It is possible that sometimes the designer may give you to develop UI component that is not already developed/coded before and force you to think on how to proceed for developing it. You can consider it as a challenge for yourself. Fortunately, Flutter helps you a lot in overcoming such a challenge.

For example, consider you are given a task to develop this kind of UI

As we can see that most of the UI can be developed with the available Widgets in Flutter. But how about the ‘NotebookPageWidget’ over which the checklist is displayed for password validation criteria. Although we can develop ‘NotebookPageWidget’ using Flutter widgets by composition(Mix of Widgets). But let’s be a little bolder and try to create ‘NotebookPageWidget’ using CustomPainter.

So our goal in this tutorial is to develop this

NotebookPageWidget

UI Structure

We can see that inside the center widget we have our own ‘NotebookPageWidget’ which is built using CustomPaint()

What is CustomPaint()?

In layman language, I can say that It is used to draw anything on the screen. Remember your childhood days when you were drawing stuff like this :)

Flutter allows you to do exactly the same very easily.

CustomPaint(

foregroundPainter: PagePainter(),

child: Container(

width: 300,

height: 150,

),

)

Properties:

child: You can create and assign any Widget here that will act as size for the canvas. Meaning child widget creates boundaries for your custom shape and you cannot draw outside of it. So in our case, you can create a blank container the has 300 width and 150 height. foregroundPainter: It paints our custom paint on top of the child. painter: It paints our custom paint below the child.

In our case, we want our PagePainter() to appear on top of given child container so we will just use foregroundPainter.

What is PagePainter() ? Doesn’t seems to be ready-made widget!

Yes, it’s not readymade widget because that is the widget in which we will write drawing instructions.

import 'package:flutter/material.dart';



class PagePainter extends CustomPainter {

@override

void paint(Canvas canvas, Size size) {



}



@override

bool shouldRepaint(PagePainter oldDelegate) {

//TODO Implement shouldRepaint

}



@override

bool shouldRebuildSemantics(PagePainter oldDelegate) {

//TODO Implement shouldRebuildSemantics

}

}

paint(Canvas canvas, Size size): Is the method where actual painting instructions are written.

shouldRepaint(PagePainter oldDelegate): Decides to redraw or not.

Now let's create our custom UI step by step

Step 1: Create a grey rectangle.

void paint(Canvas canvas, Size size) {

//Setp 1

final paintgrey = Paint()..color = Colors.grey;

var rrectRed =

RRect.fromLTRBR(0, 0, size.width, size.height, Radius.circular(8.0));

canvas.drawRRect(rrectRed, paintgrey);



}

Paint()..color = Colors.grey creates paint object with grey color.

RRect.fromLTRBR(0, 0, size.width, size.height, Radius.circular(8.0)) creates rectangle starting from top left to bottom of right with radius of 8.0 around it.

canvas.drawRRect(rrectRed, paintgrey) draws rectangle with grey color.

Step 2: Create a white rectangle on top of the grey one.

//Step 2

final paintWhite = Paint()..color = Colors.white;

var rrectWhite =

RRect.fromLTRBR(5, 0, size.width, size.height, Radius.circular(8.0));

canvas.drawRRect(rrectWhite, paintWhite);

RRect.fromLTRBR(5, 0, size.width, size.height, Radius.circular(8.0)) creates white rectangle leaving margin of 5 from left side.

NOTE: Writing drawing instructions sequentially will draw on top of the previous one. Just how to use pencil and color for drawing on paper. Feels more natural.

Step 3: Create horizontal lines.

//Step 3

final paintDarkgrey = Paint()

..color = Colors.blueGrey

..strokeWidth = 1.0;

canvas.drawLine(Offset(0, size.height * .2),

Offset(size.width, size.height * .2), paintDarkgrey);

canvas.drawLine(Offset(0, size.height * .4),

Offset(size.width, size.height * .4), paintDarkgrey);

canvas.drawLine(Offset(0, size.height * .6),

Offset(size.width, size.height * .6), paintDarkgrey);

canvas.drawLine(Offset(0, size.height * .8),

Offset(size.width, size.height * .8), paintDarkgrey);

canvas.drawLine(Offset(0, size.height * .2), Offset(size.width, size.height * .2), paintDarkgrey) draws line from Offset(0, size.height * .2) i.e 20% of height from left side to Offset(size.width, size.height * .2) i.e 20% of height to right side. and similarly other lines are drawn in order of increase in height that acts as place where our text should align.

Step 4: Create a vertical line

//Step 4

final paintPink = Paint()

..color = Colors.pinkAccent

..strokeWidth = 2.5;

canvas.drawLine(Offset(size.width * .1, 0),

Offset(size.width * .1, size.height), paintPink);

New paint object is created to have pink accent color and stroke width of 2.5 which is used to draw a vertical line from Offset(size.width * .1, 0) i.e 10% of width and very top to Offset(size.width * .1, size.height) i.e 10% of width to very bottom which acts as a margin from where text writing should begin.

That’s it.

Your own made custom widget is ready to be used by you and others in Flutter community. I hope you have understood the basic idea of implementing this.

And I have already created the task that was used as an example for this article. It’s called Password Guide. Please do check out here and improve my code. I would like to learn from you.

The working prototype at https://github.com/pinkeshdarji/LoginRegister

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