dart:core library Null safety
Built-in types, collections, and other core functionality for every Dart program.
This library is automatically imported.
Some classes in this library, such as String and num, support Dart's built-in data types. Other classes, such as List and Map, provide data structures for managing collections of objects. And still other classes represent commonly used types of data such as URIs, dates and times, and errors.
Numbers and booleans
int and double provide support for Dart's built-in numerical data types: integers and double-precision floating point numbers, respectively. An object of type bool is either true or false. Variables of these types can be constructed from literals:
int meaningOfLife = 42;
double valueOfPi = 3.141592;
bool visible = true;
Strings and regular expressions
A String is immutable and represents a sequence of characters.
String shakespeareQuote = "All the world's a stage, ...";
StringBuffer provides a way to construct strings efficiently.
StringBuffer moreShakespeare = new StringBuffer();
moreShakespeare.write('And all the men and women ');
moreShakespeare.write('merely players; ...');
The String and StringBuffer classes implement string concatenation, interpolation, and other string manipulation features.
String philosophy = 'Live on ';
String get palindrome => philosophy + philosophy.split('').reversed.join();
RegExp implements Dart regular expressions, which provide a grammar for matching patterns within text. For example, here's a regular expression that matches a string of one or more digits:
var numbers = new RegExp(r'\d+');
Dart regular expressions have the same syntax and semantics as JavaScript regular expressions. See ecma-international.org/ecma-262/5.1/#sec-15.10 for the specification of JavaScript regular expressions.
Collections
The dart:core library provides basic collections, such as List, Map, and Set.
A List is an ordered collection of objects, with a length. Lists are sometimes called arrays. Use a List when you need to access objects by index.
List superheroes = [ 'Batman', 'Superman', 'Harry Potter' ];
A Set is an unordered collection of unique objects. You cannot get an item by index (position). Adding a duplicate item has no effect.
Set villains = new Set();
villains.add('Joker');
villains.addAll( ['Lex Luther', 'Voldemort'] );
A Map is an unordered collection of key-value pairs. Maps are sometimes called associative arrays because maps associate a key to some value for easy retrieval. Keys are unique. Use a Map when you need to access objects by a unique identifier.
Map sidekicks = { 'Batman': 'Robin',
'Superman': 'Lois Lane',
'Harry Potter': 'Ron and Hermione' };
In addition to these classes, dart:core contains Iterable, an interface that defines functionality common in collections of objects. Examples include the ability to run a function on each element in the collection, to apply a test to each element, to retrieve an object, and to determine length.
Iterable is implemented by List and Set, and used by Map for its keys and values.
For other kinds of collections, check out the
dart:collection
library.
Date and time
Use DateTime to represent a point in time and Duration to represent a span of time.
You can create DateTime objects with constructors or by parsing a correctly formatted string.
DateTime now = new DateTime.now();
DateTime berlinWallFell = new DateTime(1989, 11, 9);
DateTime moonLanding = DateTime.parse("1969-07-20");
Create a Duration object specifying the individual time units.
Duration timeRemaining = new Duration(hours:56, minutes:14);
In addition to DateTime and Duration, dart:core contains the Stopwatch class for measuring elapsed time.
Uri
A Uri object represents a uniform resource identifier, which identifies a resource on the web.
Uri dartlang = Uri.parse('http://dartlang.org/');
Errors
The Error class represents the occurrence of an error during runtime. Subclasses of this class represent specific kinds of errors.
Other documentation
For more information about how to use the built-in types, refer to Built-in Types in A tour of the Dart language.
Also, see dart:core - numbers, collections, strings, and more for more coverage of types in this library.
The Dart Language Specification provides technical details.
Classes
-
BidirectionalIterator<
E> - An Iterator that allows moving backwards as well as forwards.
- BigInt
- An arbitrarily large integer.
- bool
-
The reserved words
true
andfalse
denote objects that are the only two instances of this class. [...] -
Comparable<
T> - Interface used by types that have an intrinsic ordering. [...]
- DateTime
- An instant in time, such as July 20, 1969, 8:18pm GMT. [...]
- Deprecated
-
The annotation
@Deprecated('migration')
marks a feature as deprecated. [...] - double
- A double-precision floating point number. [...]
