FlexColorScheme
FlexColorScheme helps you make beautiful color scheme based Flutter themes, with optional primary color branding on surfaces. The created themes are based on the same concept as Flutter’s ColorScheme based themes, but with a few interesting twists and convenience features.
For more information about FlexColorScheme, its background and use cases, this package companion blog post and article is also recommended reading.
Contents
- FlexColorScheme
- Contents
- Introduction
- Installing and Using
- Tutorial
- Example 1 – Use a Predefined Color Scheme
- Example 2 – Create a Custom Color Scheme
- Example 3 – Switch Between Different Color Schemes
- Example 4 – Switch Between Built-in Color Schemes and Custom Ones
- Example 5 – Full Featured Demo
- Local State and Setup
- FlexColorScheme Properties and toTheme
- FlexColorScheme Properties and toScheme
- Equivalent Setup for the Dark Theme, but with More Options
- Passing All the Values Back and Forth to the HomePage
- Themed System Navigation Bar in Android
- Building the Example
- Computed Dark Theme
- Computed Dark Theme with Level Adjustment
- Branded Surfaces and App Bar Options
- The TabBar Style
- True Black
- Android Transparent System Navigation Bar
- Behind the Scenes
- Appendix A – Built-in Scheme Reference
Introduction
When you design Flutter applications you should base the colors of your application on a light theme mode ColorScheme and a dark theme mode ColorScheme. Then make your light and dark ThemeData from these color schemes, and in your MaterialApp use these themes for the light and dark themes. This gives you an application that uses the defined color scheme on the built-in Material UI Widgets, well on most of them anyway. Flutter’s ThemeData.from
a ColorScheme
has a few gaps, the used color scheme is not consistently applied to all standard Material UI Widgets.
FlexColorScheme corrects these minor inconsistencies and gaps that exist in the current version of Flutter’s ThemeData.from
factory. It also makes a few opinionated, but subtle theme modifications compared to the ThemeData.from
themes created from a ColorScheme
. These topics are covered in detail in the last chapter and in the article you can find a visual presentation of the differences.
FlexColorScheme can also do some other nice theme design tricks. If you have seen the Flutter Flexfold web demo application, then you have already seen FlexColorScheme in action. The Flexfold demo app uses this package for its fancy theming and to enable effortless switching between all the themes it uses. The package included examples in the tutorial chapter, show you how the Flexfold demo app theming is done by using package.
Color Branded Backgrounds and Surfaces
The Material Guide briefly mentions color branded surfaces. With FlexColorScheme you can easily create such primary color branded themes. This is done by using the four built-in strengths for blending in primary color into surface and background colors, while avoiding blending it in with the scaffold background color, for all but the highest strength. It is quite interesting what a bit of extra flair and purposefully designed feeling it can result in when used appropriately.
Nuanced Scheme Set from One Color
A FlexColorScheme
can like Flutter’s standard ColorScheme
be created by specifying all the required scheme colors. You can also specify just the primary color, and get all other colors needed for a complete color scheme computed based on only the provided primary color.
There is a helper class with a factory FlexSchemeColor.from
that can do this for you. Another helper can create a computed matching dark scheme from a defined light scheme, this is done with FlexSchemeColor.toDark
. This works regardless of if you created a fully specified custom light scheme, or one from just a single color. These features are presented and explained in tutorial example 4 and example 5.
What About My Own Theme Additions?
FlexColorScheme does not get in the way of adding your own additional custom theming to your application. When you have defined your FlexColorScheme
, you make a theme based on its scheme with FlexColorScheme.toTheme
, that returns a ThemeData
object that you can use like any other ThemeData
object. You can then of course override this returned theme data and add additional custom sub-theming to it with the normal ThemeData copyWith
method before passing it on to your application’s theme
or darkTheme
property.
Built-in Color Schemes
Color schemes are no fun without some built-in example schemes to use and play with. FlexColorScheme comes with 24 ready to go matching light and dark schemes, that you can use in your applications if you like. Here is a composite image showing them all.
The above image is just an overview teaser of all the color schemes. In the package companion blog post you can find high resolution images of each one of them. Another convenient and recommended way to see and try all the predefined color schemes is by using the live Web versions of the package example 4 or example 5, where you can try all the built-in color schemes and see the impact they have on often used Flutter widgets. In Appendix A you can find a table listing all the built-in schemes, their FlexScheme
enum value, name and description, plus links to the high-resolution images of each color scheme.
The built-in color schemes are all tuned matching light and dark scheme pairs. Most of them are pretty conservative, but some are intentionally a bit more playful and bold. The first two color schemes are actually the Flutter and Material Design Guide examples of light and dark color schemes, and the Flutter high contrast light and dark color versions as well. So OK, there are actually “only” 22 new ready-made light and dark color scheme pairs.
This ColorScheme Should be Different!
The built-in schemes in no way claim to be a “this selection” fits all needs collection, nor do they claim to be more correct than any other color scheme. What fits your needs and looks good to you, is of course the right choice for your application and use case. You can easily make your own custom scheme totally from scratch or copy the colors in an existing scheme and change the color that does not fit your design requirements.
Design Your Custom Schemes for FlexColorScheme
The package examples show how you can easily make and use your own custom schemes for FlexColorScheme. Maybe the built-in examples will inspire your creative side to define your own schemes. The tutorial walks you through how to define your own color schemes and make themes based on them instead.
You can even create your own custom list or map of schemes and use all of them, instead of the built-in ones. The built-in schemes implementation can then function as one possible implementation guide on how to do this.
While building, testing and using this package over a period of time, a number of color schemes were born as a side product. I decided to include them in FlexColorscheme and offer them for re-use and inspiration as they are, but in no way is it a necessity to use them to reap the benefits of FlexColorScheme.
The color and scheme definitions for the built-in color schemes are in their own classes and will not be included in the release compiled version of your application if you do not use (reference) them in your application, and instead only use your own custom scheme colors.
If I don’t Use the Predefined Schemes, Why Should I Use FlexColorScheme?
The main purpose for creating this package was to be able to easily switch among multiple color schemes in an app, to address some gaps in Flutter’s default color scheme based themes, to provide an easy way to make theme’s with primary color branded backgrounds and surfaces, vary this branding strength and to provide an easy toggle for different app bar designs, without the need to make a custom theme for it manually every time. FlexColorScheme also adds support for a true black mode for dark themes.
Additionally, FlexColorScheme introduces a way to make “lazy” quick toned ColorScheme based themes from just a single light scheme color, even its dark scheme counterpart can be made from this single color definition. To understand how this can be done, it is recommended to go through the tutorial in this readme file.
If you like and need the above features, then FlexColorScheme may fit your theming requirements even if you do not use any of its built-in color schemes. There is no need to use any of the built-in color schemes to benefit from FlexColorScheme’s capabilities.
Can We Change this Predefined Scheme’s Colors?
No, current predefined schemes will not be changed. Changing them would be a breaking change to the package version promise. Sure, the scheme colors could in theory be changed by releasing a new major version that break past scheme color definitions. At the moment, there are no plans to ever add breaking releases to just change a predefined scheme’s color(s). All current color definition values are also included in the package tests, and a failed color value test is considered a breaking change.
Can We Add This Scheme?
I do plan to from time to time add new color schemes to the built-in ones, just to keep things interesting and if I happen to come up with one that I like and want to add.
If you have a lovely ColorScheme set with matching light and dark theme mode colors, that you think really should be included in FlexColorScheme’s built-in schemes collection, then by all means please feel free post a suggestion as a GitHub issue. No promises are made about its eventual inclusion, but if I also think it is a really nice and pretty color scheme, it might very well get included. Coming up with nice schemes is trickier than it seems, so contributions to new ones will be considered.
Installing and Using
In the pubspec.yaml
of your Flutter project, add the following dependency:
dependencies: flex_color_scheme: any
In your library file add the following import:
import 'package:flex_color_scheme/flex_color_scheme.dart';
You can now start using FlexColorScheme
based themes in your application. The easiest way to do so is to use one of the 24 built-in color schemes. The schemes have enums that you can use to refer to them. Their corresponding data object holds name, description and separate scheme data for each schemes’ light and dark mode.
As a simple use case, take the default Flutter counter app, do the above installation and select one of the built-in FlexColorScheme’s schemes to use with it.
In this example we use “Oh Mandy red” scheme that is represented by enum value FlexScheme.mandyRed
.
We also set the app’s themeMode
property to ThemeMode.system
so that the used device can control if the app uses its light or dark theme, based on the device system setting for light and dark theme.
Totally just one property modified, and two properties added to the default counter app, plus the package import of course. The modified MaterialApp from the Flutter default counter app is shown below.
class MyApp extends StatelessWidget { @override Widget build(BuildContext context) { return MaterialApp( title: 'Flutter Demo', // The Mandy red, light theme. theme: FlexColorScheme.light(scheme: FlexScheme.mandyRed).toTheme, // The Mandy red, dark theme. darkTheme: FlexColorScheme.dark(scheme: FlexScheme.mandyRed).toTheme, // Use dark or light theme based on system setting. themeMode: ThemeMode.system, home: MyHomePage(title: 'Flutter Demo Home Page'), );
The above additions gives us the following counter app look:
Perhaps not so exciting, that is because the basic counter app uses very few features and widgets, so it cannot really illustrate the result very well. This is why the included examples contain demo UI, that is not really at all relevant to using FlexColorScheme and is really only there to better demonstrate the result.
NOTE:
Version 1.4.0 introduces the easier and less verbose scheme
convenience factory property used above. You can use it instead of colors
if all you want to do is just use one of the built-in color schemes. The previous way of using colors
with the FlexColor.schemes
map, with the FlexScheme
enum values as keys, works as before too, but is not needed for this simple use case. The colors
property is still used in the examples for custom color schemes and mixing custom schemes with selected built-in ones.
