for the type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it encounters an identifier that appears to be the name of a method but either isn't defined or isn't visible in the scope in which it's being referenced.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the identifier removeMiddle
isn't defined:
int f(List<int> l) => l.removeMiddle();
Common fixes
#If the identifier isn't defined, then either define it or replace it with the name of a method that is defined. The example above can be corrected by fixing the spelling of the method:
int f(List<int> l) => l.removeLast();
undefined_named_parameter
#The named parameter '{0}' isn't defined.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function invocation has a named argument, but the method or function being invoked doesn't define a parameter with the same name.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because m
doesn't declare a named parameter named a
:
class C {
m({int? b}) {}
}
void f(C c) {
c.m(a: 1);
}
Common fixes
#If the argument name is mistyped, then replace it with the correct name. The example above can be fixed by changing a
to b
:
class C {
m({int? b}) {}
}
void f(C c) {
c.m(b: 1);
}
If a subclass adds a parameter with the name in question, then cast the receiver to the subclass:
class C {
m({int? b}) {}
}
class D extends C {
m({int? a, int? b}) {}
}
void f(C c) {
(c as D).m(a: 1);
}
If the parameter should be added to the function, then add it:
class C {
m({int? a, int? b}) {}
}
void f(C c) {
c.m(a: 1);
}
undefined_operator
#The operator '{0}' isn't defined for the type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a user-definable operator is invoked on an object for which the operator isn't defined.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
doesn't define the operator +
:
class C {}
C f(C c) => c + 2;
Common fixes
#If the operator should be defined for the class, then define it:
class C {
C operator +(int i) => this;
}
C f(C c) => c + 2;
undefined_prefixed_name
#The name '{0}' is being referenced through the prefix '{1}', but it isn't defined in any of the libraries imported using that prefix.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a prefixed identifier is found where the prefix is valid, but the identifier isn't declared in any of the libraries imported using that prefix.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because dart:core
doesn't define anything named a
:
import 'dart:core' as p;
void f() {
p.a;
}
Common fixes
#If the library in which the name is declared isn't imported yet, add an import for the library.
If the name is wrong, then change it to one of the names that's declared in the imported libraries.
undefined_referenced_parameter
#The parameter '{0}' isn't defined by '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an annotation of the form UseResult.unless(parameterDefined: parameterName)
specifies a parameter name that isn't defined by the annotated function.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
doesn't have a parameter named b
:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@UseResult.unless(parameterDefined: 'b')
int f([int? a]) => a ?? 0;
Common fixes
#Change the argument named parameterDefined
to match the name of one of the parameters to the function:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@UseResult.unless(parameterDefined: 'a')
int f([int? a]) => a ?? 0;
undefined_setter
#The setter '{0}' isn't defined for the '{1}' function type.
The setter '{0}' isn't defined for the type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it encounters an identifier that appears to be the name of a setter but either isn't defined or isn't visible in the scope in which the identifier is being referenced.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there isn't a setter named z
:
class C {
int x = 0;
void m(int y) {
this.z = y;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the identifier isn't defined, then either define it or replace it with the name of a setter that is defined. The example above can be corrected by fixing the spelling of the setter:
class C {
int x = 0;
void m(int y) {
this.x = y;
}
}
undefined_shown_name
#The library '{0}' doesn't export a member with the shown name '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a show combinator includes a name that isn't defined by the library being imported.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because dart:math
doesn't define the name String
:
import 'dart:math' show min, String;
var x = min(0, 1);
Common fixes
#If a different name should be shown, then correct the name. Otherwise, remove the name from the list:
import 'dart:math' show min;
var x = min(0, 1);
undefined_super_member
#undefined_super_method
)
The getter '{0}' isn't defined in a superclass of '{1}'.
The method '{0}' isn't defined in a superclass of '{1}'.
The operator '{0}' isn't defined in a superclass of '{1}'.
The setter '{0}' isn't defined in a superclass of '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an inherited member (method, getter, setter, or operator) is referenced using super
, but there's no member with that name in the superclass chain.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because Object
doesn't define a method named n
:
class C {
void m() {
super.n();
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because Object
doesn't define a getter named g
:
class C {
void m() {
super.g;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the inherited member you intend to invoke has a different name, then make the name of the invoked member match the inherited member.
If the member you intend to invoke is defined in the same class, then remove the super.
.
If the member isn't defined, then either add the member to one of the superclasses or remove the invocation.
unknown_platform
#The platform '{0}' is not a recognized platform.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an unknown platform name is used as a key in the platforms
map. To learn more about specifying your package's supported platforms, check out the documentation on platform declarations.
Example
#The following pubspec.yaml
produces this diagnostic because the platform browser
is unknown.
name: example
platforms:
browser:
Common fixes
#If you can rely on automatic platform detection, then omit the top-level platforms
key.
name: example
If you need to manually specify the list of supported platforms, then write the platforms
field as a map with known platform names as keys.
name: example
platforms:
# These are the known platforms
android:
ios:
linux:
macos:
web:
windows:
unnecessary_cast
#Unnecessary cast.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value being cast is already known to be of the type that it's being cast to.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because n
is already known to be an int
as a result of the is
test:
void f(num n) {
if (n is int) {
(n as int).isEven;
}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary cast:
void f(num n) {
if (n is int) {
n.isEven;
}
}
unnecessary_dev_dependency
#The dev dependency on {0} is unnecessary because there is also a normal dependency on that package.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's an entry under dev_dependencies
for a package that is also listed under dependencies
. The packages under dependencies
are available to all of the code in the package, so there's no need to also list them under dev_dependencies
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the package meta
is listed under both dependencies
and dev_dependencies
:
name: example
dependencies:
meta: ^1.0.2
dev_dependencies:
meta: ^1.0.2
Common fixes
#Remove the entry under dev_dependencies
(and the dev_dependencies
key if that's the only package listed there):
name: example
dependencies:
meta: ^1.0.2
unnecessary_final
#The keyword 'final' isn't necessary because the parameter is implicitly 'final'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either a field initializing parameter or a super parameter in a constructor has the keyword final
. In both cases the keyword is unnecessary because the parameter is implicitly final
.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field initializing parameter has the keyword final
:
class A {
int value;
A(final this.value);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the super parameter in B
has the keyword final
:
class A {
A(int value);
}
class B extends A {
B(final super.value);
}
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary final
keyword:
class A {
A(int value);
}
class B extends A {
B(super.value);
}
unnecessary_import
#The import of '{0}' is unnecessary because all of the used elements are also provided by the import of '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import isn't needed because all of the names that are imported and referenced within the importing library are also visible through another import.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
that contains the following:
class A {}
And, given a file b.dart
that contains the following:
export 'a.dart';
class B {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the class A
, which is imported from a.dart
, is also imported from b.dart
. Removing the import of a.dart
leaves the semantics unchanged:
import 'a.dart';
import 'b.dart';
void f(A a, B b) {}
Common fixes
#If the import isn't needed, then remove it.
If some of the names imported by this import are intended to be used but aren't yet, and if those names aren't imported by other imports, then add the missing references to those names.
unnecessary_nan_comparison
#A double can't equal 'double.nan', so the condition is always 'false'.
A double can't equal 'double.nan', so the condition is always 'true'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a value is compared to double.nan
using either ==
or !=
.
Dart follows the IEEE 754 floating-point standard for the semantics of floating point operations, which states that, for any floating point value x
(including NaN, positive infinity, and negative infinity),
NaN == x
is always falseNaN != x
is always true
As a result, comparing any value to NaN is pointless because the result is already known (based on the comparison operator being used).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because d
is being compared to double.nan
:
bool isNaN(double d) => d == double.nan;
Common fixes
#Use the getter double.isNaN
instead:
bool isNaN(double d) => d.isNaN;
unnecessary_non_null_assertion
#The '!' will have no effect because the receiver can't be null.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the operand of the !
operator can't be null
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
can't be null
:
int f(int x) {
return x!;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the null check operator (!
):
int f(int x) {
return x;
}
unnecessary_no_such_method
#Unnecessary 'noSuchMethod' declaration.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when there's a declaration of noSuchMethod
, the only thing the declaration does is invoke the overridden declaration, and the overridden declaration isn't the declaration in Object
.
Overriding the implementation of Object
's noSuchMethod
(no matter what the implementation does) signals to the analyzer that it shouldn't flag any inherited abstract methods that aren't implemented in that class. This works even if the overriding implementation is inherited from a superclass, so there's no value to declare it again in a subclass.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the declaration of noSuchMethod
in A
makes the declaration of noSuchMethod
in B
unnecessary:
class A {
@override
dynamic noSuchMethod(x) => super.noSuchMethod(x);
}
class B extends A {
@override
dynamic noSuchMethod(y) {
return super.noSuchMethod(y);
}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary declaration:
class A {
@override
dynamic noSuchMethod(x) => super.noSuchMethod(x);
}
class B extends A {}
unnecessary_null_assert_pattern
#The null-assert pattern will have no effect because the matched type isn't nullable.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a null-assert pattern is used to match a value that isn't nullable.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable x
isn't nullable:
void f(int x) {
if (x case var a! when a > 0) {}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the null-assert pattern:
void f(int x) {
if (x case var a when a > 0) {}
}
unnecessary_null_check_pattern
#The null-check pattern will have no effect because the matched type isn't nullable.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a null-check pattern is used to match a value that isn't nullable.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value x
isn't nullable:
void f(int x) {
if (x case var a? when a > 0) {}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the null-check pattern:
void f(int x) {
if (x case var a when a > 0) {}
}
unnecessary_null_comparison
#The operand can't be 'null', so the condition is always 'false'.
The operand can't be 'null', so the condition is always 'true'.
The operand must be 'null', so the condition is always 'false'.
The operand must be 'null', so the condition is always 'true'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds an equality comparison (either ==
or !=
) with one operand of null
and the other operand can't be null
. Such comparisons are always either true
or false
, so they serve no purpose.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because x
can never be null
, so the comparison always evaluates to true
:
void f(int x) {
if (x != null) {
print(x);
}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because x
can never be null
, so the comparison always evaluates to false
:
void f(int x) {
if (x == null) {
throw ArgumentError("x can't be null");
}
}
Common fixes
#If the other operand should be able to be null
, then change the type of the operand:
void f(int? x) {
if (x != null) {
print(x);
}
}
If the other operand really can't be null
, then remove the condition:
void f(int x) {
print(x);
}
unnecessary_question_mark
#The '?' is unnecessary because '{0}' is nullable without it.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either the type dynamic
or the type Null
is followed by a question mark. Both of these types are inherently nullable so the question mark doesn't change the semantics.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the question mark following dynamic
isn't necessary:
dynamic? x;
Common fixes
#Remove the unneeded question mark:
dynamic x;
unnecessary_set_literal
#Braces unnecessarily wrap this expression in a set literal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a function that has a return type of void
, Future<void>
, or FutureOr<void>
uses an expression function body (=>
) and the returned value is a literal set containing a single element.
Although the language allows it, returning a value from a void
function isn't useful because it can't be used at the call site. In this particular case the return is often due to a misunderstanding about the syntax. The braces aren't necessary and can be removed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the closure being passed to g
has a return type of void
, but is returning a set:
void f() {
g(() => {1});
}
void g(void Function() p) {}
Common fixes
#Remove the braces from around the value:
void f() {
g(() => 1);
}
void g(void Function() p) {}
unnecessary_type_check
#Unnecessary type check; the result is always 'false'.
Unnecessary type check; the result is always 'true'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of a type check (using either is
or is!