- Duration
- A span of time, such as 27 days, 4 hours, 12 minutes, and 3 seconds. [...]
-
Expando<
T extends Object> - An Expando allows adding new properties to objects. [...]
- Function
- The base class for all function types. [...]
-
Future<
T> - An object representing a delayed computation. [...]
- int
- An integer number. [...]
- Invocation
- Representation of the invocation of a member on an object. [...]
-
Iterable<
E> - A collection of values, or "elements", that can be accessed sequentially. [...]
-
Iterator<
E> - An interface for getting items, one at a time, from an object. [...]
-
List<
E> - An indexable collection of objects with a length. [...]
-
Map<
K, V> - A collection of key/value pairs, from which you retrieve a value using its associated key. [...]
-
MapEntry<
K, V> - A key/value pair representing an entry in a Map.
- Match
- A result from searching within a string. [...]
- Null
-
The reserved word
null
denotes an object that is the sole instance of this class. [...] - num
- An integer or floating-point number. [...]
- Object
- The base class for all Dart objects. [...]
- Pattern
- An interface for basic searches within strings.
- pragma
- A hint to tools. [...]
- Provisional
- An annotation class that was used during development of Dart 2. [...]
- RegExp
- A regular expression pattern. [...]
- RegExpMatch
- A regular expression match. [...]
- RuneIterator
- Iterator for reading runes (integer Unicode code points) of a Dart string.
- Runes
- The runes (integer Unicode code points) of a String.
-
Set<
E> - A collection of objects in which each object can occur only once. [...]
-
Sink<
T> - A generic destination for data. [...]
- StackTrace
- An interface implemented by all stack trace objects. [...]
- Stopwatch
- A simple stopwatch interface to measure elapsed time.
-
Stream<
T> - A source of asynchronous data events. [...]
- String
- A sequence of UTF-16 code units. [...]
- StringBuffer
- A class for concatenating strings efficiently. [...]
- StringSink
- Symbol
- Opaque name used by mirrors, invocations and Function.apply.
- Type
- Runtime representation of a type. [...]
- Uri
- A parsed URI, such as a URL. [...]
- UriData
-
A way to access the structure of a
data:
URI. [...]
Constants
- deprecated → const Deprecated
-
Marks a feature as Deprecated until the next release.
const Deprecated("next release")
- override → const Object
-
Annotation on an instance members which override an interface member. [...]
const _Override()
- provisional → const Null
-
An annotation that was used during development of Dart 2. [...]
null
- proxy → const Null
-
This annotation was used in Dart prior to version 2. [...]
null
Functions
Typedefs
-
Comparator<
T> (T a, T b) → int - The signature of a generic comparison function. [...]
Exceptions / Errors
- AbstractClassInstantiationError
- Error thrown when trying to instantiate an abstract class.
- ArgumentError
- Error thrown when a function is passed an unacceptable argument.
- AssertionError
- Error thrown by the runtime system when an assert statement fails.
- CastError
- Error thrown by the runtime system when a cast operation fails.
- ConcurrentModificationError
- Error occurring when a collection is modified during iteration. [...]
- CyclicInitializationError
- Error thrown when a lazily initialized variable cannot be initialized. [...]
- Error
- Error objects thrown in the case of a program failure. [...]
- Exception
- A marker interface implemented by all core library exceptions. [...]
- FallThroughError
- Error thrown when control reaches the end of a switch case. [...]
- FormatException
- Exception thrown when a string or some other data does not have an expected format and cannot be parsed or processed.
- IndexError
-
A specialized RangeError used when an index is not in the range
0..indexable.length-1
. [...] - IntegerDivisionByZeroException
- LateInitializationError
- Error thrown when a late variable is accessed in an invalid manner. [...]
- NoSuchMethodError
-
Error thrown by the default implementation of
noSuchMethod
on Object. - NullThrownError
-
Error thrown when attempting to throw
null
. - OutOfMemoryError
- RangeError
- Error thrown due to an index being outside a valid range.
- StackOverflowError
- StateError
- The operation was not allowed by the current state of the object. [...]
- TypeError
- Error thrown by the runtime system when a dynamic type error happens.
- UnimplementedError
- Thrown by operations that have not been implemented yet. [...]
- UnsupportedError
- The operation was not allowed by the object. [...]