For reference and comparison, with the color
factory property, using a built-in color scheme looks like this:
theme: FlexColorScheme.light( colors: FlexColor.schemes[FlexScheme.mandyRed].light, ).toTheme,
with the scheme
convenience property this can instead be written like this:
theme: FlexColorScheme.light(scheme: FlexScheme.mandyRed).toTheme,
Which is a much nicer way to access and use a predefined color scheme.
The FlexColorScheme.light
and FlexColorScheme.dark
factories no longer require any of their properties. If both scheme
and colors
properties are defined, then colors
takes precedence. If both are undefined (null), then scheme
defaults to FlexScheme.material
, which defines the color scheme used in the Material Design Guide. This addition does not change any possible past behavior.
Can I use different built-in color schemes for my light and dark themes?
Yes this is possible, just use different FlexScheme
enums values for the light and dark FlexColorScheme factories scheme
property. If the colors used by the selected schemes are a bit related, this can be used to create nice and unique light and dark combinations of the predefined schemes.
By using the colors
property you could even apply a FlexSchemeColor
that has data that was designed for a light theme to the FlexColorScheme.dark factory and wise versa. For example, with the FlexColorScheme.dark
factory, you could to its colors
property assign the FlexSchemeColors
fromFlexColor.schemes[FlexScheme.mandyRed].light
that are designed and intended to be used with the light mode factory. The results will typically just not be as useful or pretty. The rationale for the slightly involved structure, is to keep it flexible, but at the same time provide self documenting API guidance on how the data was designed to be used and consumed. The new scheme
property prevents using the light scheme colors for the dark factory and wise versa. It can however still be done if so desired with the colors
property as shown above. The colors
property is always needed and used when you make custom color schemes with the FlexColorScheme.light
and FlexColorScheme.dark
factories.
Default Sample Application
The package contains five different example applications with increasing complexity.
The default example 1, is just a repeat of the above example, but with a themeMode
3-way toggle switch, an effective theme colors widget, plus a bunch of dummy commonly used Material UI widgets.
To try the simplest and default example 1 on a device or simulator, clone the repository and run the example:
cd example/ flutter run --release
The result is a sample app that uses the built-in “Oh Mandy red” color scheme as its theme. Has a light/dark/system theme mode switch, includes a theme colors presentation widget and Material UI widget samples. With them you can see the active theme’s colors, and the created theme’s impact on common Material UI widgets.
Building the examples If you cloned the repository to build the examples, you can open the package
/example
folder with your IDE to build the above default example. This example is the same as the example in the/example/lib/example1
folder. If you want to build the other examples, without setting up different configurations in your IDE for the different main files, you can copy and paste the wanted example’smain.dart
code into the/example/lib/main.dart
file to build it from your IDE. After copying the new main example content, change the relative import for the “all shared imports” file to:import 'all_shared_imports.dart';
and for examples 4 and 5, also the “sub page” import to:import 'shared/sub_page.dart';
Live WEB Demos of the Examples
If you want to take a quick look at all the examples, you can try live web versions of them.
Example 1 represents the simplest use case, to just use one of the built-in color schemes as your application theme and toggle between its light and dark variant, or allow device mode setting to control if the dark or light theme is used.
Example 2 is like example 1, but here we use custom colors to make a custom scheme and turn it into a theme.
In example 3 we can toggle the active theme between 3 different predefined color schemes, plus the custom one we made in example 2.
In example 4 we can select any of the different built-in themes and three custom ones we made.
Example 5 is the last, and most complex one of the examples and presents more configuration options that you can modify interactively. This example is best seen and tested on a tablet, desktop or desktop web browser, rather than on a phone, but it certainly works on a phone sized canvas too. This example is explained in more detail further below.
A really fancy example of FlexColorScheme usage is the Flexfold demo app.
It might look and feel complicated, but it is actually only slightly more involved than the above example nr 5, that has almost all the same theming features, and the same themes as the Flexfold demo app. Go through the examples, and you will be ready to make cool interactively custom themed apps like this in no time.
Tutorial
In this tutorial we go through all the bundled examples and explain the used FlexColorScheme
features in each example. For simplicity the example applications do not use any advanced state management solution. The key part for each example is always in the used stateful MaterialApp
, where all the scheme setup for the themes are made. The rest of the content in the examples is just there to make a visual presentation of the resulting theme from the used color scheme.
Used HomePage in the Examples
The content of the HomePage
in all these examples is not relevant for using FlexColorScheme
based application theming. The critical parts are in the example MaterialApp
theme definitions. The HomePage
just contains UI to visually show what the resulting themes look like, when used in an application with often used Flutter Widgets. In example 5 we can also make interactive changes to many FlexColorScheme
API values to see and learn how they work in practice.
In all the examples we pass in the FlexSchemeData
object we used for the active theme to the application’s HomePage
. This is not needed in order to use FlexColorScheme
based themes. It is done to be able to show the active color scheme’s name and description in the examples. At the same time it provides the right color data for the 3-way theme mode switch FlexThemeModeSwitch
. The switch uses the light and dark scheme colors in its theme mode option buttons. This way the theme mode option buttons always show the 4 main colors in the active light and dark color scheme.
Optional FlexThemeModeSwitch
One unique feature on the HomePage
of all the examples is the FlexThemeModeSwitch
. It is the UI Widget used for the 3-way theme mode switch used in all the examples to change the active theme mode.
Using the switch is very simple, give it the currently selected and active theme mode, the current FlexSchemeData
scheme, so it can color its buttons correctly, and use the onThemeModeChanged
callback for changes to its mode. Then change the themeMode
property in the MaterialApp
accordingly, to actually change the used theme mode.
FlexThemeModeSwitch( themeMode: themeMode, onThemeModeChanged: onThemeModeChanged, flexSchemeData: flexSchemeData, ),
Using the FlexThemeModeSwitch
3-way theme mode switch is optional and not required to use FlexColorScheme
based themes. It is just a unique theme mode switch design and was included as a bonus feature in the FlexColorScheme
package. It was added based on a request after it had been observed in the wild in the Flexfold demo app.
In the Flexfold demo app the switch was originally a fairly fixed design. This FlexThemeModeSwitch
has many properties that allow you to customize it extensively. You can find its API reference here and its companion, the FlexThemeModeOptionButton
API reference here. With the API you can customize the look of the FlexThemeModeSwitch
, here are some examples:
The FlexThemeModeOptionButton
is typically used by the FlexThemeModeSwitch
, but it can also be used as a part of other theme related indicator widgets. Like for example the scrolling horizontal list used in the Flexfold demo app. Where it is used as a theme indicator in a list, as a way to show all available themes and select the active theme, just as an alternative to the rather plain popup menu.
Example 1 – Use a Predefined Color Scheme
The first and simplest example shows how you can use a predefined color scheme in FlexColorScheme
to define light and dark themes using the scheme, and then switch between the light and dark mode. A theme showcase widget shows the theme with several common Material widgets.
This example is basically a repeat of the Flutter default counter app modification earlier, but with a different HomePage
and a way to change the MaterialApp
active themeMode
property value via the FlexThemeModeSwitch
switch on the HomePage
, using a basic value changed callback function.
void main() => runApp(const DemoApp()); class DemoApp extends StatefulWidget { const DemoApp({Key key}) : super(key: key); @override _DemoAppState createState() => _DemoAppState(); } class _DemoAppState extends State<DemoApp> { // Used to select if we use the dark or light theme. ThemeMode themeMode; @override void initState() { themeMode = ThemeMode.light; super.initState(); } @override Widget build(BuildContext context) { // Define which predefined FlexScheme to use. // Go ahead and try some other ones too. const FlexScheme usedFlexScheme = FlexScheme.mandyRed; return MaterialApp( debugShowCheckedModeBanner: false, title: 'FlexColorScheme', // A light scheme, passed to FlexColorScheme.light factory, then use // toTheme to return the resulting theme to the MaterialApp theme. theme: FlexColorScheme.light( scheme: usedFlexScheme, // Use comfortable on desktops instead of compact, devices use default. visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme, // Same thing for the dark theme, but using FlexColorScheme.dark factory. darkTheme: FlexColorScheme.dark( scheme: usedFlexScheme, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme, // Use the above dark or light theme, based on active themeMode // value light/dark/system. themeMode: themeMode, // The HomePage, with its properties. In this example we pass it the // current themeMode, change it via its call-back. We also pass the // currently used FlexSchemeData to the HomePage so we can use it to // display some info about it, and use the colors on the theme switch. home: HomePage( themeMode: themeMode, onThemeModeChanged: (ThemeMode mode) { setState(() { themeMode = mode; }); }, // Pass in the used active FlexSchemeData so we can // use its properties on the HomePage. flexSchemeData: FlexColor.schemes[usedFlexScheme], ), ); } }
One more minor addition – visualDensity
All examples in this package use comfortable adaptive platform visual density viaFlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity
, instead of the default counter application’sVisualDensity.adaptivePlatformDensity
.This is an alternative that on desktop applications results in the Flutter
comfortable
visual density being used, instead ofcompact
. On devices, they both result in the default largestandard
visual density that is suitable for small touch devices. This helper function was added to provide an easy option for using a bit larger UI elements on desktop and web apps, while keeping the correct size for devices.If the desktop and web versions of the app is used on computers with touch screens, the
comfortable
density provides a nice balance. It still looks compact enough to be desktop like, while providing a bit more touch friendly space, without looking like an overblown device UI on a desktop.FlexColorScheme can of course also use the
VisualDensity.adaptivePlatformDensity
value. If you prefer it, just replace the line with it. If you do not specify any visual density, the Flutter default densitystandard
is used on all platforms. This creates Material widgets with a lot of white space around and inside them, which may not be what you want on Web and Desktop applications, but is the correct choice for small touch devices. The visual density feature in Flutter was created to address this difference in design requirement. The built-in functionVisualDensity.adaptivePlatformDensity
was added to adapt the density according to used platform. TheFlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity
does the same, but with a bit more white space on desktops. Use the one you like and works best for your use case.