) is known at compile time.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the test a is Object?
is always true
:
bool f<T>(T a) => a is Object?;
Common fixes
#If the type check doesn't check what you intended to check, then change the test:
bool f<T>(T a) => a is Object;
If the type check does check what you intended to check, then replace the type check with its known value or completely remove it:
bool f<T>(T a) => true;
unqualified_reference_to_non_local_static_member
#Static members from supertypes must be qualified by the name of the defining type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when code in one class references a static member in a superclass without prefixing the member's name with the name of the superclass. Static members can only be referenced without a prefix in the class in which they're declared.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the static field x
is referenced in the getter g
without prefixing it with the name of the defining class:
class A {
static int x = 3;
}
class B extends A {
int get g => x;
}
Common fixes
#Prefix the name of the static member with the name of the declaring class:
class A {
static int x = 3;
}
class B extends A {
int get g => A.x;
}
unqualified_reference_to_static_member_of_extended_type
#Static members from the extended type or one of its superclasses must be qualified by the name of the defining type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an undefined name is found, and the name is the same as a static member of the extended type or one of its superclasses.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because m
is a static member of the extended type C
:
class C {
static void m() {}
}
extension E on C {
void f() {
m();
}
}
Common fixes
#If you're trying to reference a static member that's declared outside the extension, then add the name of the class or extension before the reference to the member:
class C {
static void m() {}
}
extension E on C {
void f() {
C.m();
}
}
If you're referencing a member that isn't declared yet, add a declaration:
class C {
static void m() {}
}
extension E on C {
void f() {
m();
}
void m() {}
}
unreachable_switch_case
#This case is covered by the previous cases.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a case
clause in a switch
statement doesn't match anything because all of the matchable values are matched by an earlier case
clause.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value 1
was matched in the preceding case:
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case 1:
print('one');
case 1:
print('two');
}
}
Common fixes
#Change one or both of the conflicting cases to match different values:
void f(int x) {
switch (x) {
case 1:
print('one');
case 2:
print('two');
}
}
unreachable_switch_default
#This default clause is covered by the previous cases.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a default
clause in a switch
statement doesn't match anything because all of the matchable values are matched by an earlier case
clause.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the values E.e1
and E.e2
were matched in the preceding cases:
enum E { e1, e2 }
void f(E x) {
switch (x) {
case E.e1:
print('one');
case E.e2:
print('two');
default:
print('other');
}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary default
clause:
enum E { e1, e2 }
void f(E x) {
switch (x) {
case E.e1:
print('one');
case E.e2:
print('two');
}
}
unused_catch_clause
#The exception variable '{0}' isn't used, so the 'catch' clause can be removed.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a catch
clause is found, and neither the exception parameter nor the optional stack trace parameter are used in the catch
block.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because e
isn't referenced:
void f() {
try {
int.parse(';');
} on FormatException catch (e) {
// ignored
}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the unused catch
clause:
void f() {
try {
int.parse(';');
} on FormatException {
// ignored
}
}
unused_catch_stack
#The stack trace variable '{0}' isn't used and can be removed.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the stack trace parameter in a catch
clause isn't referenced within the body of the catch
block.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because stackTrace
isn't referenced:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} catch (exception, stackTrace) {
// ...
}
}
Common fixes
#If you need to reference the stack trace parameter, then add a reference to it. Otherwise, remove it:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} catch (exception) {
// ...
}
}
unused_element
#A value for optional parameter '{0}' isn't ever given.
The declaration '{0}' isn't referenced.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a private declaration isn't referenced in the library that contains the declaration. The following kinds of declarations are analyzed:
- Private top-level declarations and all of their members
- Private members of public declarations
- Optional parameters of private functions for which a value is never passed
Not all references to an element will mark it as "used":
- Assigning a value to a top-level variable (with a standard
=
assignment, or a null-aware??=
assignment) does not count as using it. - Referring to an element in a doc comment reference does not count as using it.
- Referring to a class, mixin, or enum on the right side of an
is
expression does not count as using it.
Example
#Assuming that no code in the library references _C
, the following code produces this diagnostic:
class _C {}
Assuming that no code in the library passes a value for y
in any invocation of _m
, the following code produces this diagnostic:
class C {
void _m(int x, [int? y]) {}
void n() => _m(0);
}
Common fixes
#If the declaration isn't needed, then remove it:
class C {
void _m(int x) {}
void n() => _m(0);
}
If the declaration is intended to be used, then add the code to use it.
unused_field
#The value of the field '{0}' isn't used.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a private field is declared but never read, even if it's written in one or more places.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field _originalValue
isn't read anywhere in the library:
class C {
final String _originalValue;
final String _currentValue;
C(this._originalValue) : _currentValue = _originalValue;
String get value => _currentValue;
}
It might appear that the field _originalValue
is being read in the initializer (_currentValue = _originalValue
), but that is actually a reference to the parameter of the same name, not a reference to the field.
Common fixes
#If the field isn't needed, then remove it.
If the field was intended to be used, then add the missing code.
unused_import
#Unused import: '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import isn't needed because none of the names that are imported are referenced within the importing library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because nothing defined in dart:async
is referenced in the library:
import 'dart:async';
void main() {}
Common fixes
#If the import isn't needed, then remove it.
If some of the imported names are intended to be used, then add the missing code.
unused_label
#The label '{0}' isn't used.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a label that isn't used is found.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the label loop
isn't referenced anywhere in the method:
void f(int limit) {
loop: for (int i = 0; i < limit; i++) {
print(i);
}
}
Common fixes
#If the label isn't needed, then remove it:
void f(int limit) {
for (int i = 0; i < limit; i++) {
print(i);
}
}
If the label is needed, then use it:
void f(int limit) {
loop: for (int i = 0; i < limit; i++) {
print(i);
if (i != 0) {
break loop;
}
}
}
unused_local_variable
#The value of the local variable '{0}' isn't used.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a local variable is declared but never read, even if it's written in one or more places.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of count
is never read:
void main() {
int count = 0;
}
Common fixes
#If the variable isn't needed, then remove it.
If the variable was intended to be used, then add the missing code.
unused_result
#'{0}' should be used. {1}.
The value of '{0}' should be used.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a function annotated with useResult
is invoked, and the value returned by that function isn't used. The value is considered to be used if a member of the value is invoked, if the value is passed to another function, or if the value is assigned to a variable or field.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the invocation of c.a()
isn't used, even though the method a
is annotated with useResult
:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
@useResult
int a() => 0;
int b() => 0;
}
void f(C c) {
c.a();
}
Common fixes
#If you intended to invoke the annotated function, then use the value that was returned:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
@useResult
int a() => 0;
int b() => 0;
}
void f(C c) {
print(c.a());
}
If you intended to invoke a different function, then correct the name of the function being invoked:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
@useResult
int a() => 0;
int b() => 0;
}
void f(C c) {
c.b();
}
unused_shown_name
#The name {0} is shown, but isn't used.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a show combinator includes a name that isn't used within the library. Because it isn't referenced, the name can be removed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function max
isn't used:
import 'dart:math' show min, max;
var x = min(0, 1);
Common fixes
#Either use the name or remove it:
import 'dart:math' show min;
var x = min(0, 1);
uri_does_not_exist
#Target of URI doesn't exist: '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import, export, or part directive is found where the URI refers to a file that doesn't exist.
Examples
#If the file lib.dart
doesn't exist, the following code produces this diagnostic:
import 'lib.dart';
Common fixes
#If the URI was mistyped or invalid, then correct the URI.
If the URI is correct, then create the file.
uri_does_not_exist_in_doc_import
#Target of URI doesn't exist: '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a doc-import is found where the URI refers to a file that doesn't exist.
Examples
#If the file lib.dart
doesn't exist, the following code produces this diagnostic:
/// @docImport 'lib.dart';
library;
Common fixes
#If the URI was mistyped or invalid, then correct the URI.
If the URI is correct, then create the file.
uri_has_not_been_generated
#Target of URI hasn't been generated: '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import, export, or part directive is found where the URI refers to a file that doesn't exist and the name of the file ends with a pattern that's commonly produced by code generators, such as one of the following:
.g.dart
.pb.dart
.pbenum.dart
.pbserver.dart
.pbjson.dart
.template.dart
Example
#If the file lib.g.dart
doesn't exist, the following code produces this diagnostic:
import 'lib.g.dart';
Common fixes
#If the file is a generated file, then run the generator that generates the file.
If the file isn't a generated file, then check the spelling of the URI or create the file.
uri_with_interpolation
#URIs can't use string interpolation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the string literal in an import
, export
, or part
directive contains an interpolation. The resolution of the URIs in directives must happen before the declarations are compiled, so expressions can't be evaluated while determining the values of the URIs.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the string in the import
directive contains an interpolation:
import 'dart:$m';
const m = 'math';
Common fixes
#Remove the interpolation from the URI:
import 'dart:math';
var zero = min(0, 0);
use_of_native_extension
#Dart native extensions are deprecated and aren't available in Dart 2.15.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library is imported using the dart-ext
scheme.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the native library x
is being imported using a scheme of dart-ext
:
import 'dart-ext:x';
Common fixes
#Rewrite the code to use dart:ffi
as a way of invoking the contents of the native library.
use_of_void_result
#This expression has a type of 'void' so its value can't be used.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when it finds an expression whose type is void
, and the expression is used in a place where a value is expected, such as before a member access or on the right-hand side of an assignment.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because f
doesn't produce an object on which toString
can be invoked:
void f() {}
void g() {
f().toString();
}
Common fixes
#Either rewrite the code so that the expression has a value or rewrite the code so that it doesn't depend on the value.
values_declaration_in_enum
#A member named 'values' can't be declared in an enum.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an enum declaration defines a member named values
, whether the member is an enum value, an instance member, or a static member.
Any such member conflicts with the implicit declaration of the static getter named values
that returns a list containing all the enum constants.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the enum E
defines an instance member named values
:
enum E {
v;
void values() {}
}
Common fixes
#Change the name of the conflicting member:
enum E {
v;
void getValues() {}
}
variable_length_array_not_last
#Variable length 'Array's must only occur as the last field of Structs.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a variable length inline Array
is not the last member of a Struct
.
For more information about FFI, see C interop using dart:ffi.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field a0
has a type with three nested arrays, but only two dimensions are given in the Array
annotation:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array.variable()
external Array<Uint8> a0;
@Uint8()
external int a1;
}
Common fixes
#Move the variable length inline Array
to be the last field in the struct.
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Uint8()
external int a1;
@Array.variable()
external Array<Uint8> a0;
}
If the inline array has a fixed size, annotate it with the size:
import 'dart:ffi';
final class C extends Struct {
@Array(10)
external Array<Uint8> a0;
@Uint8()
external int a1;
}
variable_pattern_keyword_in_declaration_context
#Variable patterns in declaration context can't specify 'var' or 'final' keyword.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a variable pattern is used within a declaration context.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable patterns in the record pattern are in a declaration context:
void f((int, int) r) {
var (var x, y) = r;
print(x + y);
}
Common fixes
#Remove the var
or final
keyword(s) within the variable pattern:
void f((int, int) r) {
var (x, y) = r;
print(x + y);
}
variable_type_mismatch
#A value of type '{0}' can't be assigned to a const variable of type '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the evaluation of a constant expression would result in a CastException
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of x
is an int
, which can't be assigned to y
because an int
isn't a String
:
const dynamic x = 0;
const String y = x;
Common fixes
#If the declaration of the constant is correct, then change the value being assigned to be of the correct type:
const dynamic x = 0;
const String y = '$x';
If the assigned value is correct, then change the declaration to have the correct type:
const int x = 0;
const int y = x;
workspace_field_not_list
#The value of the 'workspace' field is required to be a list of relative file paths.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of the workspace
key isn't a list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of the workspace
key is a string when a list is expected:
name: example
workspace: notPaths
Common fixes
#Change the value of the workspace field so that it's a list:
name: example
workspace:
- pkg/package_1
- pkg/package_2
workspace_value_not_string
#Workspace entries are required to be directory paths (strings).
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a workspace
list contains a value that isn't a string.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the workspace
list contains a map:
name: example
workspace:
- image.gif: true
Common fixes
#Change the workspace
list so that it only contains valid POSIX-style directory paths:
name: example
workspace:
- pkg/package_1
- pkg/package_2
workspace_value_not_subdirectory
#Workspace values must be a relative path of a subdirectory of '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a workspace
list contains a value that is not a subdirectory of the directory containing the `pubspec.yaml`` file.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value in the workspace
list is not a relative path of a subdirectory of the directory containing the 'pubspec.yaml' file:
name: example
workspace:
- /home/my_package
Common fixes
#Change the workspace
list so that it only contains only subdirectory paths.
name: example
workspace:
- pkg/package_1
- pkg/package_2
wrong_number_of_parameters_for_operator
#Operator '-' should declare 0 or 1 parameter, but {0} found.
Operator '{0}' should declare exactly {1} parameters, but {2} found.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a declaration of an operator has the wrong number of parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the operator +
must have a single parameter corresponding to the right operand:
class C {
int operator +(a, b) => 0;
}
Common fixes
#Add or remove parameters to match the required number:
class C {
int operator +(a) => 0;
}
wrong_number_of_parameters_for_setter
#Setters must declare exactly one required positional parameter.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a setter is found that doesn't declare exactly one required positional parameter.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the setter s
declares two required parameters:
class C {
set s(int x, int y) {}
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the setter s
declares one optional parameter:
class C {
set s([int? x]) {}
}
Common fixes
#Change the declaration so that there's exactly one required positional parameter:
class C {
set s(int x) {}
}
wrong_number_of_type_arguments
#The type '{0}' is declared with {1} type parameters, but {2} type arguments were given.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type that has type parameters is used and type arguments are provided, but the number of type arguments isn't the same as the number of type parameters.
