restorablePushReplacement<T extends Object?, TO extends Object?> static method

  1. @optionalTypeArgs
String restorablePushReplacement<T extends Object?, TO extends Object?>(
  1. BuildContext context,
  2. RestorableRouteBuilder<T> routeBuilder,
  3. {TO? result,
  4. Object? arguments}
)

Replace the current route of the navigator that most tightly encloses the given context by pushing a new route and then disposing the previous route once the new route has finished animating in.

Unlike Routes pushed via pushReplacement, Routes pushed with this method are restored during state restoration according to the rules outlined in the "State Restoration" section of Navigator.

If non-null, result will be used as the result of the route that is removed; the future that had been returned from pushing that old route will complete with result. Routes such as dialogs or popup menus typically use this mechanism to return the value selected by the user to the widget that created their route. The type of result, if provided, must match the type argument of the class of the old route (TO).

The new route and the route below the removed route are notified (see Route.didPush and Route.didChangeNext). If the Navigator has any Navigator.observers, they will be notified as well (see NavigatorObserver.didReplace). The removed route is notified once the new route has finished animating (see Route.didComplete).

Ongoing gestures within the current route are canceled when a new route is pushed.

The T type argument is the type of the return value of the new route, and TO is the type of the return value of the old route.

The method takes a RestorableRouteBuilder as argument, which must be a static function annotated with @pragma('vm:entry-point'). It must instantiate and return a new Route object that will be added to the navigator. The provided arguments object is passed to the routeBuilder. The navigator calls the static routeBuilder function again during state restoration to re-create the route object.

Any object that is serializable via the StandardMessageCodec can be passed as arguments. Often, a Map is used to pass key-value pairs.

The method returns an opaque ID for the pushed route that can be used by the RestorableRouteFuture to gain access to the actual Route object added to the navigator and its return value. You can ignore the return value of this method, if you do not care about the route object or the route's return value.

Typical usage is as follows:
link

To create a local project with this code sample, run:
flutter create --sample=widgets.Navigator.restorablePushReplacement.1 mysample

Implementation

@optionalTypeArgs
static String restorablePushReplacement<T extends Object?, TO extends Object?>(BuildContext context, RestorableRouteBuilder<T> routeBuilder, { TO? result, Object? arguments }) {
  return Navigator.of(context).restorablePushReplacement<T, TO>(routeBuilder, result: result, arguments: arguments);
}