Building and running example 1
When you build and run example 1 you get a sample application that looks like this in light and dark mode:
Try example 1 live on the web here.
In the app, scroll down to see the theme showcase further below, it presents the theme with common Material widgets. This simple first example is not using primary color surface branding, it is just a normal theme with a few convenient fixes for some theme design gaps in Flutter’s own themes created with ThemeData.from
a ColorScheme
.
Example 2 – Create a Custom Color Scheme
This example shows how you can define your own FlexSchemeData
and create FlexColorScheme
based themes from it. A theme showcase widget shows the theme with several common Material widgets.
The full code is not shown in the tutorial, please see the code in the package folder flex_color_scheme/example/lib/example2 for the entire example.
To make a custom color scheme, we will for simplicity just define it as a constant in this example. We make a FlexSchemeData
object with a name, description and scheme colors defined with FlexSchemeColor
for the light and matching dark scheme. In this example we use dark purple and deep green and matching desaturated versions for the dark scheme.
We could also have stored the light and dark scheme in their own FlexSchemeColor objects, or even created them directly in their respective colors
property in the light and dark factories. However, since we will also use this information on the HomePage for the theme switch widget and to display the scheme name and description, putting them in a FlexSchemeData object that contains both the light and dark scheme, plus its name and description, is a convenient way to re-use the information.
const FlexSchemeData customFlexScheme = FlexSchemeData( name: 'Toledo purple', description: 'Purple theme created from custom defined colors.', light: FlexSchemeColor( primary: Color(0xFF4E0028), primaryVariant: Color(0xFF320019), secondary: Color(0xFF003419), secondaryVariant: Color(0xFF002411), ), dark: FlexSchemeColor( primary: Color(0xFF9E7389), primaryVariant: Color(0xFF775C69), secondary: Color(0xFF738F81), secondaryVariant: Color(0xFF5C7267), ), );
Then we use this FlexSchemeData
customFlexScheme instance light
and dark
properties as scheme colors
for the FlexColorScheme.light
and dark
factory for each theme mode and toTheme
to get the themes they define.
This setup is totally equivalent to how we used one of the built-in predefined FlexSchemeData
objects in example 1, in this case we just defined our own custom FlexSchemeData
in customFlexScheme
.
: @override Widget build(BuildContext context) { return MaterialApp( debugShowCheckedModeBanner: false, title: 'FlexColorScheme', theme: FlexColorScheme.light( colors: customFlexScheme.light, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme, darkTheme: FlexColorScheme.dark( colors: customFlexScheme.dark, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme, home: HomePage( themeMode: themeMode, onThemeModeChanged: (ThemeMode mode) { setState(() { themeMode = mode; }); }, // We use our custom FlexSchemeData on the HomePage too. flexSchemeData: customFlexScheme, ), ); } }
When you build and run example 2 you get a sample application that looks like this in light and dark mode:
Try example 2 live on the web here.
Scroll down to see the theme showcase widgets further below, presenting the theme with some widgets. This example is not using primary color surface branding, it is just a normal theme with a few convenient fixes for certain theme properties.
Example 3 – Switch Between Different Color Schemes
This example shows how you can use three built-in color schemes, add a custom scheme and then use all four as selectable FlexColorScheme
based theme options in an application. The example also uses strong branded surface colors. A theme showcase widget shows the theme with several common Material widgets.
The full example code is not shown here, please see the code in the package folder flex_color_scheme/example/lib/example3 for the entire example.
The customFlexScheme FlexSchemeData
definition is the same as in example 2, it is not repeated below. In the example below, if we select the FlexScheme.custom
option, we use our customFlexScheme object, otherwise the selected built-in scheme we selected on the HomePage is used. We also set the surface style to FlexSurface.strong
, for a strong primary color branded blend in surfaces and backgrounds.
: class _DemoAppState extends State<DemoApp> { ThemeMode themeMode; // Used to store which FlexSchemeData option we selected FlexScheme flexScheme; @override void initState() { themeMode = ThemeMode.light; flexScheme = FlexScheme.hippieBlue; // Default selected theme super.initState(); } @override Widget build(BuildContext context) { return MaterialApp( debugShowCheckedModeBanner: false, title: 'FlexColorScheme', theme: FlexColorScheme.light( // When we select the custom FlexScheme on the home // page, we get the custom enum value back and use the custom // scheme we defined, otherwise we use the selected scheme // from the the built in map. colors: flexScheme == FlexScheme.custom ? customFlexScheme.light : FlexColor.schemesWithCustom[flexScheme].light, // This surface style gives a strong blend of primary // color on surfaces and background colors. surfaceStyle: FlexSurface.strong, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme, // Just a repeat with equivalent setup for the dark theme. darkTheme: FlexColorScheme.dark( colors: flexScheme == FlexScheme.custom ? customFlexScheme.dark : FlexColor.schemesWithCustom[flexScheme].dark, surfaceStyle: FlexSurface.strong, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme, themeMode: themeMode, home: HomePage( themeMode: themeMode, onThemeModeChanged: (ThemeMode mode) { setState(() { themeMode = mode; }); }, // We pass the enum value of the active scheme to the HomePage. flexScheme: flexScheme, // Where we can select a new scheme and get its enum value back. onFlexSchemeChanged: (FlexScheme selectedScheme) { setState(() { flexScheme = selectedScheme; }); }, // We take care to pass in selected built-in scheme data // or the custom one we made if it is selected. flexSchemeData: flexScheme == FlexScheme.custom ? customFlexScheme : FlexColor.schemesWithCustom[flexScheme], ), ); } }
In this example on the HomePage we removed the option to allow the theme mode to depend on the system theme mode setting, by setting showSystemMode
to false
, thus removing this option from the switch.
: FlexThemeModeSwitch( themeMode: themeMode, onThemeModeChanged: onThemeModeChanged, flexSchemeData: flexSchemeData, showSystemMode: false, ), :
These are the four resulting different themes with their light and dark modes, that we can select and use with this example.
Hippie blue scheme in light and dark mode.
Green money scheme in light and dark mode.
Red red wine scheme in light and dark mode.
Our custom Toledo purple scheme in light and dark mode.
Try example 3 live on the web here.
Example 4 – Switch Between Built-in Color Schemes and Custom Ones
This example shows how you can use all the built-in color schemes, plus three custom schemes. How to interactively select which one of these schemes is used to define the active theme. The example also uses medium branded background and surface colors. A theme showcase widget shows the theme with several common Material widgets. A subpage is also available that shows the same theme applied when opening another page, that in Flutter just inherits the same theme.
The full example code is not shown here, please see the code in the package folder flex_color_scheme/example/lib/example4 for the entire example.
In this example we set the surface style to FlexSurface.medium
, for medium primary color branded surfaces.
The example is otherwise fairly straight forward. This time we use the built in FlexColor.schemesList
to access all the pre-defined FlexSchemeData
objects as a plain list with the predefined scheme data. We unpack this list with the spread operator into a new custom myFlexSchemes
list, and add our three custom schemes as FlexSchemeData
objects to the end of this new list. We then access the list’s FlexSchemeData
objects with an index number, that we simply change with a popup menu on the HomePage. That is the general principle, let’s go through it step by step.
Begin by defining the same colors that we used in example 2 and 3 for our first custom color. In this case we also assign the same color that we used for our secondaryVariant
scheme color, to the optional appBarColor
. This is done because the built-in schemes use their secondary variant color as their custom app bar color, it could of course be any color, but for consistency we will do the same for our custom FlexSchemeColor
data objects. This part is not actually used in this example yet, but we will re-use these custom definitions in example 5 where it is used, so we might as well add it now to make the explanations for example 5 a bit shorter.
We mix it up a bit by first defining the light and dark FlexSchemeColor
data objects, that we will use as light and dark matched pairs in the FlexSchemeData
that we are going to add to our list.
void main() => runApp(const DemoApp()); // Create a custom flex color scheme for a light theme. const FlexSchemeColor myScheme1Light = FlexSchemeColor( primary: Color(0xFF4E0028), primaryVariant: Color(0xFF320019), secondary: Color(0xFF003419), secondaryVariant: Color(0xFF002411), appBarColor: Color(0xFF002411), ); // Create a corresponding custom flex color scheme for a dark theme. const FlexSchemeColor myScheme1Dark = FlexSchemeColor( primary: Color(0xFF9E7389), primaryVariant: Color(0xFF775C69), secondary: Color(0xFF738F81), secondaryVariant: Color(0xFF5C7267), appBarColor: Color(0xFF5C7267), );
We can build a scheme the long way, by specifying all the required hand-picked scheme colors, like above, or we can also build schemes from a single primary color. With the FlexSchemeColor.from
factory. With the factory the only required color is the primary color, the other colors will be computed. You can optionally also provide the primaryVariant
, secondary
and secondaryVariant
colors with the factory as well, but any color that is not provided will always be computed for the full set of required colors in a FlexSchemeColor
.