The analyzer also produces this diagnostic when a constructor is invoked and the number of type arguments doesn't match the number of type parameters declared for the class.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because C
has one type parameter but two type arguments are provided when it is used as a type annotation:
class C<E> {}
void f(C<int, int> x) {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because C
declares one type parameter, but two type arguments are provided when creating an instance:
class C<E> {}
var c = C<int, int>();
Common fixes
#Add or remove type arguments, as necessary, to match the number of type parameters defined for the type:
class C<E> {}
void f(C<int> x) {}
wrong_number_of_type_arguments_constructor
#The constructor '{0}.{1}' doesn't have type parameters.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when type arguments are provided after the name of a named constructor. Constructors can't declare type parameters, so invocations can only provide the type arguments associated with the class, and those type arguments are required to follow the name of the class rather than the name of the constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type parameters (<String>
) follow the name of the constructor rather than the name of the class:
class C<T> {
C.named();
}
C f() => C.named<String>();
Common fixes
#If the type arguments are for the class' type parameters, then move the type arguments to follow the class name:
class C<T> {
C.named();
}
C f() => C<String>.named();
If the type arguments aren't for the class' type parameters, then remove them:
class C<T> {
C.named();
}
C f() => C.named();
wrong_number_of_type_arguments_enum
#The enum is declared with {0} type parameters, but {1} type arguments were given.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an enum value in an enum that has type parameters is instantiated and type arguments are provided, but the number of type arguments isn't the same as the number of type parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the enum value c
provides one type argument even though the enum E
is declared to have two type parameters:
enum E<T, U> {
c<int>()
}
Common fixes
#If the number of type parameters is correct, then change the number of type arguments to match the number of type parameters:
enum E<T, U> {
c<int, String>()
}
If the number of type arguments is correct, then change the number of type parameters to match the number of type arguments:
enum E<T> {
c<int>()
}
wrong_number_of_type_arguments_extension
#The extension '{0}' is declared with {1} type parameters, but {2} type arguments were given.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an extension that has type parameters is used and type arguments are provided, but the number of type arguments isn't the same as the number of type parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the extension E
is declared to have a single type parameter (T
), but the extension override has two type arguments:
extension E<T> on List<T> {
int get len => length;
}
void f(List<int> p) {
E<int, String>(p).len;
}
Common fixes
#Change the type arguments so that there are the same number of type arguments as there are type parameters:
extension E<T> on List<T> {
int get len => length;
}
void f(List<int> p) {
E<int>(p).len;
}
wrong_number_of_type_arguments_method
#The method '{0}' is declared with {1} type parameters, but {2} type arguments are given.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function is invoked with a different number of type arguments than the number of type parameters specified in its declaration. There must either be no type arguments or the number of arguments must match the number of parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the invocation of the method m
has two type arguments, but the declaration of m
only has one type parameter:
class C {
int m<A>(A a) => 0;
}
int f(C c) => c.m<int, int>(2);
Common fixes
#If the type arguments are necessary, then make them match the number of type parameters by either adding or removing type arguments:
class C {
int m<A>(A a) => 0;
}
int f(C c) => c.m<int>(2);
If the type arguments aren't necessary, then remove them:
class C {
int m<A>(A a) => 0;
}
int f(C c) => c.m(2);
yield_in_non_generator
#Yield statements must be in a generator function (one marked with either 'async*' or 'sync*').
Yield-each statements must be in a generator function (one marked with either 'async*' or 'sync*').
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a yield
or yield*
statement appears in a function whose body isn't marked with one of the async*
or sync*
modifiers.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because yield
is being used in a function whose body doesn't have a modifier:
Iterable<int> get digits {
yield* [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9];
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because yield*
is being used in a function whose body has the async
modifier rather than the async*
modifier:
Stream<int> get digits async {
yield* [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9];
}
Common fixes
#Add a modifier, or change the existing modifier to be either async*
or sync*
:
Iterable<int> get digits sync* {
yield* [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9];
}
yield_of_invalid_type
#A yielded value of type '{0}' must be assignable to '{1}'.
The type '{0}' implied by the 'yield*' expression must be assignable to '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type of object produced by a yield
or yield*
expression doesn't match the type of objects that are to be returned from the Iterable
or Stream
types that are returned from a generator (a function or method marked with either sync*
or async*
).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the getter zero
is declared to return an Iterable
that returns integers, but the yield
is returning a string from the iterable:
Iterable<int> get zero sync* {
yield '0';
}
Common fixes
#If the return type of the function is correct, then fix the expression following the keyword yield
to return the correct type:
Iterable<int> get zero sync* {
yield 0;
}
If the expression following the yield
is correct, then change the return type of the function to allow it:
Iterable<String> get zero sync* {
yield '0';
}
always_declare_return_types
#The function '{0}' should have a return type but doesn't.
The method '{0}' should have a return type but doesn't.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method or function doesn't have an explicit return type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
doesn't have a return type:
f() {}
Common fixes
#Add an explicit return type:
void f() {}
always_put_control_body_on_new_line
#Statement should be on a separate line.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the code being controlled by a control flow statement (if
, for
, while
, or do
) is on the same line as the control flow statement.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the return
statement is on the same line as the if
that controls whether the return
will be executed:
void f(bool b) {
if (b) return;
}
Common fixes
#Put the controlled statement onto a separate, indented, line:
void f(bool b) {
if (b)
return;
}
always_put_required_named_parameters_first
#Required named parameters should be before optional named parameters.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when required named parameters occur after optional named parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the required parameter x
is after the optional parameter y
:
void f({int? y, required int x}) {}
Common fixes
#Reorder the parameters so that all required named parameters are before any optional named parameters:
void f({required int x, int? y}) {}
always_use_package_imports
#Use 'package:' imports for files in the 'lib' directory.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import
in a library inside the lib
directory uses a relative path to import another library inside the lib
directory of the same package.
Example
#Given that a file named a.dart
and the code below are both inside the lib
directory of the same package, the following code produces this diagnostic because a relative URI is used to import a.dart
:
import 'a.dart';
Common fixes
#Use a package import:
import 'package:p/a.dart';
annotate_overrides
#The member '{0}' overrides an inherited member but isn't annotated with '@override'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member overrides an inherited member, but isn't annotated with @override
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method m
in the class B
overrides the method with the same name in class A
, but isn't marked as an intentional override:
class A {
void m() {}
}
class B extends A {
void m() {}
}
Common fixes
#If the member in the subclass is intended to override the member in the superclass, then add an @override
annotation:
class A {
void m() {}
}
class B extends A {
@override
void m() {}
}
If the member in the subclass is not intended to override the member in the superclass, then rename one of the members:
class A {
void m() {}
}
class B extends A {
void m2() {}
}
avoid_empty_else
#Empty statements are not allowed in an 'else' clause.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the statement after an else
is an empty statement (a semicolon).
For more information, see the documentation for avoid_empty_else
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the statement following the else
is an empty statement:
void f(int x, int y) {
if (x > y)
print("1");
else ;
print("2");
}
Common fixes
#If the statement after the empty statement is intended to be executed only when the condition is false
, then remove the empty statement:
void f(int x, int y) {
if (x > y)
print("1");
else
print("2");
}
If there is no code that is intended to be executed only when the condition is false
, then remove the whole else
clause:
void f(int x, int y) {
if (x > y)
print("1");
print("2");
}
avoid_function_literals_in_foreach_calls
#Function literals shouldn't be passed to 'forEach'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the argument to Iterable.forEach
is a closure.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the argument to the invocation of forEach
is a closure:
void f(Iterable<String> s) {
s.forEach((e) => print(e));
}
Common fixes
#If the closure can be replaced by a tear-off, then replace the closure:
void f(Iterable<String> s) {
s.forEach(print);
}
If the closure can't be replaced by a tear-off, then use a for
loop to iterate over the elements:
void f(Iterable<String> s) {
for (var e in s) {
print(e);
}
}
avoid_futureor_void
#Don't use the type 'FutureOr
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the type FutureOr<void>
is used as the type of a result (to be precise: it is used in a position that isn't contravariant). The type FutureOr<void>
is problematic because it may appear to encode that a result is either a Future<void>
, or the result should be discarded (when it is void
). However, there is no safe way to detect whether we have one or the other case because an expression of type void
can evaluate to any object whatsoever, including a future of any type.
It is also conceptually unsound to have a type whose meaning is something like "ignore this object; also, take a look because it might be a future".
An exception is made for contravariant occurrences of the type FutureOr<void>
(e.g., for the type of a formal parameter), and no warning is emitted for these occurrences. The reason for this exception is that the type does not describe a result, it describes a constraint on a value provided by others. Similarly, an exception is made for type alias declarations, because they may well be used in a contravariant position (e.g., as the type of a formal parameter). Hence, in type alias declarations, only the type parameter bounds are checked.
Example
#import 'dart:async';
FutureOr<void> m() => null;
Common fixes
#A replacement for the type FutureOr<void>
which is often useful is Future<void>?
. This type encodes that a result is either a Future<void>
or it is null, and there is no ambiguity at run time since no object can have both types.
It may not always be possible to use the type Future<void>?
as a replacement for the type FutureOr<void>
, because the latter is a supertype of all types, and the former is not. In this case it may be a useful remedy to replace FutureOr<void>
by the type void
.
avoid_init_to_null
#Redundant initialization to 'null'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a nullable variable is explicitly initialized to null
. The variable can be a local variable, field, or top-level variable.
A variable or field that isn't explicitly initialized automatically gets initialized to null
. There's no concept of "uninitialized memory" in Dart.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable f
is explicitly initialized to null
:
class C {
int? f = null;
void m() {
if (f != null) {
print(f);
}
}
}
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary initialization:
class C {
int? f;
void m() {
if (f != null) {
print(f);
}
}
}
avoid_print
#Don't invoke 'print' in production code.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the function print
is invoked in production code.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function print
can't be invoked in production:
void f(int x) {
print('x = $x');
}
Common fixes
#If you're writing code that uses Flutter, then use the function debugPrint
, guarded by a test using kDebugMode
:
import 'package:flutter/foundation.dart';
void f(int x) {
if (kDebugMode) {
debugPrint('x = $x');
}
}
If you're writing code that doesn't use Flutter, then use a logging service, such as package:logging
, to write the information.
avoid_relative_lib_imports
#Can't use a relative path to import a library in 'lib'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the URI in an import
directive has lib
in the path.
Example
#Assuming that there is a file named a.dart
in the lib
directory:
class A {}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the import contains a path that includes lib
:
import '../lib/a.dart';
Common fixes
#Rewrite the import to not include lib
in the URI:
import 'a.dart';
avoid_renaming_method_parameters
#The parameter name '{0}' doesn't match the name '{1}' in the overridden method.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method that overrides a method from a superclass changes the names of the parameters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter of the method m
in B
is named b
, which is different from the name of the overridden method's parameter in A
:
class A {
void m(int a) {}
}
class B extends A {
@override
void m(int b) {}
}
Common fixes
#Rename one of the parameters so that they are the same:
class A {
void m(int a) {}
}
class B extends A {
@override
void m(int a) {}
}
avoid_return_types_on_setters
#Unnecessary return type on a setter.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a setter has an explicit return type.
Setters never return a value, so declaring the return type of one is redundant.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the setter s
has an explicit return type (void
):
void set s(int p) {}
Common fixes
#Remove the return type:
set s(int p) {}
avoid_returning_null_for_void
#Don't return 'null' from a function with a return type of 'void'.
Don't return 'null' from a method with a return type of 'void'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a function that has a return type of void
explicitly returns null
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there is an explicit return of null
in a void
function:
void f() {
return null;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary explicit null
:
void f() {
return;
}
avoid_shadowing_type_parameters
#The type parameter '{0}' shadows a type parameter from the enclosing {1}.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type parameter shadows a type parameter from an enclosing declaration.
Shadowing a type parameter with a different type parameter can lead to subtle bugs that are difficult to debug.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the type parameter T
defined by the method m
shadows the type parameter T
defined by the class C
:
class C<T> {
void m<T>() {}
}
Common fixes
#Rename one of the type parameters:
class C<T> {
void m<S>() {}
}
avoid_single_cascade_in_expression_statements
#Unnecessary cascade expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a single cascade operator is used and the value of the expression isn't being used for anything (such as being assigned to a variable or being passed as an argument).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the value of the cascade expression s..length
isn't being used:
void f(String s) {
s..length;
}
Common fixes
#Replace the cascade operator with a simple access operator:
void f(String s) {
s.length;
}
avoid_slow_async_io
#Use of an async 'dart:io' method.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an asynchronous file I/O method with a synchronous equivalent is used.
