One of the main mecanism of Flutter Navigator 2.0 it the function onPopPage inside RouterDelegate > build > Navigator. However, I do not understand when route.didPop(result) returns false.
We can use the John Ryan's famous example to show my question. His demo code.
onPopPage: (route, result) {
if (!route.didPop(result)) {
return false;
}
// Update the list of pages by setting _selectedBook to null
_selectedBook = null;
show404 = false;
notifyListeners();
return true;
},
On all of my tests, using AppBar autogenerated back button, route.didPop(result) returns true.
The doc stays :
bool didPop(dynamic result)
package:flutter/src/widgets/navigator.dart
A request was made to pop this route. If the route can handle it internally (e.g. because it has its own stack of internal state) then return false, otherwise return true (by returning the value of calling super.didPop). Returning false will prevent the default behavior of [NavigatorState.pop].
When this function returns true, the navigator removes this route from the history but does not yet call [dispose]. Instead, it is the route's responsibility to call [NavigatorState.finalizeRoute], which will in turn call [dispose] on the route. This sequence lets the route perform an exit animation (or some other visual effect) after being popped but prior to being disposed.
This method should call [didComplete] to resolve the [popped] future (and this is all that the default implementation does); routes should not wait for their exit animation to complete before doing so.
See [popped], [didComplete], and [currentResult] for a discussion of the result argument.
But was does "If the route can handle it internally (e.g. because it has its own stack of internal state) then return false" mean ? The route has its own stack of internal state ? How to produce this result ?
Thank you, stay safe