In this example we create our 2nd scheme from just a primary color for the light and dark schemes. The custom appBarColor
will in this case also receive the same color value as the one that is computed for secondaryVariant
color, this is the default with the FlexSchemeColor.from
factory if the color is not specified. The used example color is an olive green like color.
final FlexSchemeColor myScheme2Light = FlexSchemeColor.from(primary: const Color(0xFF4C4E06)); final FlexSchemeColor myScheme2Dark = FlexSchemeColor.from(primary: const Color(0xFF9D9E76));
For our 3rd custom scheme we will define primary
and secondary
colors for the light color scheme, but no variant colors. We will not make any dark scheme definitions at all. The primary color is “Oregon” orange, and the used secondary color is a complementary dark teal like color.
final FlexSchemeColor myScheme3Light = FlexSchemeColor.from( primary: const Color(0xFF993200), secondary: const Color(0xFF1B5C62), );
Next we create a list with all the FlexSchemeData
objects we will use as our schemes in this example, starting with all the built-in ones and adding our three custom ones at the end.
A FlexSchemeData object stores
name
anddescription
plus the matchingFlexSchemeColor
forlight
anddark
mode color schemes. As a rule of thumb, the dark scheme colors must be less saturated than its light scheme colors used for a light theme. Using the same colors in a light and dark color schemes seldom produce nice looking or very usable dark and light theme mode pairs. You can read more in the Material Design guide about selecting suitable dark theme colors.
We first unpack the predefined FlexSchemeData
into the list myFlexSchemes
with the spread operator, add our own light and dark scheme definition pairs as FlexSchemeData
to the end. For our last custom FlexSchemeColor
myScheme3Light
that we did not make a matching dark scheme for, we instead use the .toDark()
method on the light scheme, to get one automatically computed from the defined light scheme colors.
final List<FlexSchemeData> myFlexSchemes = <FlexSchemeData>[ // Add ALL the predefined FlexColor schemes ...FlexColor.schemesList, // Then add our first custom schemes to the FlexSchemeData list. const FlexSchemeData( name: 'Toledo purple', description: 'Purple theme, created from full custom defined color scheme.', light: myScheme1Light, dark: myScheme1Dark, ), // Do the same for our second custom scheme. FlexSchemeData( name: 'Olive green', description: 'Olive green theme, created from primary light and dark colors.', light: myScheme2Light, dark: myScheme2Dark, ), FlexSchemeData( name: 'Oregon orange', description: 'Custom orange and blue theme, from only light scheme colors.', light: myScheme3Light, // We create the dark desaturated colors from the light scheme. dark: myScheme3Light.toDark(), ), ];
The setup of the stateful MaterialApp is just as simple as in the previous examples.
: class _DemoAppState extends State<DemoApp> { ThemeMode themeMode; // Used to select which FlexSchemeData we currently use in our list. int themeIndex; @override void initState() { themeMode = ThemeMode.light; themeIndex = 6; // Start with index 6, the brand blue colors. super.initState(); } @override Widget build(BuildContext context) { return MaterialApp( debugShowCheckedModeBanner: false, title: 'FlexColorScheme', // Light theme definition. theme: FlexColorScheme.light( // As scheme colors we use the one from our list // pointed to by the current themeIndex. colors: myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].light, // Medium strength surface branding used in this example. surfaceStyle: FlexSurface.medium, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme, // Just a repeat with equivalent setup for the dark theme. darkTheme: FlexColorScheme.dark( colors: myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].dark, surfaceStyle: FlexSurface.medium, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme, themeMode: themeMode, home: HomePage( themeMode: themeMode, onThemeModeChanged: (ThemeMode mode) { setState(() { themeMode = mode; }); }, // We pass the index of the active theme to the HomePage. schemeIndex: themeIndex, // Where we can select a new theme in a popup menu // and get its index back and update state. onSchemeChanged: (int index) { setState(() { themeIndex = index; }); }, // As FlexSchemeData is needed for info on the home // page, we just pass the used from out list // pointed to by our current themeIndex. flexSchemeData: myFlexSchemes[themeIndex], ), ); } }
When you build Example 4, it starts with the Brand blues theme. It is based on a scheme that uses blue colors found in different well known web brands. The primary blue color in the light scheme might thus look very familiar.
You can use the popup menu available in the ListTile showing the current theme to change the active theme. You can choose any of the built-in 24 schemes, plus the three custom color schemes we added. When you change scheme, you will notice that the active theme color changes are animated by interpolating from the active theme colors, to the new theme colors. This is a very nice standard feature when you modify the theme used by a Flutter Material applications.
Try some other theme, here is for example the Mango mojito theme.
Try example 4 live on the web here
Example 5 – Full Featured Demo
This example shows how you can use all the built-in color schemes in FlexColorScheme to define themes from them and how you can define your own custom scheme colors and use them together with the predefined ones. Like the previous example, this can give you an idea of how you can create your own complete custom list of color schemes if you do not want to use any of the predefined ones.
The example also shows how you can use the surface branding feature, vary its strength and how to use the custom app bar theme features. The usage of the true black theme feature for dark themes, is also demonstrated. Using the optional Windows desktop like tooltip theme is also shown.
The example includes a dummy responsive side menu and rail to give a visual presentation of what applications that have larger visible surfaces using the surface branding look like. A theme showcase widget again shows the theme with several common Material widgets.
A subpage is also available that show that the same active theme is also applied when opening another page. This is because all the built-in widgets use the same inherited theme and use the colors in the theme in predefined ways by default. This is also a good example and explanation of why you should use the same theme colors for your custom re-usable widgets as their default color property values. Then theme your application to make it look the way you want, rather than defining constants that you apply directly to widget color properties.
If you tried the previous examples on a device, and not on the Web or a built them as desktop targets, you might have noticed that the system navigation bar on Android devices does not always change. It is not themed to have matching background and theme mode that matches the active application theme as it changes. This example shows how this can be fixed and that the used method remain in effect when opening a subpage.
The same custom color schemes as in example 4, are also used in this example. They are not explained here again, please see example 4 for details. The full example code is not shown here either, please see the code in the package folder flex_color_scheme/example/lib/example5 for the entire example’s code.
Example 5 – Local State and Setup
In this example we will be able to toggle the used app bar theme style, the surfaces branding strength, tooltip style and try the true black theme toggle for dark-mode. This is done so that you can interactively try the options and see what they do.
You can also use the example to toggle the tabBarStyle
to use a theme that is designed to fit in an app bar, regardless of which style you have used for it. This is the default style for this sub theme. Alternatively you can choose a style that makes a TabBarTheme
that fits well on background colors. Use this option if you intend to use the TabBar primarily in a Scaffold body, in dialog or Drawer or other surface and background colored material, then you do not have re-theme it or style it for that purpose.
We also introduce a toggle that allows us to for all the schemes use the toDark
computed dark schemes, instead of the hand tuned built-in ones. You can then compare the results, the toDark
method does a pretty good job and can even be tuned with a property if so desired. If you use this toggle on the last custom scheme, you will not see any difference, because we already created its dark scheme with this method, the toggle just again computes the same dark scheme. There is also a slider that you can use to adjust the white blend level of the toDark
method from its default value of 35%, to be anything from 0…100 %, so you can experiment with it and see what it does.
Additionally, we will include a toggle that allows us to instead of using the FlexColorScheme.toTheme
method, use the standard flutter ThemeData.from
factory to create the theme from the same color scheme definitions. We can use this toggle to see and study the differences that FlexColorScheme.toTheme
brings.
: class _DemoAppState extends State<DemoApp> { // Used to select if we use the dark or light theme. ThemeMode themeMode; // Used to select which FlexSchemeData we use in our list of schemes. int themeIndex; // Enum used to control primary color branding on surface and background. FlexSurface flexSurface; // Enum used to select what app bar style we use. FlexAppBarStyle flexAppBarStyle; // Used to modify the themed app bar elevation. double appBarElevation; // Enum used to select what tab bar style we use. FlexTabBarStyle flexTabBarStyle; // If true, tooltip background will be light in light theme, and dark // in dark themes. The Flutter Material default and standard is the other // way, tooltip background color is inverted compared to app background. bool tooltipsMatchBackground; // Allow toggling between normal dark mode and true black dark mode. bool darkIsTrueBlack; // Allow toggling between using the actual defined dark color scheme or // try how it would look if we had not defined the dark colors, but had // been lazy and just created the dark scheme from the light scheme // with the toDark() method. bool useToDarkMethod; // The 'level' of white blend percentage used when computing dark scheme // colors from the light scheme colors with the toDark method. int level; // Use the toTheme to create Themes from `FlexColorScheme`. This is // the preferred method when using `FlexColorScheme`. In the demo // you can use a toggle to see what a FlexColorScheme looks like if // you the color scheme and `ThemeData.from` to instead create the theme. bool useToThemeMethod; @override void initState() { themeMode = ThemeMode.light; themeIndex = 7; // Start with deep blue see theme. flexSurface = FlexSurface.medium; flexAppBarStyle = FlexAppBarStyle.primary; appBarElevation = 0; flexTabBarStyle = FlexTabBarStyle.forAppBar; tooltipsMatchBackground = false; darkIsTrueBlack = false; useToDarkMethod = false; level = 35; useToThemeMethod = true; super.initState(); }
Example 5 – The FlexColorScheme Properties and toTheme
We define the light theme for the app, using current theme index, selected surface style and app bar style. With the built-in 24 themes, and the three custom ones we made, we can use 27 different app themes via the setup below, times the five surface styles and five app bar variants.
The factory FlexColorScheme.light
is used to define a FlexColorScheme
for a light theme, from the light FlexSchemeColor in the myFlexSchemes
list, plus some other properties, like the surface and app bar style used in this example, as well as the tooltip and true black setting for the dark theme.