The following are the specific flagged asynchronous methods:
Directory.exists
Directory.stat
File.lastModified
File.exists
File.stat
FileSystemEntity.isDirectory
FileSystemEntity.isFile
FileSystemEntity.isLink
FileSystemEntity.type
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the async method exists
is invoked:
import 'dart:io';
Future<void> g(File f) async {
await f.exists();
}
Common fixes
#Use the synchronous version of the method:
import 'dart:io';
void g(File f) {
f.existsSync();
}
avoid_type_to_string
#Using 'toString' on a 'Type' is not safe in production code.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the method toString
is invoked on a value whose static type is Type
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method toString
is invoked on the Type
returned by runtimeType
:
bool isC(Object o) => o.runtimeType.toString() == 'C';
class C {}
Common fixes
#If it's essential that the type is exactly the same, then use an explicit comparison:
bool isC(Object o) => o.runtimeType == C;
class C {}
If it's alright for instances of subtypes of the type to return true
, then use a type check:
bool isC(Object o) => o is C;
class C {}
avoid_types_as_parameter_names
#The parameter name '{0}' matches a visible type name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a parameter in a parameter list is the same as a visible type (a type whose name is in scope).
This often indicates that the intended name of the parameter is missing, causing the name of the type to be used as the name of the parameter rather than the type of the parameter. Even when that's not the case (the name of the parameter is intentional), the name of the parameter will shadow the existing type, which can lead to bugs that are difficult to diagnose.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
has a parameter named int
, which shadows the type int
from dart:core
:
void f(int) {}
Common fixes
#If the parameter name is missing, then add a name for the parameter:
void f(int x) {}
If the parameter is intended to have an implicit type of dynamic
, then rename the parameter so that it doesn't shadow the name of any visible type:
void f(int_) {}
avoid_unnecessary_containers
#Unnecessary instance of 'Container'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a widget tree contains an instance of Container
and the only argument to the constructor is child:
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the invocation of the Container
constructor only has a child:
argument:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget buildRow() {
return Container(
child: Row(
children: [
Text('a'),
Text('b'),
],
)
);
}
Common fixes
#If you intended to provide other arguments to the constructor, then add them:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget buildRow() {
return Container(
color: Colors.red.shade100,
child: Row(
children: [
Text('a'),
Text('b'),
],
)
);
}
If no other arguments are needed, then unwrap the child widget:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget buildRow() {
return Row(
children: [
Text('a'),
Text('b'),
],
);
}
avoid_web_libraries_in_flutter
#Don't use web-only libraries outside Flutter web plugins.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library in a package that isn't a web plugin contains an import of a web-only library:
dart:html
dart:js
dart:js_util
dart:js_interop
dart:js_interop_unsafe
package:js
package:web
Example
#When found in a package that isn't a web plugin, the following code produces this diagnostic because it imports dart:html
:
import 'dart:html';
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class C {}
Common fixes
#If the package isn't intended to be a web plugin, then remove the import:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class C {}
If the package is intended to be a web plugin, then add the following lines to the pubspec.yaml
file of the package:
flutter:
plugin:
platforms:
web:
pluginClass: HelloPlugin
fileName: hello_web.dart
See Developing packages & plugins for more information.
await_only_futures
#Uses 'await' on an instance of '{0}', which is not a subtype of 'Future'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the expression after await
has any type other than Future<T>
, FutureOr<T>
, Future<T>?
, FutureOr<T>?
or dynamic
.
An exception is made for the expression await null
because it is a common way to introduce a microtask delay.
Unless the expression can produce a Future
, the await
is unnecessary and can cause a reader to assume a level of asynchrony that doesn't exist.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the expression after await
has the type int
:
void f() async {
await 23;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the await
:
void f() async {
23;
}
camel_case_extensions
#The extension name '{0}' isn't an UpperCamelCase identifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of an extension doesn't use the 'UpperCamelCase' naming convention.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name of the extension doesn't start with an uppercase letter:
extension stringExtension on String {}
Common fixes
#If the extension needs to have a name (needs to be visible outside this library), then rename the extension so that it has a valid name:
extension StringExtension on String {}
If the extension doesn't need to have a name, then remove the name of the extension:
extension on String {}
camel_case_types
#The type name '{0}' isn't an UpperCamelCase identifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a type (a class, mixin, enum, or typedef) doesn't use the 'UpperCamelCase' naming convention.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name of the class doesn't start with an uppercase letter:
class c {}
Common fixes
#Rename the type so that it has a valid name:
class C {}
cancel_subscriptions
#Uncancelled instance of 'StreamSubscription'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance of StreamSubscription
is created but the method cancel
isn't invoked.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the subscription
isn't canceled:
import 'dart:async';
void f(Stream stream) {
// ignore: unused_local_variable
var subscription = stream.listen((_) {});
}
Common fixes
#Cancel the subscription:
import 'dart:async';
void f(Stream stream) {
var subscription = stream.listen((_) {});
subscription.cancel();
}
close_sinks
#Unclosed instance of 'Sink'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance of Sink
is created but the method close
isn't invoked.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the sink
isn't closed:
import 'dart:io';
void g(File f) {
var sink = f.openWrite();
sink.write('x');
}
Common fixes
#Close the sink:
import 'dart:io';
void g(File f) {
var sink = f.openWrite();
sink.write('x');
sink.close();
}
collection_methods_unrelated_type
#The argument type '{0}' isn't related to '{1}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when any one of several methods in the core libraries are invoked with arguments of an inappropriate type. These methods are ones that don't provide a specific enough type for the parameter to allow the normal type checking to catch the error.
The arguments that are checked are:
- an argument to
Iterable<E>.contains
should be related toE
- an argument to
List<E>.remove
should be related toE
- an argument to
Map<K, V>.containsKey
should be related toK
- an argument to
Map<K, V>.containsValue
should be related toV
- an argument to
Map<K, V>.remove
should be related toK
- an argument to
Map<K, V>.[]
should be related toK
- an argument to
Queue<E>.remove
should be related toE
- an argument to
Set<E>.lookup
should be related toE
- an argument to
Set<E>.remove
should be related toE
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the argument to contains
is a String
, which isn't assignable to int
, the element type of the list l
:
bool f(List<int> l) => l.contains('1');
Common fixes
#If the element type is correct, then change the argument to have the same type:
bool f(List<int> l) => l.contains(1);
If the argument type is correct, then change the element type:
bool f(List<String> l) => l.contains('1');
constant_identifier_names
#The constant name '{0}' isn't a lowerCamelCase identifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a constant doesn't follow the lowerCamelCase naming convention.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name of the top-level variable isn't a lowerCamelCase identifier:
const EMPTY_STRING = '';
Common fixes
#Rewrite the name to follow the lowerCamelCase naming convention:
const emptyString = '';
control_flow_in_finally
#Use of '{0}' in a 'finally' clause.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a finally
clause contains a return
, break
, or continue
statement.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there is a return
statement inside a finally
block:
int f() {
try {
return 1;
} catch (e) {
print(e);
} finally {
return 0;
}
}
Common fixes
#If the statement isn't needed, then remove the statement, and remove the finally
clause if the block is empty:
int f() {
try {
return 1;
} catch (e) {
print(e);
}
}
If the statement is needed, then move the statement outside the finally
block:
int f() {
try {
return 1;
} catch (e) {
print(e);
}
return 0;
}
curly_braces_in_flow_control_structures
#Statements in {0} should be enclosed in a block.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a control structure (if
, for
, while
, or do
statement) has a statement other than a block.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the then
statement is not enclosed in a block:
int f(bool b) {
if (b)
return 1;
return 0;
}
Common fixes
#Add braces around the statement that should be a block:
int f(bool b) {
if (b) {
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
dangling_library_doc_comments
#Dangling library doc comment.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a documentation comment that appears to be library documentation isn't followed by a library
directive. More specifically, it is produced when a documentation comment appears before the first directive in the library, assuming that it isn't a library
directive, or before the first top-level declaration and is separated from the declaration by one or more blank lines.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there's a documentation comment before the first import
directive:
/// This is a great library.
import 'dart:core';
The following code produces this diagnostic because there's a documentation comment before the first class declaration, but there's a blank line between the comment and the declaration.
/// This is a great library.
class C {}
Common fixes
#If the comment is library documentation, then add a library
directive without a name:
/// This is a great library.
library;
import 'dart:core';
If the comment is documentation for the following declaration, then remove the blank line:
/// This is a great library.
class C {}
depend_on_referenced_packages
#The imported package '{0}' isn't a dependency of the importing package.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a package import refers to a package that is not specified in the pubspec.yaml
file.
Depending explicitly on packages that you reference ensures they will always exist and allows you to put a dependency constraint on them to guard against breaking changes.
Example
#Given a pubspec.yaml
file containing the following:
dependencies:
meta: ^3.0.0
The following code produces this diagnostic because there is no dependency on the package a
:
import 'package:a/a.dart';
Common fixes
#Whether the dependency should be a regular dependency or dev dependency depends on whether the package is referenced from a public library (one under either lib
or bin
), or only private libraries, (such as one under test
).
If the package is referenced from at least one public library, then add a regular dependency on the package to the pubspec.yaml
file under the dependencies
field:
dependencies:
a: ^1.0.0
meta: ^3.0.0
If the package is referenced only from private libraries, then add a dev dependency on the package to the pubspec.yaml
file under the dev_dependencies
field:
dependencies:
meta: ^3.0.0
dev_dependencies:
a: ^1.0.0
empty_catches
#Empty catch block.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the block in a catch
clause is empty.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the catch block is empty:
void f() {
try {
print('Hello');
} catch (exception) {}
}
Common fixes
#If the exception shouldn't be ignored, then add code to handle the exception:
void f() {
try {
print('We can print.');
} catch (exception) {
print("We can't print.");
}
}
If the exception is intended to be ignored, then add a comment explaining why:
void f() {
try {
print('We can print.');
} catch (exception) {
// Nothing to do.
}
}
If the exception is intended to be ignored and there isn't any good explanation for why, then rename the exception parameter:
void f() {
try {
print('We can print.');
} catch (_) {}
}
empty_constructor_bodies
#Empty constructor bodies should be written using a ';' rather than '{}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor has an empty block body.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor for C
has a block body that is empty:
class C {
C() {}
}
Common fixes
#Replace the block with a semicolon:
class C {
C();
}
empty_statements
#Unnecessary empty statement.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an empty statement is found.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the statement controlled by the while
loop is an empty statement:
void f(bool condition) {
while (condition);
g();
}
void g() {}
Common fixes
#If there are no statements that need to be controlled, then remove both the empty statement and the control structure it's part of (being careful that any other code being removed doesn't have a side-effect that needs to be preserved):
void f(bool condition) {
g();
}
void g() {}
If there are no statements that need to be controlled but the control structure is still required for other reasons, then replace the empty statement with a block to make the structure of the code more obvious:
void f(bool condition) {
while (condition) {}
g();
}
void g() {}
If there are statements that need to be controlled, remove the empty statement and adjust the code so that the appropriate statements are being controlled, possibly adding a block:
void f(bool condition) {
while (condition) {
g();
}
}
void g() {}
file_names
#The file name '{0}' isn't a lower_case_with_underscores identifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a .dart
file doesn't use lower_case_with_underscores.
Example
#A file named SliderMenu.dart
produces this diagnostic because the file name uses the UpperCamelCase convention.
Common fixes
#Rename the file to use the lower_case_with_underscores convention, such as slider_menu.dart
.
hash_and_equals
#Missing a corresponding override of '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class or mixin either overrides the definition of ==
but doesn't override the definition of hashCode
, or conversely overrides the definition of hashCode
but doesn't override the definition of ==
.
Both the ==
operator and the hashCode
property of objects must be consistent for a common hash map implementation to function properly. As a result, when overriding either method, both should be overridden.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the class C
overrides the ==
operator but doesn't override the getter hashCode
:
class C {
final int value;
C(this.value);
@override
bool operator ==(Object other) =>
other is C &&
other.runtimeType == runtimeType &&
other.value == value;
}
Common fixes
#If you need to override one of the members, then add an override of the other:
class C {
final int value;
C(this.value);
@override
bool operator ==(Object other) =>
other is C &&
other.runtimeType == runtimeType &&
other.value == value;
@override
int get hashCode => value.hashCode;
}
If you don't need to override either of the members, then remove the unnecessary override:
class C {
final int value;
C(this.value);
}
implementation_imports
#Import of a library in the 'lib/src' directory of another package.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import references a library that's inside the lib/src
directory of a different package, which violates the convention for pub packages.
Example
#The following code, assuming that it isn't part of the ffi
package, produces this diagnostic because the library being imported is inside the top-level src
directory:
import 'package:ffi/src/allocation.dart';
Common fixes
#If the library being imported contains code that's part of the public API, then import the public library that exports the public API:
import 'package:ffi/ffi.dart';
If the library being imported isn't part of the public API of the package, then either find a different way to accomplish your goal, assuming that it's possible, or open an issue asking the package authors to make it part of the public API.
implicit_call_tearoffs
#Implicit tear-off of the 'call' method.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an object with a call
method is assigned to a function-typed variable, implicitly tearing off the call
method.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because an instance of Callable
is passed to a function expecting a Function
:
class Callable {
void call() {}
}
void callIt(void Function() f) {
f();
}
void f() {
callIt(Callable());
}
Common fixes
#Explicitly tear off the call
method:
class Callable {
void call() {}
}
void callIt(void Function() f) {
f();
}
void f() {
callIt(Callable().call);
}
invalid_runtime_check_with_js_interop_types
#Cast from '{0}' to '{1}' casts a Dart value to a JS interop type, which might not be platform-consistent.
Cast from '{0}' to '{1}' casts a JS interop value to a Dart type, which might not be platform-consistent.
Cast from '{0}' to '{1}' casts a JS interop value to an incompatible JS interop type, which might not be platform-consistent.
Runtime check between '{0}' and '{1}' checks whether a Dart value is a JS interop type, which might not be platform-consistent.
Runtime check between '{0}' and '{1}' checks whether a JS interop value is a Dart type, which might not be platform-consistent.
Runtime check between '{0}' and '{1}' involves a non-trivial runtime check between two JS interop types that might not be platform-consistent.
Runtime check between '{0}' and '{1}' involves a runtime check between a JS interop value and an unrelated JS interop type that will always be true and won't check the underlying type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an is
test has either
- a JS interop type on the right-hand side, whether directly or as a type argument to another type, or
- a JS interop value on the left-hand side.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the JS interop type JSBoolean
is on the right-hand side of an is
test:
import 'dart:js_interop';
bool f(Object b) => b is JSBoolean;
The following code produces this diagnostic because the JS interop type JSString
is used as a type argument on the right-hand side of an is
test:
import 'dart:js_interop';
bool f(List<Object> l) => l is List<JSString>;
The following code produces this diagnostic because the JS interop value a
is on the left-hand side of an is
test:
import 'dart:js_interop';
bool f(JSAny a) => a is String;
Common fixes
#Use a JS interop helper, such as isA
, to check the underlying type of JS interop values:
import 'dart:js_interop';
void f(Object b) => b.jsify()?.isA<JSBoolean>();
invalid_use_of_do_not_submit_member
#Uses of '{0}' should not be submitted to source control.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a member that is annotated with @doNotSubmit
is referenced outside of a member declaration that is also annotated with @doNotSubmit
.
Example
#Given a file a.dart
containing the following declaration:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@doNotSubmit
void emulateCrash() { /* ... */ }
The following code produces this diagnostic because the declaration is being referenced outside of a member that is also annotated with @doNotSubmit
:
import 'a.dart';
void f() {
emulateCrash();
}
Common fixes
#Most commonly, when complete with local testing, the reference to the member should be removed.
If building additional functionality on top of the member, annotate the newly added member with @doNotSubmit
as well:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
import 'a.dart';
@doNotSubmit
void emulateCrashWithOtherFunctionality() {
emulateCrash();
// do other things.
}
library_annotations
#This annotation should be attached to a library directive.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an annotation that applies to a whole library isn't associated with a library
directive.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the TestOn
annotation, which applies to the whole library, is associated with an import
directive rather than a library
directive:
@TestOn('browser')
import 'package:test/test.dart';
void main() {}
Common fixes
#Associate the annotation with a library
directive, adding one if necessary:
@TestOn('browser')
library;
import 'package:test/test.dart';
void main() {}
library_names
#The library name '{0}' isn't a lower_case_with_underscores identifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a library doesn't use the lower_case_with_underscores naming convention.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the library name libraryName
isn't a lower_case_with_underscores identifier:
library libraryName;
Common fixes
#If the library name is not required, then remove the library name:
library;
If the library name is required, then convert it to use the lower_case_with_underscores naming convention:
library library_name;
library_prefixes
#The prefix '{0}' isn't a lower_case_with_underscores identifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import prefix doesn't use the lower_case_with_underscores naming convention.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the prefix ffiSupport
isn't a lower_case_with_underscores identifier:
import 'package:ffi/ffi.dart' as ffiSupport;
Common fixes
#Convert the prefix to use the lower_case_with_underscores naming convention:
import 'package:ffi/ffi.dart' as ffi_support;
library_private_types_in_public_api
#Invalid use of a private type in a public API.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type that is not part of the public API of a library is referenced in the public API of that library.
Using a private type in a public API can make the API unusable outside the defining library.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter c
of the public function f
has a type that is library private (_C
):
void f(_C c) {}
class _C {}
Common fixes
#If the API doesn't need to be used outside the defining library, then make it private:
void _f(_C c) {}
class _C {}
If the API needs to be part of the public API of the library, then either use a different type that's public, or make the referenced type public:
void f(C c) {}
class C {}
literal_only_boolean_expressions
#The Boolean expression has a constant value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the value of the condition in an if
or loop statement is known to be either always true
or always false
. An exception is made for a while
loop whose condition is the Boolean literal true
.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the condition will always evaluate to true
:
void f() {
if (true) {
print('true');
}
}
The lint will evaluate a subset of expressions that are composed of constants, so the following code will also produce this diagnostic because the condition will always evaluate to false
:
void g(int i) {
if (1 == 0 || 3 > 4) {
print('false');
}
}
Common fixes
#If the condition is wrong, then correct the condition so that it's value can't be known at compile time:
void g(int i) {
if (i == 0 || i > 4) {
print('false');
}
}
If the condition is correct, then simplify the code to not evaluate the condition:
void f() {
print('true');
}
no_adjacent_strings_in_list
#Don't use adjacent strings in a list literal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when two string literals are adjacent in a list literal. Adjacent strings in Dart are concatenated together to form a single string, but the intent might be for each string to be a separate element in the list.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the strings 'a'
and 'b'
are adjacent:
List<String> list = ['a' 'b', 'c'];
Common fixes
#If the two strings are intended to be separate elements of the list, then add a comma between them:
List<String> list = ['a', 'b', 'c'];
If the two strings are intended to be a single concatenated string, then either manually merge the strings:
List<String> list = ['ab', 'c'];
Or use the +
operator to concatenate the strings:
List<String> list = ['a' + 'b', 'c'];
no_duplicate_case_values
#The value of the case clause ('{0}') is equal to the value of an earlier case clause ('{1}').
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when two or more case
clauses in the same switch
statement have the same value.
Any case
clauses after the first can't be executed, so having duplicate case
clauses is misleading.
This diagnostic is often the result of either a typo or a change to the value of a constant.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because two case clauses have the same value (1):
// @dart = 2.14
void f(int v) {
switch (v) {
case 1:
break;
case 1:
break;
}
}
Common fixes
#If one of the clauses should have a different value, then change the value of the clause:
void f(int v) {
switch (v) {
case 1:
break;
case 2:
break;
}
}
If the value is correct, then merge the statements into a single clause:
void f(int v) {
switch (v) {
case 1:
break;
}
}
no_leading_underscores_for_library_prefixes
#The library prefix '{0}' starts with an underscore.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a prefix declared on an import starts with an underscore.
Library prefixes are inherently not visible outside the declaring library, so a leading underscore indicating private adds no value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the prefix _core
starts with an underscore:
import 'dart:core' as _core;
Common fixes
#Remove the underscore:
import 'dart:core' as core;
no_leading_underscores_for_local_identifiers
#The local variable '{0}' starts with an underscore.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a local variable starts with an underscore.
Local variables are inherently not visible outside the declaring library, so a leading underscore indicating private adds no value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter _s
starts with an underscore:
int f(String _s) => _s.length;
Common fixes
#Remove the underscore:
int f(String s) => s.length;
no_logic_in_create_state
#Don't put any logic in 'createState'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an implementation of createState
in a subclass of StatefulWidget
contains any logic other than the return of the result of invoking a zero argument constructor.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor invocation has arguments:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class MyWidget extends StatefulWidget {
@override
MyState createState() => MyState(0);
}
class MyState extends State {
int x;
MyState(this.x);
}
Common fixes
#Rewrite the code so that createState
doesn't contain any logic:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class MyWidget extends StatefulWidget {
@override
MyState createState() => MyState();
}
class MyState extends State {
int x = 0;
MyState();
}
no_wildcard_variable_uses
#The referenced identifier is a wildcard.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when either a parameter or local variable whose name consists of only underscores is referenced. Such names will become non-binding in a future version of the Dart language, making the reference illegal.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name of the parameter consists of two underscores:
// @dart = 3.6
void f(int __) {
print(__);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the name of the local variable consists of a single underscore:
// @dart = 3.6
void f() {
int _ = 0;
print(_);
}
Common fixes
#If the variable or parameter is intended to be referenced, then give it a name that has at least one non-underscore character:
void f(int p) {
print(p);
}
If the variable or parameter is not intended to be referenced, then replace the reference with a different expression:
void f() {
print(0);
}
non_constant_identifier_names
#The variable name '{0}' isn't a lowerCamelCase identifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a class member, top-level declaration, variable, parameter, named parameter, or named constructor that isn't declared to be const
, doesn't use the lowerCamelCase convention.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the top-level variable Count
doesn't start with a lowercase letter:
var Count = 0;
Common fixes
#Change the name in the declaration to follow the lowerCamelCase convention:
var count = 0;
null_check_on_nullable_type_parameter
#The null check operator shouldn't be used on a variable whose type is a potentially nullable type parameter.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a null check operator is used on a variable whose type is T?
, where T
is a type parameter that allows the type argument to be nullable (either has no bound or has a bound that is nullable).
Given a generic type parameter T
which has a nullable bound, it is very easy to introduce erroneous null checks when working with a variable of type T?
. Specifically, it is not uncommon to have T? x;
and want to assert that x
has been set to a valid value of type T
. A common mistake is to do so using x!
. This is almost always incorrect, because if T
is a nullable type, x
may validly hold null
as a value of type T
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because t
has the type T?
and T
allows the type argument to be nullable (because it has no extends
clause):
T f<T>(T? t) => t!;
Common fixes
#Use the type parameter to cast the variable:
T f<T>(T? t) => t as T;
overridden_fields
#Field overrides a field inherited from '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a class defines a field that overrides a field from a superclass.
Overriding a field with another field causes the object to have two distinct fields, but because the fields have the same name only one of the fields can be referenced in a given scope. That can lead to confusion where a reference to one of the fields can be mistaken for a reference to the other.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field f
in B
shadows the field f
in A
:
class A {
int f = 1;
}
class B extends A {
@override
int f = 2;
}
Common fixes
#If the two fields are representing the same property, then remove the field from the subclass:
class A {
int f = 1;
}
class B extends A {}
If the two fields should be distinct, then rename one of the fields:
class A {
int f = 1;
}
class B extends A {
int g = 2;
}
If the two fields are related in some way, but can't be the same, then find a different way to implement the semantics you need.
package_names
#The package name '{0}' isn't a lower_case_with_underscores identifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the name of a package doesn't use the lower_case_with_underscores naming convention.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the name of the package uses the lowerCamelCase naming convention:
name: somePackage
Common fixes
#Rewrite the name of the package using the lower_case_with_underscores naming convention:
name: some_package
package_prefixed_library_names
#The library name is not a dot-separated path prefixed by the package name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library has a name that doesn't follow these guidelines:
- Prefix all library names with the package name.
- Make the entry library have the same name as the package.
- For all other libraries in a package, after the package name add the dot-separated path to the library's Dart file.
- For libraries under
lib
, omit the top directory name.