: @override Widget build(BuildContext context) { return MaterialApp( debugShowCheckedModeBanner: false, title: 'FlexColorScheme', theme: useToThemeMethod ? FlexColorScheme.light( colors: myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].light, surfaceStyle: flexSurface, appBarStyle: flexAppBarStyle, appBarElevation: appBarElevation, tabBarStyle: flexTabBarStyle, tooltipsMatchBackground: tooltipsMatchBackground, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme
Example 5 – The FlexColorScheme Properties and toScheme
We also demonstrate how to create the same theme with the standard from color scheme ThemeData factory ThemeData.from
. The surface style works, but will not be applied as elegantly, but it works fairly OK up to medium branding. The app bar style has no effect, nor the tooltip or tab bar style.
When toggling between the standard ThemeData.from
and the FlexColorScheme.toTheme
made themes from the same ColorScheme
data, we can observe the differences and see some theme colors that the standard method does not adjust to match the used color scheme. The previously mentioned article also includes a visual presentation of the differences.
: ThemeData.from( colorScheme: FlexColorScheme.light( colors: myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].light, surfaceStyle: flexSurface, appBarStyle: flexAppBarStyle, appBarElevation: appBarElevation, tabBarStyle: flexTabBarStyle, tooltipsMatchBackground: tooltipsMatchBackground, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toScheme, ).copyWith( visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, typography: Typography.material2018( platform: defaultTargetPlatform, ), ),
To make this switch work interactively we also have to make sure we use the same typography as the one used in FlexColorScheme, otherwise the animated theme will show an assertion error, since it cannot animate between the different defaults for the used typography. To fix this, we use the same nicer and newer typography that is used by default by FlexColorScheme based themes. We also add the visual density to the ThemeData with the same copyWith
so we get the same Widget spacing as the one used in out toTheme
setup.
IMPORTANT
When using FlexColorScheme and making themes with it, you would normally NOT USE THE ABOVE toScheme APPROACH. It is ONLY included in this example to be able to demonstrate the theme adjustments provided by FlexColorScheme.toTheme
. That being said, it is as shown totally possible to do so if you for some reasons prefer the results with the toScheme
approach. By doing so you do however loose most of the end results and features offered by FlexColorScheme
. You can see an example visual comparison and presentation of the differences here.
The used FlexColorScheme.light
properties appBarStyle
, appBarElevation
, tabBarStyle
, tooltipsMatchBackground
and visualDensity
in the example above, actually have no impact at all on the returned ColorScheme
by toScheme
. It can only return colors in a ColorScheme
, that of course have no such theming concepts. Definition of these values above could just as well be removed in the above example, but they were left in there to demonstrate that for this NOT recommended FlexColorScheme theme definition method, they have no impact on the end result. Only properties that adjust scheme colors, like colors
, scheme
, surfaceStyle
and usedColors
will have an impact on the toScheme
returned by FlexColorScheme.
Example 5 – Equivalent Setup for the Dark Theme, but with More Options
We do the equivalent definition for the dark theme, and we add the true black option as well. We also use the useToDarkMethod
boolean as switch for colors
to pass it a FlexSchemeColor
that is either using the predefined ones or computes it from its light FlexSchemeColor
.
For the toDark
calculation we give it the level property that allows us to tune the dark conversion with the slider in the UI. We also use the defaultError
modifier. This ensures that the resulting computed toDark scheme will ignore any existing light scheme error color definition, and use Material default dark mode error color as its error color. Without this modifier, toDark will also compute the error color for the dark scheme from the light scheme’s error color. It will thus also change with the level adjustment. This is certainly also a usable option, but in this example we do not want this behavior.
darkTheme: useToThemeMethod ? FlexColorScheme.dark( colors: useToDarkMethod ? myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].light.defaultError.toDark(level) : myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].dark, surfaceStyle: flexSurface, appBarStyle: flexAppBarStyle, appBarElevation: appBarElevation, tabBarStyle: flexTabBarStyle, tooltipsMatchBackground: tooltipsMatchBackground, darkIsTrueBlack: darkIsTrueBlack, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toTheme : ThemeData.from( colorScheme: FlexColorScheme.dark( colors: useToDarkMethod ? myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].light.defaultError.toDark(level) : myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].dark, surfaceStyle: flexSurface, appBarStyle: flexAppBarStyle, appBarElevation: appBarElevation, tabBarStyle: flexTabBarStyle, tooltipsMatchBackground: tooltipsMatchBackground, darkIsTrueBlack: darkIsTrueBlack, visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, ).toScheme, ).copyWith( visualDensity: FlexColorScheme.comfortablePlatformDensity, typography: Typography.material2018( platform: defaultTargetPlatform, ), ),
What does defaultError actually do?
ThedefaultError
modifier creates a new copy of the object, whereerror
color is null. This causes thetoDark
method to skip it and keep it as null, it then gets the default Material error via thetoTheme
method. For the customFlexSchemeColor
objects we made for example 4 and 5, we did not specify any error color, so they are alreadynull
and get the default fixed Material error in dark mode anyway. However, the built-in schemes do specify their error color for both their light and dark schemes, mostly they use the same Material default error color, but some red colored schemes use the high contrast Material error color. Because the light error color is defined, if we do not wanttoDark
to compute a dark scheme error color that changes with the level, we can modify its value to null beforetoDark
is used.
Example 5 – Passing All the Values Back and Forth to the HomePage
The rest of the additions in the stateful MaterialApp are just passing in current values and getting a new value for it via callbacks for all our settings and their current values.
It is certainly getting tedious to do it this way by now, but since it was stated that we would not add any advanced state management solution or verbose inherited widget to these bundled examples. We are sticking to this way in this more complex example as well. Let it at the same time be a good example of why and when a state management solution should really be considered.
// themeMode value and change callback. themeMode: themeMode, home: HomePage( themeMode: themeMode, onThemeModeChanged: (ThemeMode mode) { setState(() { themeMode = mode; }); }, // Used theme index and change callback. schemeIndex: themeIndex, onSchemeChanged: (int index) { setState(() { themeIndex = index;}); }, // Used surface branding and change callback. themeSurface: flexSurface, onThemeSurfaceChanged: (FlexSurface surface) { setState(() { flexSurface = surface; }); }, // Used app bar style and change callback. appBarStyle: flexAppBarStyle, onAppBarStyleChanged: (FlexAppBarStyle style) { setState(() { flexAppBarStyle = style; }); }, // WUsed app bar elevation and change value callback. appBarElevation: appBarElevation, onAppBarElevationChanged: (double value) { setState(() { appBarElevation = value; }); }, // Used tab bar style and change callback. tabBarStyle: flexTabBarStyle, onTabBarStyleChanged: (FlexTabBarStyle style) { setState(() { flexTabBarStyle = style; }); }, // Used tooltip style and change callback. tooltipsMatchBackground: tooltipsMatchBackground, onTooltipsMatchBackgroundChanged: (bool value) { setState(() { tooltipsMatchBackground = value; }); }, // True black mode and change callback. darkIsTrueBlack: darkIsTrueBlack, onDarkIsTrueBlackChanged: (bool value) { setState(() { darkIsTrueBlack = value; }); }, // Dark scheme method and toggle method callback. useToDark: useToDarkMethod, onUseToDarkChanged: (bool value) { setState(() { useToDarkMethod = value; }); }, // Dark scheme white blend level and change callback. whiteBlend: level, onWhiteBlendChanged: (int value) { setState(() { level = value; }); }, // Theme creation method and toggle method callback. useToTheme: useToThemeMethod, onUseToThemeChanged: (bool value) { setState(() { useToThemeMethod = value; }); }, // And pass the current FlexSchemeData to the // homePage so we can use some info from it. // We use copyWith to modify the dark scheme to // the colors we get from toggling the switch // for computed dark colors or the actual defined // dark colors. flexSchemeData: myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].copyWith( dark: useToDarkMethod ? myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].light.toDark() : myFlexSchemes[themeIndex].dark), ), ); } }
With this example we include a side rail, it expands to a menu on desktop/web when using a larger canvas, it even does this in phone landscape mode. This just a dummy for demo purposes. It is here to give a better idea and presentation of what a surface branded theme looks like. The effect is best viewed and experienced on a tablet, or the with a desktop browser via the live web demo, where the surface branded theming effect is more obvious.
Example 5 – Themed System Navigation Bar in Android
The HomePage’s build method for this example starts by wrapping the entire page content in an AnnotatedRegion
with a value that we get from the static helper FlexColorScheme.themedSystemNavigationBar(context)
.
Using this setup we can get a system navigation bar, typically on older Android phones that still uses one, that also follows the active theme’s background color and theme mode. The system navigation bar will get updated as you select new themes, different background color branding style and strength, and toggle dark and light theme mode. Many Flutter applications neglect or forget to include this feature in their themes.
return AnnotatedRegion<SystemUiOverlayStyle>( value: FlexColorScheme.themedSystemNavigationBar(context), child: ... );
Example 5 – Building the Example
The above concludes the code walk through of example 5. When we build it, the example starts with the deep blue sea scheme. In the example below we can also see the correctly themed system navigation bar on the Android device.
Try example 5 live on the web here
Example 5 – Computed Dark Theme
Since example 5 allows us to toggle the dark mode from using its hand tuned predefined dark scheme colors, to the dark scheme colors computed from the light scheme colors. Let’s use that feature study and compare some examples.
With the above deep blue sea scheme, the computed ones are a bit more dull and muted in this example. These screenshots are using medium surface branding, the computed dark scheme is on the right.
With some other schemes, like the Aqua blue one there is only a minor difference. These screenshots are using strong surface branding, the computed dark scheme is on the right.