For example, given a package named my_package
, here are the library names for various files in the package:
Example
#Assuming that the file containing the following code is not in a file named special.dart
in the lib
directory of a package named something
(which would be an exception to the rule), the analyzer produces this diagnostic because the name of the library doesn't conform to the guidelines above:
library something.special;
Common fixes
#Change the name of the library to conform to the guidelines.
prefer_adjacent_string_concatenation
#String literals shouldn't be concatenated by the '+' operator.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the +
operator is used to concatenate two string literals.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because two string literals are being concatenated by using the +
operator:
var s = 'a' + 'b';
Common fixes
#Remove the operator:
var s = 'a' 'b';
prefer_collection_literals
#Unnecessary constructor invocation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor is used to create a list, map, or set, but a literal would produce the same result.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor for Map
is being used to create a map that could also be created using a literal:
var m = Map<String, String>();
Common fixes
#Use the literal representation:
var m = <String, String>{};
prefer_conditional_assignment
#The 'if' statement could be replaced by a null-aware assignment.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an assignment to a variable is conditional based on whether the variable has the value null
and the ??=
operator could be used instead.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter s
is being compared to null
in order to determine whether to assign a different value:
int f(String? s) {
if (s == null) {
s = '';
}
return s.length;
}
Common fixes
#Use the ??=
operator instead of an explicit if
statement:
int f(String? s) {
s ??= '';
return s.length;
}
prefer_const_constructors
#Use 'const' with the constructor to improve performance.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an invocation of a const constructor isn't either preceded by const
or in a constant context.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the invocation of the const
constructor is neither prefixed by const
nor in a constant context:
class C {
const C();
}
C c = C();
Common fixes
#If the context can be made a constant context, then do so:
class C {
const C();
}
const C c = C();
If the context can't be made a constant context, then add const
before the constructor invocation:
class C {
const C();
}
C c = const C();
prefer_const_constructors_in_immutables
#Constructors in '@immutable' classes should be declared as 'const'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a non-const
constructor is found in a class that has the @immutable
annotation.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor in C
isn't declared as const
even though C
has the @immutable
annotation:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@immutable
class C {
final f;
C(this.f);
}
Common fixes
#If the class really is intended to be immutable, then add the const
modifier to the constructor:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@immutable
class C {
final f;
const C(this.f);
}
If the class is mutable, then remove the @immutable
annotation:
class C {
final f;
C(this.f);
}
prefer_const_declarations
#Use 'const' for final variables initialized to a constant value.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a top-level variable, static field, or local variable is marked as final
and is initialized to a constant value.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the top-level variable v
is both final
and initialized to a constant value:
final v = const <int>[];
The following code produces this diagnostic because the static field f
is both final
and initialized to a constant value:
class C {
static final f = const <int>[];
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the local variable v
is both final
and initialized to a constant value:
void f() {
final v = const <int>[];
print(v);
}
Common fixes
#Replace the keyword final
with const
and remove const
from the initializer:
class C {
static const f = <int>[];
}
prefer_const_literals_to_create_immutables
#Use 'const' literals as arguments to constructors of '@immutable' classes.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a non-const list, map, or set literal is passed as an argument to a constructor declared in a class annotated with @immutable
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the list literal ([1]
) is being passed to a constructor in an immutable class but isn't a constant list:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@immutable
class C {
final f;
const C(this.f);
}
C c = C([1]);
Common fixes
#If the context can be made a constant context, then do so:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@immutable
class C {
final f;
const C(this.f);
}
const C c = C([1]);
If the context can't be made a constant context but the constructor can be invoked using const
, then add const
before the constructor invocation:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@immutable
class C {
final f;
const C(this.f);
}
C c = const C([1]);
If the context can't be made a constant context and the constructor can't be invoked using const
, then add the keyword const
before the collection literal:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
@immutable
class C {
final f;
const C(this.f);
}
C c = C(const [1]);
prefer_contains
#Always 'false' because 'indexOf' is always greater than or equal to -1.
Always 'true' because 'indexOf' is always greater than or equal to -1.
Unnecessary use of 'indexOf' to test for containment.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the method indexOf
is used and the result is only compared with -1
or 0
in a way where the semantics are equivalent to using contains
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the condition in the if
statement is checking to see whether the list contains the string:
void f(List<String> l, String s) {
if (l.indexOf(s) < 0) {
// ...
}
}
Common fixes
#Use contains
instead, negating the condition when necessary:
void f(List<String> l, String s) {
if (l.contains(s)) {
// ...
}
}
prefer_double_quotes
#Unnecessary use of single quotes.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a string literal uses single quotes ('
) when it could use double quotes ("
) without needing extra escapes and without hurting readability.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the string literal uses single quotes but doesn't need to:
void f(String name) {
print('Hello $name');
}
Common fixes
#Use double quotes in place of single quotes:
void f(String name) {
print("Hello $name");
}
prefer_final_fields
#The private field {0} could be 'final'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a private field is only assigned one time. The field can be initialized in multiple constructors and still be flagged because only one of those constructors can ever run.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field _f
is only assigned one time, in the field's initializer:
class C {
int _f = 1;
int get f => _f;
}
Common fixes
#Mark the field final
:
class C {
final int _f = 1;
int get f => _f;
}
prefer_for_elements_to_map_fromiterable
#Use 'for' elements when building maps from iterables.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when Map.fromIterable
is used to build a map that could be built using the for
element.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because fromIterable
is being used to build a map that could be built using a for
element:
void f(Iterable<String> data) {
Map<String, int>.fromIterable(
data,
key: (element) => element,
value: (element) => element.length,
);
}
Common fixes
#Use a for
element to build the map:
void f(Iterable<String> data) {
<String, int>{
for (var element in data)
element: element.length
};
}
prefer_function_declarations_over_variables
#Use a function declaration rather than a variable assignment to bind a function to a name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a closure is assigned to a local variable and the local variable is not re-assigned anywhere.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the local variable f
is initialized to be a closure and isn't assigned any other value:
void g() {
var f = (int i) => i * 2;
f(1);
}
Common fixes
#Replace the local variable with a local function:
void g() {
int f(int i) => i * 2;
f(1);
}
prefer_generic_function_type_aliases
#Use the generic function type syntax in 'typedef's.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a typedef is written using the older syntax for function type aliases in which the name being declared is embedded in the function type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because it uses the older syntax:
typedef void F<T>();
Common fixes
#Rewrite the typedef to use the newer syntax:
typedef F<T> = void Function();
prefer_if_null_operators
#Use the '??' operator rather than '?:' when testing for 'null'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a conditional expression (using the ?:
operator) is used to select a different value when a local variable is null
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable s
is being compared to null
so that a different value can be returned when s
is null
:
String f(String? s) => s == null ? '' : s;
Common fixes
#Use the if-null operator instead:
String f(String? s) => s ?? '';
prefer_initializing_formals
#Use an initializing formal to assign a parameter to a field.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor parameter is used to initialize a field without modification.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter c
is only used to set the field c
:
class C {
int c;
C(int c) : this.c = c;
}
Common fixes
#Use an initializing formal parameter to initialize the field:
class C {
int c;
C(this.c);
}
prefer_inlined_adds
#The addition of a list item could be inlined.
The addition of multiple list items could be inlined.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the methods add
and addAll
are invoked on a list literal where the elements being added could be included in the list literal.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the add
method is being used to add b
, when it could have been included directly in the list literal:
List<String> f(String a, String b) {
return [a]..add(b);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the addAll
method is being used to add the elements of b
, when it could have been included directly in the list literal:
List<String> f(String a, List<String> b) {
return [a]..addAll(b);
}
Common fixes
#If the add
method is being used, then make the argument an element of the list and remove the invocation:
List<String> f(String a, String b) {
return [a, b];
}
If the addAll
method is being used, then use the spread operator on the argument to add its elements to the list and remove the invocation:
List<String> f(String a, List<String> b) {
return [a, ...b];
}
prefer_interpolation_to_compose_strings
#Use interpolation to compose strings and values.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when string literals and computed strings are being concatenated using the +
operator, but string interpolation would achieve the same result.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the String s
is concatenated with other strings using the +
operator:
String f(String s) {
return '(' + s + ')';
}
Common fixes
#Use string interpolation:
String f(List<String> l) {
return '(${l[0]}, ${l[1]})';
}
prefer_is_empty
#The comparison is always 'false' because the length is always greater than or equal to 0.
The comparison is always 'true' because the length is always greater than or equal to 0.
Use 'isEmpty' instead of 'length' to test whether the collection is empty.
Use 'isNotEmpty' instead of 'length' to test whether the collection is empty.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the result of invoking either Iterable.length
or Map.length
is compared for equality with zero (0
).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the result of invoking length
is checked for equality with zero:
int f(Iterable<int> p) => p.length == 0 ? 0 : p.first;
Common fixes
#Replace the use of length
with a use of either isEmpty
or isNotEmpty
:
void f(Iterable<int> p) => p.isEmpty ? 0 : p.first;
prefer_is_not_empty
#Use 'isNotEmpty' rather than negating the result of 'isEmpty'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the result of invoking Iterable.isEmpty
or Map.isEmpty
is negated.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the result of invoking Iterable.isEmpty
is negated:
void f(Iterable<int> p) => !p.isEmpty ? p.first : 0;
Common fixes
#Rewrite the code to use isNotEmpty
:
void f(Iterable<int> p) => p.isNotEmpty ? p.first : 0;
prefer_is_not_operator
#Use the 'is!' operator rather than negating the value of the 'is' operator.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the prefix !
operator is used to negate the result of an is
test.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the result of testing to see whether o
is a String
is negated using the prefix !
operator:
String f(Object o) {
if (!(o is String)) {
return o.toString();
}
return o;
}
Common fixes
#Use the is!
operator instead:
String f(Object o) {
if (o is! String) {
return o.toString();
}
return o;
}
prefer_iterable_wheretype
#Use 'whereType' to select elements of a given type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the method Iterable.where
is being used to filter elements based on their type.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method where
is being used to access only the strings within the iterable:
Iterable<Object> f(Iterable<Object> p) => p.where((e) => e is String);
Common fixes
#Rewrite the code to use whereType
:
Iterable<String> f(Iterable<Object> p) => p.whereType<String>();
This might also allow you to tighten the types in your code or remove other type checks.
prefer_null_aware_operators
#Use the null-aware operator '?.' rather than an explicit 'null' comparison.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a comparison with null
is used to guard a member reference, and null
is used as a result when the guarded target is null
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the invocation of length
is guarded by a null
comparison even though the default value is null
:
int? f(List<int>? p) {
return p == null ? null : p.length;
}
Common fixes
#Use a null-aware access operator instead:
int? f(List<int>? p) {
return p?.length;
}
prefer_relative_imports
#Use relative imports for files in the 'lib' directory.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an import
in a library inside the lib
directory uses a package:
URI to refer to another library in the same package.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because it uses a package:
URI when a relative URI could have been used:
import 'package:my_package/bar.dart';
Common fixes
#Use a relative URI to import the library:
import 'bar.dart';
prefer_single_quotes
#Unnecessary use of double quotes.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a string literal uses double quotes ("
) when it could use single quotes ('
) without needing extra escapes and without hurting readability.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the string literal uses double quotes but doesn't need to:
void f(String name) {
print("Hello $name");
}
Common fixes
#Use single quotes in place of double quotes:
void f(String name) {
print('Hello $name');
}
prefer_typing_uninitialized_variables
#An uninitialized field should have an explicit type annotation.
An uninitialized variable should have an explicit type annotation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a variable without an initializer doesn't have an explicit type annotation.
Without either a type annotation or an initializer, a variable has the type dynamic
, which allows any value to be assigned to the variable, often causing hard to identify bugs.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the variable r
doesn't have either a type annotation or an initializer:
Object f() {
var r;
r = '';
return r;
}
Common fixes
#If the variable can be initialized, then add an initializer:
Object f() {
var r = '';
return r;
}
If the variable can't be initialized, then add an explicit type annotation:
Object f() {
String r;
r = '';
return r;
}
prefer_void_to_null
#Unnecessary use of the type 'Null'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when Null
is used in a location where void
would be a valid choice.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
is declared to return null
(at some future time):
Future<Null> f() async {}
Common fixes
#Replace the use of Null
with a use of void
:
Future<void> f() async {}
provide_deprecation_message
#Missing a deprecation message.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a deprecated
annotation is used instead of the Deprecated
annotation.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function f
is annotated with deprecated
:
@deprecated
void f() {}
Common fixes
#Convert the code to use the longer form:
@Deprecated('Use g instead. Will be removed in 4.0.0.')
void f() {}
recursive_getters
#The getter '{0}' recursively returns itself.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a getter invokes itself, resulting in an infinite loop.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the getter count
invokes itself:
class C {
int _count = 0;
int get count => count;
}
Common fixes
#Change the getter to not invoke itself:
class C {
int _count = 0;
int get count => _count;
}
secure_pubspec_urls
#The '{0}' protocol shouldn't be used because it isn't secure.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a URL in a pubspec.yaml
file is using a non-secure scheme, such as http
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the pubspec.yaml
file contains an http
URL:
dependencies:
example: any
repository: http://github.com/dart-lang/example
Common fixes
#Change the scheme of the URL to use a secure scheme, such as https
:
dependencies:
example: any
repository: https://github.com/dart-lang/example
sized_box_for_whitespace
#Use a 'SizedBox' to add whitespace to a layout.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a Container
is created using only the height
and/or width
arguments.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the Container
has only the width
argument:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget buildRow() {
return Row(
children: <Widget>[
const Text('...'),
Container(
width: 4,
child: Text('...'),
),
const Expanded(
child: Text('...'),
),
],
);
}
Common fixes
#Replace the Container
with a SizedBox
of the same dimensions:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget buildRow() {
return Row(
children: <Widget>[
Text('...'),
SizedBox(
width: 4,
child: Text('...'),
),
Expanded(
child: Text('...'),
),
],
);
}
sized_box_shrink_expand
#Use 'SizedBox.{0}' to avoid needing to specify the 'height' and 'width'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a SizedBox
constructor invocation specifies the values of both height
and width
as either 0.0
or double.infinity
.