Example 5 – Computed Dark Theme with Level Adjustment
The result of the toDark
method varies depending on how saturated the used light scheme colors are. It is possible to tune the calculated dark scheme by modifying the whiteBlend
property it uses to blend in white to make the dark scheme. The default whiteBlend
is 35%, this is normally a suitable value. For more saturated light scheme colors try 40%, which is also used in the Material design guide to convert the default red error color for light mode, to dark mode. For light scheme color with low saturation, a white blend of 20…30% often also produces nice results.
With the included level slider in the example we can interactively change the whiteBlend
level for the computed dark mode scheme colors. Let’s select a color scheme, say the Brand blues one, then go dark. By default, the built-in predefined hand-picked matching dark scheme colors for the dark theme mode are used.
Turn on the “Compute dark theme” mode, the result is pretty close to the predefined one for this dark scheme with the default level of 35%. Then adjust the white level blend to tune how saturated the computed dark scheme colors are compared to their light scheme master. At 0% they are the same as the light scheme, at 100%, well then they are white, not so useful. A range of 10…50% can produce excellent results. What is best depends on how saturated your starting light scheme colors are, and of course what kind of matching dark theme look you like and want. If you use the even darker dark-mode, true black, you may want to have a different saturation for your dark scheme colors compared to standard dark-mode surface. You could easily implement that adjustment with this feature.
This screen recording compares the computed toDark
theme result, to the built-in hand-picked one. It does this by toggling the mode a few times, so you can compare the different results. It also uses the level slider to adjust the toDark
theme result. A sharp eye might notice that this recording does not use the defaultError
error color modifier, the changing dark error color does not look so nice when tuning the computed scheme colors. The bundled example 5 and live web version of it uses the modifier.
Example 5 – Branded Surfaces and App Bar Options
Let us now explore the effect of branded surface colors. Branded surfaces are often associated with dark mode, but it works well with light mode too when applied delicately. Below you can see how the primary color gets blended into Material surface and even stronger so, into Material background colors. The screenshots below are using the medium branding strength.
You can use the toggle in the example to change from standard no branded surfaces colors, to light, medium, strong and heavy.
The scaffold background does not receive any branding until the heavy mode. You might think that this and all the other theming can be done by just passing the same scheme colors to the ThemeData.from
factory. That is why this demo allows you to flip a switch to do just that, so you can see and observe the difference between color scheme based themes created by FlexColorScheme.toTheme
and ThemeData.from
.
Feel free to experiment with the live web demo where the differences are even easier to observe since you can have both versions open side by side, in a large browser windows. A ready-made example comparison can be found here.
Now that when we tried basic surface color branding, we can test the tricks FlexColorScheme
can do with the AppBarTheme
and how you can match it to your surface branding if you like.
You can easily toggle both dark and light mode app bar’s to use differently themed backgrounds than the normal ColorScheme
primary colored one in light-mode, and dark background in dark-mode, that you get when you create a theme with ThemeData.from(colorScheme)
.
Even without using a separately defined AppBarTheme
, FlexColorScheme app bars can use scheme primary color, the default Material plain white/dark background color, or the primary branded surface, or primary branded background color, as well as an extra custom app bar scheme color, as the app bar’s themed background color.
The FlexColorScheme
scheme’s appBarColor
is a separate scheme color that does not exist in Flutter’s standard ColorScheme
, so it does not have to be any of the colors available in a ColorScheme
. The predefined schemes use the color defined in a ColorScheme
scheme’s secondaryVariant
color, as their value for the custom appBarColor
. When you make your own schemes you can do the same or use a totally none ColorScheme
related color as the app bar’s custom color option. This color then becomes one of the FlexColorScheme’s easy selectable app bar theme color options, via the appBarStyle
property and the FlexAppBarStyle
enum, in this case via the custom
choice.
Below you can see some different branding strengths with a background primary color branded app bar theme used. This example compares medium versus heavy branding. The medium choice is usually well-balanced, but light can be subtle and nice too. If you want to make a bold statement theme, go with heavy. Please note that the visual impact of the branding also depends on how saturated the primary color is.
Here are few more images of the heavy primary color branded version, when looking at some widgets as well.
Example 5 – The TabBar Style
The tabBarStyle
property can be used to toggle the theme the tab bar receives. By default, a theme that is designed to make it fit in an app bar, regardless of which style you have selected for it, is used. This is the FlexTabBarStyle.forAppBar
style. The typical usage of a TabBar is to have it in an AppBar, and the default style works for this use case.
Alternatively you can choose a style that makes a TabBarTheme
that fits well on background colors. Use this option if you only intend to use the TabBar in a Scaffold body, in Dialogs, Drawers or other surface and background colored Material, then you do not have re-theme it or style it separately for this purpose.
If you intend to use TabBar widgets in both AppBar’s and on surface and backgrounds, you will have to choose the style that makes most sense for your use case and theme it separately for the other case, just like you have to do with Flutter standard TabBar theme as well.
Which tab bar style and resulting tab bar theme, actually works best, depends on the background color. Here we see tab bars used on surfaces and in an app bar, when the app bar is using the primary color. As can be seen, the tab bar theme that goes well in an app bar in such a case, does not fit on the surfaces at all, and wise versa.
If you plan to use only surface, background (also the branded ones) colored app bars, you can see that both tab bar styles, and their resulting themes work for both situations. The difference is minor, and it is a matter of opinion which one is preferable. Both style options can be used if you restrict your app bar color to background colors. In such a use case you can get away with using just one of the built-in style options, even if you use tab bars in both app bars and on other surfaces.
Example 5 – True Black
Dark-mode is nice, but with FlexColorScheme
you can go even darker, go true black with the flick of a switch. When using the true black option for dark-mode, surface, background and scaffold background are set to fully black. This can save power on OLED screens as the pixels are turned off, but it can also cause scrolling artefact issues when pixels turn fully on and off rapidly as you scroll. You can read about this and see an example of it in the Material design guide as well. (Scroll back up one heading from the link to get to the mention of it.)
If you use branded surfaces with true black mode enabled, you will notice that the branding has a lower impact, only at strong and heavy levels does it have a visible effect. This is by design to keep most surfaces totally or very close to black when true black is combined with surface branding. If you really want complete black for all surfaces and backgrounds, then avoid combining true black mode with branded surfaces. On the other hand it still makes a darker theme than normal dark theme, which can look nice, and it eliminates the scrolling issue since all background colored pixels are not fully off in the strong and heavy branded true black modes.
Here is an example of a branded dark theme with true black OFF (default and standard) and true black ON, when using heavy branding with the Red red wine color scheme.
Here is another difference example with the Deep blue sea scheme, when using medium strength surface branding, and a primary colored app bar in dark-mode.
Android Transparent System Navigation Bar
Version 1.4.0 adds experimental support for transparent system navigation bar for Android for SDK >= 30. The support is added via the new opacity
property in FlexColorScheme.themedSystemNavigationBar
. A separate example that builds on example 5 for this more advanced use case, shows and explains how and when transparent system navigation bar can be used in Android.
The example also shows how to manage it so that it looks as nice as possible when using primary color branded background color, applied to the system navigation bar in Android, when transparency is not supported, and your app uses transparent system navigation bar when running on an API level that supports it.
Please see the separate small stand-alone example Android project called sysnavbar on GitHub for full details.
With this experimental feature you can make an Android system navigation that looks like the left one below when it is supported, but falls back to just being theme color branded, like the right one, on API levels that do not support it.
The example below uses the classical system navigation bar with the navigation buttons, but it also works when the phone settings is changed to the much smaller gesture bar or on phones that don’t even have a visible gesture bar.
Please note that phones with API30 (Android 11), were when this was written (Jan 16, 2021) still very rare, and at the time did not even register on stats counter. This will improve over time.
Behind the Scenes
FlexColorScheme does not actually use the ThemeData.from
factory with a passed in ColorScheme
to make its theme. It uses the ThemeData
factory directly with some custom theming. It does of course define a ColorScheme
that it uses for the ThemeData
. FlexColorScheme uses color calculations for the primary color brand blended surfaces, and for the lazy schemes that do not specify all colors in a color scheme.
None Null Sub-Themes
Flutter’s default Theme and its ThemeData is moving towards a design where all the sub-theme’s in the default ThemeData are NULL. It is always the widget that defines the default behavior and look when its sub-theme and its properties are null and its properties for the same values are null. The widget colors for such cases are then defined by ThemeData.of(context).colorScheme
.
This Flutter theming design goal was described in this document. It is mostly implemented by now, but there might still be some sub-themes in Flutter SDK remaining that do not fully adhere to this design.
FlexColorScheme sets ThemeData.of(context).colorScheme
to ensure that its colors are applied to all widgets that adhere to this newer standard. It also sets all still existing legacy colors in ThemeData.of(context)
, that some Flutter Widgets still use, to use scheme appropriate or scheme derived colors. Thanks to this there should not be any built-in Widgets in Flutter that do not get color scheme themed by FlexColorScheme.
The ThemeData created by FlexColorScheme().toTheme
also tries to not create and modify sub-themes when it does not have to. However, to meet its design goals, FlexColorScheme has to create a number of sub-themes and set some of their properties. In some rare cases this is done to correct theming issues in Flutter, but mostly to reach its own design goals. Further below is a list of all the sub-themes it creates and properties that you can currently expect to have none null values in them. These sub-themes and their properties, would otherwise be null when just using default ThemeData()
or ThemeData.from()
factories, if they did not specify sub-themes.
Even though these sub-themes currently are not null, and have some none null properties, it is still recommended to always use a null fallback value if you are accessing ThemeData sub-themes and their properties in ThemeData.of(context)
.
For example, when using the Floating Action Button’s theme data, don’t just use:
final Color fabColor = Theme.of(context).floatingActionButtonTheme.backgroundColor;
It should never be considered fully safe to access properties like it without using null fallbacks. Instead, do something similar to this:
final Color fabColor = Theme.of(context)?.floatingActionButtonTheme?.backgroundColor ?? Theme.of(context).colorScheme.secondary;
Where we in this example fall back to the color that the FAB widget would use by default, if its sub-theme data or its background color is not defined. The above definition is already much safer, if you always expect to find a Color value. You can certainly add even more null fallbacks to it, but for them to be needed you probably have other use case issues as well.
FlexColorScheme will try to not change past creation of its none null sub-themes, but ultimately changes to these implementation details are only considered breaking if they produce a theme that is visibly different from past behavior.
Flutter SDK may also change some of its implementation details of ThemeData. Take for example the broken Chip case, if it is modified to fix its dark theme bug, then FlexColorScheme would have no reason for its own fix. In cases where Flutter defaults moves in a direction that the same definition is no longer needed in FlexColorScheme, such sub-theme definitions may eventually be removed, but not without due warning.
One current such case is actually the floatingActionButtonTheme
sub-theme that FlexColorScheme currently creates. The used sub-theme does not change current default behavior. However, in some earlier versions of Flutter there was a severe deprecation warning if the current sub-theme was not defined. (FlexColorScheme actually existed for quite a while before it was published as a package on pub.dev, the current definition is a remnant of that). It was recently observed that in current Flutter version, the Flutter SDK default and FlexColorScheme sub-theme now agrees 100% on the design and there is no longer any deprecated warning if the sub-theme is totally removed from FlexColorScheme’s theme definition. This sub-theme definition is thus no longer necessary and will be removed from FlexColorScheme. In this case it will wait until release 2.0.0 (null safe version) that will contain other breaking changes as well. Consider this as pre-info of this change though.
- AppBarTheme in
ThemeData.appBarTheme
is NOT null.
The actual values are defined to match the offered convenience theming options for the AppBar. The property values depend on made configuration choices. When the these matters land in stable #71184 #72206 the implementation will be changed. Some currently defined properties may no longer be required be defined when the new feature for app bar land in stable channel.- TextTheme: A custom textTheme to enable white app bars. This one will be removed when above new app bar theming features land in stable channel.
- color: Depends on chosen app bar theme style.
- brightness: : Depends on chosen app bar theme style.
- iconTheme: Not null, defines:
- color: : Depends on chosen app bar theme style.
- actionsIconTheme: Not null, defines:
- color: : Depends on chosen app bar theme style.
- elevation: As defined, default is 0
- BottomAppBarTheme in
ThemeData.bottomAppBarTheme
is NOT null.- Color:
colorScheme.background
- elevation: As defined, default is 0
- Color:
- TextSelectionThemeData in
ThemeData.bottomAppBarTheme
is NOT null.- selectionColor:
dark ? primary.withOpacity(0.50) : primary.withOpacity(0.30)
- selectionHandleColor:
primaryColorDark
- selectionColor:
- InputDecorationTheme in
ThemeData.inputDecorationTheme
is NOT null.- filled:
true
- fillColor:
dark ? primary.withOpacity(0.06) : primary.withOpacity(0.35)
- filled:
- ButtonThemeData in
ThemeData.buttonTheme
is NOT null.- colorScheme:
colorScheme
- textTheme:
ButtonTextTheme.primary
- materialTapTargetSize:
MaterialTapTargetSize.shrinkWrap
- padding:
EdgeInsets.symmetric(horizontal: 16)
- colorScheme:
- ChipThemeData in
ThemeData.chipTheme
is NOT null.
It is defined to fix issue #65663 and uses ChipThemeData.fromDefaults to set:- secondaryColor:
colorScheme.primary
- brightness:
colorScheme.brightness
- labelStyle:
textTheme.bodyText1
- secondaryColor:
- FloatingActionButtonThemeData in
ThemeData.floatingActionButtonTheme
is NOT null.
NOTE This sub-theme will be removed in version 2.0.0, its sub-theme definition is no longer needed. Flutter SDK default now results in the same design by default.
It currently sets:- backgroundColor:
colorScheme.secondary
- foregroundColor:
colorScheme.onSecondary
- backgroundColor:
- TabBarTheme in
ThemeData.tabBarTheme
is NOT null.
Its colors depend on if a theme appropriate for current active app bar background color (default), or one for background and surface color usage is selected. It sets:- indicatorSize:
TabBarIndicatorSize.tab
- labelStyle:
TextTheme().button
- labelColor: Depends on selected and targeted main usage.
- unselectedLabelColor: Depends on selected and targeted main usage.
- indicatorSize:
- BottomNavigationBarThemeData in
ThemeData.bottomNavigationBarTheme
is NOT null.- selectedIconTheme: Not null, defines:
- color:
colorScheme.primary
- color:
- selectedItemColor:
colorScheme.primary
- selectedIconTheme: Not null, defines:
- TooltipThemeData in
ThemeData.tooltipTheme
is NOT null. This theme is modified to address issue #71429 and to also enable a toggle that inverts the tooltip colors, which is a style often used on Windows desktops. The toggle can be used to change the style depending on the current platform. The used logic and theme changes are defined as.- margin:
EdgeInsets.symmetric(horizontal: 12, vertical: 6)
- padding:
desktop ? EdgeInsets.fromLTRB(8, 3, 8, 4) : EdgeInsets.symmetric(horizontal: 16, vertical: 8)
- textStyle:textTheme.bodyText2.copyWith( inherit: false, color: tooltipsMatchBackground ? dark ? Colors.white : Colors.black : dark ? Colors.black : Colors.white, fontSize: desktop ? 12 : 14)
- decoration:tooltipsMatchBackground ? BoxDecoration( color: dark ? Colors.grey[900].withOpacity(0.93) : Colors.white.withOpacity(0.94), borderRadius: const BorderRadius.all(Radius.circular(4)), border: Border.all(color: dark ? Colors.grey[600] : Colors.grey[900])) : null // Use default Flutter SDK decoration.
- margin:
ThemeData Default Modifications
In addition to the primary color branded surfaces, full shaded schemes from just one primary color, true black and app bar convenience tricks. The returned ThemeData
contains some opinionated modifications and theme corrections compared to what you get if you would just use the standard ThemeData.from
with a ColorScheme
.
You can still of course override the returned theme data with your own theme modifications and additions, by using the copyWith
method on the resulting theme data object.
The following lists the full details of what the differences compared to the standard ThemeData.from
factory are, as well as the rationale behind the made design choices and changes to the defaults.
ScaffoldBackground
has its own color property inFlexColorScheme
and can if so desired differ from theColorScheme.background
color. In the used surface branding implementation, thescaffoldBackground
typically gets no primary branding applied. Only in the heavy choice is there a small amount. Whereasbackground
in a FlexColorScheme theme receives the most color branding of the surface colors. This fits well for where thebackground
color is typically used in Material background by Widgets, but it does not go so well together withscaffoldBackground
, which is the reason why it has its own color value in this implementation.- The
dialogBackgroundColor
uses theColorScheme.surface
color instead ofColorScheme.background
. Thebackground
color needed the strongest branding when branding is used, but this did not look so good on dialogs, so its color choice was changed tosurface
instead, that gets much lighter branding in FlexColorScheme when it is used. With standard Material surface colors, thebackground
andsurface
colors are the same, so there is no difference when using the default background and surface colors. - The
indicatorColor
is same as effectiveTabColor which uses a function with logic to determine its color bases on if a TabBarTheme was selected that should work on current app bar background color, or on surface/background colors. - For
toggleableActiveColor
theColorScheme.secondary
color is used. The Flutter default just uses the defaultThemeData
colors and not the actual colors you define in theColorScheme
you create your theme from. Perhaps an oversight in Flutter? See issue #65782. - Flutter themes created with
ThemeData.from
do not define any color scheme related color for theprimaryColorDark
color, this method does. See issue #65782. TheThemeData.from
leaves this color atThemeData
factory default, this may not match your scheme. Widgets seldom use this color, so the issue is rarely seen. - Flutter themes created with
ThemeData.from
do not define any color scheme based color for theprimaryColorLight
color, this method does. See issue #65782. TheThemeData.from
leaves this color atThemeData
factory default this may not match your scheme. Widgets seldom use this color, so the issue is rarely seen. - Flutter themes created with
ThemeData.from
do not define any color scheme based color for thesecondaryHeaderColor
color, this method does. See issue #65782.ThemeData.from
leaves this color atThemeData
factory default this may not match your scheme. Widgets seldom use this color, so the issue is rarely seen. - Background color for
AppBarTheme
can use a custom colored app bar theme in both light and dark themes, that is not dependent on theme primary or surface color. This functionality needs a custom text theme to be possible to implement without a context. This implementation does however not get correctly localized typography.A new feature implemented via #71184 also enables this kind app bar theme and keep the correct typography localization. This new feature is (as of 31.12.2020) not yet available on channel stable. The first version on master could also not be enabled via Themes only, one also had to opt in on AppBar level making it difficult to adopt the feature. I wrote a proposal to introduce opt-in on theme level too, see #72206. The proposal has already been implemented. When these new features land in stable channel, the implementation below will be changed to use the new AppBarTheme feature, which is better than the current work-around since we no longer need a custom text theme. - The
AppBarTheme
elevation defaults to 0, an iOs style influenced opinionated choice. It can easily be adjusted directly in theFlexColorScheme
definition with property valueappBarElevation
without creating a sub theme or usingcopyWith
. - The
bottomAppBarColor