Examples
#The following code produces this diagnostic because both the height
and width
are 0.0
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget build() {
return SizedBox(
height: 0.0,
width: 0.0,
child: const Text(''),
);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because both the height
and width
are double.infinity
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget build() {
return SizedBox(
height: double.infinity,
width: double.infinity,
child: const Text(''),
);
}
Common fixes
#If both are 0.0
, then use SizedBox.shrink
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget build() {
return SizedBox.shrink(
child: const Text(''),
);
}
If both are double.infinity
, then use SizedBox.expand
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget build() {
return SizedBox.expand(
child: const Text(''),
);
}
slash_for_doc_comments
#Use the end-of-line form ('///') for doc comments.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a documentation comment uses the block comment style (delimited by /**
and */
).
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the documentation comment for f
uses a block comment style:
/**
* Example.
*/
void f() {}
Common fixes
#Use an end-of-line comment style:
/// Example.
void f() {}
sort_child_properties_last
#The '{0}' argument should be last in widget constructor invocations.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the child
or children
argument isn't the last argument in an invocation of a widget class' constructor. An exception is made if all of the arguments after the child
or children
argument are function expressions.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the child
argument isn't the last argument in the invocation of the Center
constructor:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget createWidget() {
return Center(
child: Text('...'),
widthFactor: 0.5,
);
}
Common fixes
#Move the child
or children
argument to be last:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget createWidget() {
return Center(
widthFactor: 0.5,
child: Text('...'),
);
}
sort_constructors_first
#Constructor declarations should be before non-constructor declarations.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor declaration is preceded by one or more non-constructor declarations.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor for C
appears after the method m
:
class C {
void m() {}
C();
}
Common fixes
#Move all of the constructor declarations before any other declarations:
class C {
C();
void m() {}
}
sort_pub_dependencies
#Dependencies not sorted alphabetically.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the keys in a dependency map in the pubspec.yaml
file aren't sorted alphabetically. The dependency maps that are checked are the dependencies
, dev_dependencies
, and dependency_overrides
maps.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the entries in the dependencies
map are not sorted:
dependencies:
path: any
collection: any
Common fixes
#Sort the entries:
dependencies:
collection: any
path: any
sort_unnamed_constructors_first
#Invalid location for the unnamed constructor.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an unnamed constructor appears after a named constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the unnamed constructor is after the named constructor:
class C {
C.named();
C();
}
Common fixes
#Move the unnamed constructor before any other constructors:
class C {
C();
C.named();
}
test_types_in_equals
#Missing type test for '{0}' in '=='.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an override of the ==
operator doesn't include a type test on the value of the parameter.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because other
is not type tested:
class C {
final int f;
C(this.f);
@override
bool operator ==(Object other) {
return (other as C).f == f;
}
}
Common fixes
#Perform an is
test as part of computing the return value:
class C {
final int f;
C(this.f);
@override
bool operator ==(Object other) {
return other is C && other.f == f;
}
}
throw_in_finally
#Use of '{0}' in 'finally' block.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a throw
statement is found inside a finally
block.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there is a throw
statement inside a finally
block:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} catch (e) {
// ...
} finally {
throw 'error';
}
}
Common fixes
#Rewrite the code so that the throw
statement isn't inside a finally
block:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} catch (e) {
// ...
}
throw 'error';
}
type_init_formals
#Don't needlessly type annotate initializing formals.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an initializing formal parameter (this.x
) or a super parameter (super.x
) has an explicit type annotation that is the same as the field or overridden parameter.
If a constructor parameter is using this.x
to initialize a field, then the type of the parameter is implicitly the same type as the field. If a constructor parameter is using super.x
to forward to a super constructor, then the type of the parameter is implicitly the same as the super constructor parameter.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter this.c
has an explicit type that is the same as the field c
:
class C {
int c;
C(int this.c);
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameter super.a
has an explicit type that is the same as the parameter a
from the superclass:
class A {
A(int a);
}
class B extends A {
B(int super.a);
}
Common fixes
#Remove the type annotation from the parameter:
class C {
int c;
C(this.c);
}
type_literal_in_constant_pattern
#Use 'TypeName _' instead of a type literal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a type literal appears as a pattern.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because a type literal is used as a constant pattern:
void f(Object? x) {
if (x case num) {
// ...
}
}
Common fixes
#If the type literal is intended to match an object of the given type, then use either a variable pattern:
void f(Object? x) {
if (x case num _) {
// ...
}
}
Or an object pattern:
void f(Object? x) {
if (x case num()) {
// ...
}
}
If the type literal is intended to match the type literal, then write it as a constant pattern:
void f(Object? x) {
if (x case const (num)) {
// ...
}
}
unawaited_futures
#Missing an 'await' for the 'Future' computed by this expression.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance of Future
is returned from an invocation within an async
(or async*
) method or function and the future is neither awaited nor passed to the unawaited
function.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function g
returns a future, but the future isn't awaited:
Future<void> f() async {
g();
}
Future<int> g() => Future.value(0);
Common fixes
#If the future needs to complete before the following code is executed, then add an await
before the invocation:
Future<void> f() async {
await g();
}
Future<int> g() => Future.value(0);
If the future doesn't need to complete before the following code is executed, then wrap the Future
-returning invocation in an invocation of the unawaited
function:
import 'dart:async';
Future<void> f() async {
unawaited(g());
}
Future<int> g() => Future.value(0);
unintended_html_in_doc_comment
#Angle brackets will be interpreted as HTML.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a documentation comment contains angle bracketed text (<...>
) that isn't one of the allowed exceptions.
Such text is interpreted by markdown to be an HTML tag, which is rarely what was intended.
See the lint rule description for the list of allowed exceptions.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the documentation comment contains the text <int>
, which isn't one of the allowed exceptions:
/// Converts a List<int> to a comma-separated String.
String f(List<int> l) => '';
Common fixes
#If the text was intended to be part of a code span, then add backticks around the code:
/// Converts a `List<int>` to a comma-separated String.
String f(List<int> l) => '';
If the text was intended to be part of a link, then add square brackets around the code:
/// Converts a [List<int>] to a comma-separated String.
String f(List<int> l) => '';
If the text was intended to be printed as-is, including the angle brackets, then add backslash escapes before the angle brackets:
/// Converts a List\<int\> to a comma-separated String.
String f(List<int> l) => '';
unnecessary_brace_in_string_interps
#Unnecessary braces in a string interpolation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a string interpolation with braces is used to interpolate a simple identifier and isn't followed by alphanumeric text.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the interpolation element ${s}
uses braces when they are not necessary:
String f(String s) {
return '"${s}"';
}
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary braces:
String f(String s) {
return '"$s"';
}
unnecessary_const
#Unnecessary 'const' keyword.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the keyword const
is used in a constant context. The keyword isn't required because it's implied.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the keyword const
in the list literal isn't needed:
const l = const <int>[];
The list is implicitly const
because of the keyword const
on the variable declaration.
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary keyword:
const l = <int>[];
unnecessary_constructor_name
#Unnecessary '.new' constructor name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a reference to an unnamed constructor uses .new
. The only place where .new
is required is in a constructor tear-off.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because .new
is being used to refer to the unnamed constructor where it isn't required:
var o = Object.new();
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary .new
:
var o = Object();
unnecessary_final
#Local variables should not be marked as 'final'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a local variable is marked as being final
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the local variable c
is marked as being final
:
void f(int a, int b) {
final c = a + b;
print(c);
}
Common fixes
#If the variable doesn't have a type annotation, then replace the final
with var
:
void f(int a, int b) {
var c = a + b;
print(c);
}
If the variable has a type annotation, then remove the final
modifier:
void f(int a, int b) {
int c = a + b;
print(c);
}
unnecessary_getters_setters
#Unnecessary use of getter and setter to wrap a field.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a getter and setter pair returns and sets the value of a field without any additional processing.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the getter/setter pair named c
only expose the field named _c
:
class C {
int? _c;
int? get c => _c;
set c(int? v) => _c = v;
}
Common fixes
#Make the field public and remove the getter and setter:
class C {
int? c;
}
unnecessary_lambdas
#Closure should be a tearoff.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a closure (lambda) could be replaced by a tear-off.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the closure passed to forEach
contains only an invocation of the function print
with the parameter of the closure:
void f(List<String> strings) {
strings.forEach((string) {
print(string);
});
}
Common fixes
#Replace the closure with a tear-off of the function or method being invoked with the closure:
void f(List<String> strings) {
strings.forEach(print);
}
unnecessary_late
#Unnecessary 'late' modifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a top-level variable or static field with an initializer is marked as late
. Top-level variables and static fields are implicitly late, so they don't need to be explicitly marked.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the static field c
has the modifier late
even though it has an initializer:
class C {
static late String c = '';
}
Common fixes
#Remove the keyword late
:
class C {
static String c = '';
}
unnecessary_library_name
#Library names are not necessary.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a library
directive specifies a name.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the library
directive includes a name:
library some.name;
class C {}
Common fixes
#Remove the name from the library
directive:
library;
class C {}
If the library has any parts, then any part of
declarations that use the library name should be updated to use the URI of the library instead.
unnecessary_new
#Unnecessary 'new' keyword.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the keyword new
is used to invoke a constructor.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the keyword new
is used to invoke the unnamed constructor from Object
:
var o = new Object();
Common fixes
#Remove the keyword new
:
var o = Object();
unnecessary_null_aware_assignments
#Unnecessary assignment of 'null'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the right-hand side of a null-aware assignment is the null
literal.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the null aware operator is being used to assign null
to s
when s
is already null
:
void f(String? s) {
s ??= null;
}
Common fixes
#If a non-null value should be assigned to the left-hand operand, then change the right-hand side:
void f(String? s) {
s ??= '';
}
If there is no non-null value to assign to the left-hand operand, then remove the assignment:
void f(String? s) {
}
unnecessary_null_in_if_null_operators
#Unnecessary use of '??' with 'null'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the right operand of the ??
operator is the literal null
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the right-hand operand of the ??
operator is null
:
String? f(String? s) => s ?? null;
Common fixes
#If a non-null value should be used for the right-hand operand, then change the right-hand side:
String f(String? s) => s ?? '';
If there is no non-null value to use for the right-hand operand, then remove the operator and the right-hand operand:
String? f(String? s) => s;
unnecessary_nullable_for_final_variable_declarations
#Type could be non-nullable.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a final field or variable has a nullable type but is initialized to a non-nullable value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the final variable i
has a nullable type (int?
), but can never be null
:
final int? i = 1;
Common fixes
#Make the type non-nullable:
final int i = 1;
unnecessary_overrides
#Unnecessary override.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an instance member overrides an inherited member but only invokes the overridden member with exactly the same arguments.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method D.m
doesn't do anything other than invoke the overridden method:
class C {
int m(int x) => x;
}
class D extends C {
@override
int m(int x) => super.m(x);
}
Common fixes
#If the method should do something more than what the overridden method does, then implement the missing functionality:
class C {
int m(int x) => x;
}
class D extends C {
@override
int m(int x) => super.m(x) + 1;
}
If the overridden method should be modified by changing the return type or one or more of the parameter types, making one of the parameters covariant
, having a documentation comment, or by having additional annotations, then update the code:
import 'package:meta/meta.dart';
class C {
int m(int x) => x;
}
class D extends C {
@mustCallSuper
@override
int m(int x) => super.m(x);
}
If the overriding method doesn't change or enhance the semantics of the code, then remove it:
class C {
int m(int x) => x;
}
class D extends C {}
unnecessary_parenthesis
#Unnecessary use of parentheses.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when parentheses are used where they do not affect the semantics of the code.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parentheses around the binary expression are not necessary:
int f(int a, int b) => (a + b);
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary parentheses:
int f(int a, int b) => a + b;
unnecessary_raw_strings
#Unnecessary use of a raw string.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a string literal is marked as being raw (is prefixed with an r
), but making the string raw doesn't change the value of the string.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the string literal will have the same value without the r
as it does with the r
:
var s = r'abc';
Common fixes
#Remove the r
in front of the string literal:
var s = 'abc';
unnecessary_statements
#Unnecessary statement.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when an expression statement has no clear effect.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the addition of the returned values from the two invocations has no clear effect:
void f(int Function() first, int Function() second) {
first() + second();
}
Common fixes
#If the expression doesn't need to be computed, then remove it:
void f(int Function() first, int Function() second) {
}
If the value of the expression is needed, then make use of it, possibly assigning it to a local variable first:
void f(int Function() first, int Function() second) {
print(first() + second());
}
If portions of the expression need to be executed, then remove the unnecessary portions:
void f(int Function() first, int Function() second) {
first();
second();
}
unnecessary_string_escapes
#Unnecessary escape in string literal.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when characters in a string are escaped when escaping them is unnecessary.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because single quotes don't need to be escaped inside strings delimited by double quotes:
var s = "Don\'t use a backslash here.";
Common fixes
#Remove the unnecessary backslashes:
var s = "Don't use a backslash here.";
unnecessary_string_interpolations
#Unnecessary use of string interpolation.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a string literal contains a single interpolation of a String
-valued variable and no other characters.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the string literal contains a single interpolation and doesn't contain any character outside the interpolation:
String f(String s) => '$s';
Common fixes
#Replace the string literal with the content of the interpolation:
String f(String s) => s;
unnecessary_this
#Unnecessary 'this.' qualifier.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the keyword this
is used to access a member that isn't shadowed.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the use of this
to access the field _f
isn't necessary:
class C {
int _f = 2;
int get f => this._f;
}
Common fixes
#Remove the this.
:
class C {
int _f = 2;
int get f => _f;
}
unnecessary_to_list_in_spreads
#Unnecessary use of 'toList' in a spread.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when toList
is used to convert an Iterable
to a List
just before a spread operator is applied to the list. The spread operator can be applied to any Iterable
, so the conversion isn't necessary.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because toList
is invoked on the result of map
, which is an Iterable
that the spread operator could be applied to directly:
List<String> toLowercase(List<String> strings) {
return [
...strings.map((String s) => s.toLowerCase()).toList(),
];
}
Common fixes
#Remove the invocation of toList
:
List<String> toLowercase(List<String> strings) {
return [
...strings.map((String s) => s.toLowerCase()),
];
}
unrelated_type_equality_checks
#The type of the operand ('{0}') isn't a subtype or a supertype of the value being matched ('{1}').
The type of the right operand ('{0}') isn't a subtype or a supertype of the left operand ('{1}').
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when two objects are being compared and neither of the static types of the two objects is a subtype of the other.
Such a comparison will usually return false
and might not reflect the programmer's intent.
There can be false positives. For example, a class named Point
might have subclasses named CartesianPoint
and PolarPoint
, neither of which is a subtype of the other, but it might still be appropriate to test the equality of instances.
As a concrete case, the classes Int64
and Int32
from package:fixnum
allow comparing instances to an int
provided the int
is on the right-hand side. This case is specifically allowed by the diagnostic, but other such cases are not.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the string s
is being compared to the integer 1
:
bool f(String s) {
return s == 1;
}
Common fixes
#Replace one of the operands with something compatible with the other operand:
bool f(String s) {
return s.length == 1;
}
use_build_context_synchronously
#Don't use 'BuildContext's across async gaps, guarded by an unrelated 'mounted' check.
Don't use 'BuildContext's across async gaps.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a BuildContext
is referenced by a StatefulWidget
after an asynchronous gap without first checking the mounted
property.
Storing a BuildContext
for later use can lead to difficult to diagnose crashes. Asynchronous gaps implicitly store a BuildContext
, making them easy to overlook for diagnosis.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the context
is passed to a constructor after the await
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class MyWidget extends Widget {
void onButtonTapped(BuildContext context) async {
await Future.delayed(const Duration(seconds: 1));
Navigator.of(context).pop();
}
}
Common fixes
#If you can remove the asynchronous gap, do so:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class MyWidget extends Widget {
void onButtonTapped(BuildContext context) {
Navigator.of(context).pop();
}
}
If you can't remove the asynchronous gap, then use mounted
to guard the use of the context
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class MyWidget extends Widget {
void onButtonTapped(BuildContext context) async {
await Future.delayed(const Duration(seconds: 1));
if (context.mounted) {
Navigator.of(context).pop();
}
}
}
use_colored_box
#Use a 'ColoredBox' rather than a 'Container' with only a 'Color'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a Container
is created that only sets the color.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the only attribute of the container that is set is the color
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget build() {
return Container(
color: Colors.red,
child: const Text('hello'),
);
}
Common fixes
#Replace the Container
with a ColoredBox
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget build() {
return ColoredBox(
color: Colors.red,
child: const Text('hello'),
);
}
use_decorated_box
#Use 'DecoratedBox' rather than a 'Container' with only a 'Decoration'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a Container
is created that only sets the decoration.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the only attribute of the container that is set is the decoration
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget buildArea() {
return Container(
decoration: const BoxDecoration(
color: Colors.red,
borderRadius: BorderRadius.all(
Radius.circular(5),
),
),
child: const Text('...'),
);
}
Common fixes
#Replace the Container
with a DecoratedBox
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Widget buildArea() {
return DecoratedBox(
decoration: const BoxDecoration(
color: Colors.red,
borderRadius: BorderRadius.all(
Radius.circular(5),
),
),
child: const Text('...'),
);
}
use_full_hex_values_for_flutter_colors
#Instances of 'Color' should be created using an 8-digit hexadecimal integer (such as '0xFFFFFFFF').
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the argument to the constructor of the Color
class is a literal integer that isn't represented as an 8-digit hexadecimal integer.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the argument (1
) isn't represented as an 8-digit hexadecimal integer:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Color c = Color(1);
Common fixes
#Convert the representation to be an 8-digit hexadecimal integer:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
Color c = Color(0x00000001);
use_function_type_syntax_for_parameters
#Use the generic function type syntax to declare the parameter '{0}'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the older style function-valued parameter syntax is used.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the function-valued parameter f
is declared using an older style syntax:
void g(bool f(String s)) {}
Common fixes
#Use the generic function type syntax to declare the parameter:
void g(bool Function(String) f) {}
use_if_null_to_convert_nulls_to_bools
#Use an if-null operator to convert a 'null' to a 'bool'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a nullable bool
-valued expression is compared (using ==
or !=
) to a boolean literal.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the nullable boolean variable b
is compared to true
:
void f(bool? b) {
if (b == true) {
// Treats `null` as `false`.
}
}
Common fixes
#Rewrite the condition to use ??
instead:
void f(bool? b) {
if (b ?? false) {
// Treats `null` as `false`.
}
}
use_key_in_widget_constructors
#Constructors for public widgets should have a named 'key' parameter.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constructor in a subclass of Widget
that isn't private to its library doesn't have a parameter named key
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the constructor for the class MyWidget
doesn't have a parameter named key
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class MyWidget extends StatelessWidget {
MyWidget({required int height});
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the default constructor for the class MyWidget
doesn't have a parameter named key
:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class MyWidget extends StatelessWidget {}
Common fixes
#Add a parameter named key
to the constructor, explicitly declaring the constructor if necessary:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
class MyWidget extends StatelessWidget {
MyWidget({super.key, required int height});
}
use_late_for_private_fields_and_variables
#Use 'late' for private members with a non-nullable type.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a private field or variable is marked as being nullable, but every reference assumes that the variable is never null
.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the private top-level variable _i
is nullable, but every reference assumes that it will not be null
:
void f() {
_i!.abs();
}
int? _i;
Common fixes
#Mark the variable or field as being both non-nullable and late
to indicate that it will always be assigned a non-null:
void f() {
_i.abs();
}
late int _i;
use_named_constants
#Use the constant '{0}' rather than a constructor returning the same object.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a constant is created with the same value as a known const
variable.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because there is a known const
field (Duration.zero
) whose value is the same as what the constructor invocation will evaluate to:
Duration d = const Duration(seconds: 0);
Common fixes
#Replace the constructor invocation with a reference to the known const
variable:
Duration d = Duration.zero;
use_raw_strings
#Use a raw string to avoid using escapes.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a string literal containing escapes, and no interpolations, could be marked as being raw in order to avoid the need for the escapes.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the string contains escaped characters that wouldn't need to be escaped if the string is made a raw string:
var s = 'A string with only \\ and \$';
Common fixes
#Mark the string as being raw and remove the unnecessary backslashes:
var s = r'A string with only \ and $';
use_rethrow_when_possible
#Use 'rethrow' to rethrow a caught exception.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a caught exception is thrown using a throw
expression rather than a rethrow
statement.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the caught exception e
is thrown using a throw
expression:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} catch (e) {
throw e;
}
}
Common fixes
#Use rethrow
instead of throw
:
void f() {
try {
// ...
} catch (e) {
rethrow;
}
}
use_setters_to_change_properties
#The method is used to change a property.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a method is used to set the value of a field, or a function is used to set the value of a top-level variable, and nothing else.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the method setF
is used to set the value of the field _f
and does no other work:
class C {
int _f = 0;
void setF(int value) => _f = value;
}
Common fixes
#Convert the method to a setter:
class C {
int _f = 0;
set f(int value) => _f = value;
}
use_string_buffers
#Use a string buffer rather than '+' to compose strings.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when values are concatenated to a string inside a loop without using a StringBuffer
to do the concatenation.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the string result
is computed by repeated concatenation within the for
loop:
String f() {
var result = '';
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
result += 'a';
}
return result;
}
Common fixes
#Use a StringBuffer
to compute the result:
String f() {
var buffer = StringBuffer();
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
buffer.write('a');
}
return buffer.toString();
}
use_string_in_part_of_directives
#The part-of directive uses a library name.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a part of
directive uses a library name to refer to the library that the part is a part of.
Example
#Given a file named lib.dart
that contains the following:
library lib;
part 'test.dart';
The following code produces this diagnostic because the part of
directive uses the name of the library rather than the URI of the library it's part of:
part of lib;
Common fixes
#Use a URI to reference the library:
part of 'lib.dart';
use_super_parameters
#Parameter '{0}' could be a super parameter.
Parameters '{0}' could be super parameters.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a parameter to a constructor is passed to a super constructor without being referenced or modified and a super
parameter isn't used.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the parameters of the constructor for B
are only used as arguments to the super constructor:
class A {
A({int? x, int? y});
}
class B extends A {
B({int? x, int? y}) : super(x: x, y: y);
}
Common fixes
#Use a super
parameter to pass the arguments:
class A {
A({int? x, int? y});
}
class B extends A {
B({super.x, super.y});
}
use_truncating_division
#Use truncating division.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the result of dividing two numbers is converted to an integer using toInt
.
Dart has a built-in integer division operator that is both more efficient and more concise.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the result of dividing x
and y
is converted to an integer using toInt
:
int divide(int x, int y) => (x / y).toInt();
Common fixes
#Use the integer division operator (~/
):
int divide(int x, int y) => x ~/ y;
valid_regexps
#Invalid regular expression syntax.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when the string passed to the default constructor of the class RegExp
doesn't contain a valid regular expression.
A regular expression created with invalid syntax will throw a FormatException
at runtime.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the regular expression isn't valid:
var r = RegExp(r'(');
Common fixes
#Fix the regular expression:
var r = RegExp(r'\(');
void_checks
#Assignment to a variable of type 'void'.
Description
#The analyzer produces this diagnostic when a value is assigned to a variable of type void
.
It isn't possible to access the value of such a variable, so the assignment has no value.
Example
#The following code produces this diagnostic because the field value
has the type void
, but a value is being assigned to it:
class A<T> {
T? value;
}
void f(A<void> a) {
a.value = 1;
}
The following code produces this diagnostic because the type of the parameter p
in the method m
is void
, but a value is being assigned to it in the invocation:
class A<T> {
void m(T p) { }
}
void f(A<void> a) {
a.m(1);
}
Common fixes
#If the type of the variable is incorrect, then change the type of the variable:
class A<T> {
T? value;
}
void f(A<int> a) {
a.value = 1;
}
If the type of the variable is correct, then remove the assignment:
class A<T> {
T? value;
}
void f(A<void> a) {}
Unless stated otherwise, the documentation on this site reflects Dart 3.5.3. Page last updated on 2024-10-18. View source or report an issue.