uses color scheme background color to match the background color of the drawer, bottom navigation bar, possible side menu and system navigation bar on android (if theming of it is used). This is a slight change from the ColorScheme default that uses surface color. - The
BottomAppBarTheme
elevation defaults toappBarElevation
or 0 if it is null, an iOs style influenced opinionated choice. It can easily be adjusted directly in theFlexColorScheme
definition with property valuebottomAppBarElevation
without creating a sub theme or usingcopyWith
. - A deviation from
ThemeData.from
color scheme based theme’s is thatThemeData.accentColor
is set toColorScheme.primary
and not tosecondary
if not otherwise defined. This is done to get an easy way for borders onTextField.decoration
to use theme based primary color in dark-mode, and notaccentColor
color.There may be a bug in the wayInputDecorationTheme
gets used by theInputDecorator
. We were unable to define a theme that would work correctly for such a setup without resorting to makingaccentColor
equal toThemeData.primaryColor
. This definition has less of an impact visually to any built-in widgets than one might suspect. With all the other included theme definitions, we saw no other widget that usedaccentColor
. FAB and toggles have their own theme and default colors, so they still use the default expectedcolorScheme.secondary
color despite this change. - The
accentColor
is made available as a separate scheme property. This done to enable control of theOutlineInputBorder()
active border color property in color scheme based themes for dark theme-mode. This is just provided as an easy way to override its customized definition without using acopyWith
on the resulting ThemeData. - In
TextSelectionThemeData
, the standard forselectionColor
iscolorScheme.primary
with opacity value0.4
for dark-mode and0.12
for light mode. Here, primary with0.5
opacity for dark-mode and0.3
for light mode is used. The standard forselectionHandleColor
iscolorScheme.primary
, here we use the slightly darker shadeprimaryColorDark
instead, which does not have a proper color scheme color value in Flutter standardColorScheme
based themes. - A predefined slightly opinionated
InputDecorationTheme
is used. It setsfilled
totrue
and fill color to color scheme primary color with opacity0.035
in light mode and with opacity0.06
in dark-mode. Another theme design change is done via modification of theThemeData.accentColor
described earlier. Since the used theme, like the default theme, does not define aborder
property ofTextField
, an app can still easily use both the default underline style, or the outline style by just specifying the defaultOutlineInputBorder()
for the border property when outlined TextField is desired. If you don’t want the filled style, or the primary colored borders in dark-mode, you can override them back withcopyWith
. For totally different border color in dark-mode you can alternatively specify it via theaccentColor
property. Which should not affect any other color than this border color when using FlexColorScheme based themes. - The property
fixTextFieldOutlineLabel
is set totrue
by default, it looks better. The only reason why it is not the default in Flutter, is for default backwards legacy design compatibility. - Button theming is applied to
ThemeData.buttonColor
using color scheme primary color. The entire color scheme is passed to old button’sButtonThemeData
and it usestextTheme
set toButtonTextTheme.primary
, plus minor changes to padding and tap target size. These modifications make the old buttons almost match the default design and look of their corresponding newer buttons. Thus, theRaisedButton
looks very similar toElevatedButton
,OutlineButton
toOutlinedButton
andFlatButton
toTextButton
. There are some differences in margins and looks, especially in dark-mode, but they are very similar.This is a button style we used before the introduction of the new buttons with their improved defaults. It just happened to be very close, since the theme was based on how things looked in the Material design guide already prior to Google releasing the new Flutter Material buttons that fully implement the correct Material design.The newer buttons are nicer, especially when it comes to their interactions and all the theming options they provide, but they are a bit verbose to theme. If you want to make custom styled buttons we still recommend using the newer buttons instead of the old ones, as they offer more customization possibilities. Still, this theming applied to the old buttons make them look close enough to the new ones, to the extent that most might not even notice if you still use the old buttons. - The default theme for Chips contain a design bug that makes the selected
ChoiceChip
widget look disabled in dark-mode, regardless if was created withThemeData
orThemeData.from
factory. See issue #65663. TheChipThemeData
modification used here fixes the issue. - The
FloatingActionButtonTheme
is set as follows:FloatingActionButtonThemeData( backgroundColor: colorScheme.secondary, foregroundColor: colorScheme.onSecondary)NOTE
This definition will be removed in version 2.0.0.
It is no longer needed. Flutter SDK now produces the same end result by default. - For
TabBarTheme
, the Flutter standard selected tab and indicator color is onSurface in dark-mode and onPrimary in light mode, which is designed to fit an AppBar colored TabBar. This is kept, and the default viaFlexTabBarStyle.forAppBar
style, with a minor modification. If AppBar is “light”, then black87 is used, not black, it is the same as the textTheme on AppBar in light app bar brightness. If theFlexTabBarStyle.forBackground
style was used, the selected color is always color scheme primary color, which works well on surface, background and scaffold background colors.The unselected TabBar color whenFlexTabBarStyle.forBackground
style is used, is always the onSurface color with 60% opacity. This is also the color if the AppBar background color brightness is light AND its color is white, surface or background colored. Otherwise, when the styleFlexTabBarStyle.forAppBar
is used, the unselected tab bar color is the selected tab color with 70% opacity. This opacity value is the same as Flutter default for the default theme that is also designed for AppBar usage. - The
BottomNavigationBarThemeData
uses color scheme primary color for the selected item. Flutter defaults to secondary color. Primary color is a design used on iOS by default for the bottom navigation bar. We agree and think it looks better as the default choice for apps. - Default
tooltipTheme
in Flutter is currently a bit flawed on desktop and web, because it defaults to using a very small font (10dp). See issue #71429.The default theming also does not handle multiline tooltips very well. The here usedTooltipThemeData
theme design, corrects both these issues. It uses 12dp font on desktop and web instead of 10dp, and some padding instead of a height constraint to ensure that multiline tooltips look nice too.FlexColorScheme also includes a new boolean propertytooltipsMatchBackground
, that can be toggled to not use Flutter’s Material default design that has a theme mode inverted background. Tooltips using light background in light theme and dark in dark, are commonly used on the Windows desktop platform. You can easily tie this extra property to the used platform to make an automatic platform adaptation of the tooltip style if you like, or give users a preference toggle where they change the tooltip style to their liking. - The property
transparentStatusBar
is set to true by default. This is used to make to the AppBar one-toned on Android devices, like on iOS devices. Set it tofalse
if you want to restore the default Android design.This modification is in current implementation made with an extra call toSystemChrome.setSystemUIOverlayStyle
to make the statusBarColor transparent. The used implementation will be changed when the new AppBarTheme #71184 lands in channel stable that allows us to modify its AnnotatedRegion with a passed inSystemOverlayStyle
.FlexColorScheme also offers a helper that allows us to easily create an annotated region for the system navigation bar that uses the active color scheme and theme mode to make use a correctly colored theme colored background for the active theme. See example 5 for an explanation on how to use this.
Appendix A – Built-in Scheme Reference
This table lists all current built-in schemes and provides a link to a high-resolution example phone image of each one.
FlexScheme | Name | Description | Light | Dark |
---|---|---|---|---|
material | Material default | Default Material color theme, used in the design guide. | Light | Dark |
materialHc | Material high contrast | High contrast Material design guide theme. | Light | Dark |
blue | Blue delight | Blue color theme, based on Material blue and light blue colors. | Light | Dark |
indigo | Indigo nights | Indigo color theme, based on Material indigo and deep purple colors. | Light | Dark |
hippieBlue | Hippie blue | Hippie blue with surfie green and chock coral pink theme. | Light | Dark |
aquaBlue | Aqua blue | Aqua tropical ocean blue theme. | Light | Dark |
brandBlue | Brand blues | Blue colors used in well known brand themes. | Light | Dark |
deepBlue | Deep blue sea | Dark deep blue sea color theme. | Light | Dark |
sakura | Pink sakura | Pink color theme, based on sakura cherry blossom like colors. | Light | Dark |
mandyRed | Oh Mandy red | Mandy red and Viking blue inspired red theme. | Light | Dark |
red | Red tornado | Red color theme, based on Material red and pink colors. | Light | Dark |
redWine | Red red wine | Red color theme, based on red wine like colors. | Light | Dark |
purpleBrown | Purple brown | Purple brown tinted aubergine and eggplant colored theme. | Light | Dark |
green | Green forest | Green color theme, based on Material green and cyan colors. | Light | Dark |
money | Green money | Green money and finance style color theme. | Light | Dark |
jungle | Green jungle | Green jungle and rain forest color theme. | Light | Dark |
greyLaw | Grey law | Material blue grey and ultra dark purple color theme, law firm style. | Light | Dark |
wasabi | Willow and wasabi | Wild Willow and wasabi green with orchid purple inspired colors. | Light | Dark |
gold | Gold sunset | Gold sunset color theme, based on orange like colors. | Light | Dark |
mango | Mango mojito | Orange and green Mango mojito color theme. | Light | Dark |
amber | Amber blue | Amber blaze and blue color theme, based on Material amber and blue accent colors. | Light | Dark |
vesuviusBurn | Vesuvius burned | Vesuvius burned orange and eden green theme. | Light | Dark |
deepPurple | Deep purple | Deep purple daisy bush theme, based on Material deepPurple and lightBlueAccent colors. | Light | Dark |
ebonyClay | Ebony clay | Ebony clay dark blue-grey and watercourse green colored theme. | Light | Dark |
Download color scheme based themes source code on GitHub
https://github.com/rydmike/flex_color_scheme
Provides the list of the opensource Flutter apps collection with GitHub repository.