| name | effective-dart |
| description | Use when writing Dart code, reviewing for style, refactoring naming, adding doc comments, structuring imports, or enforcing type annotations. |
Effective Dart Skill
This skill defines how to write idiomatic, high-quality Dart and Flutter code following Effective Dart guidelines.
1. Naming Conventions
| Kind | Convention | Example |
|---|
| Classes, enums, typedefs, type parameters, extensions | UpperCamelCase | MyWidget, UserState |
| Packages, directories, source files | lowercase_with_underscores | user_profile.dart |
| Import prefixes | lowercase_with_underscores | import '...' as my_prefix; |
| Variables, parameters, named parameters, functions | lowerCamelCase | userName, fetchData() |
- Capitalize acronyms and abbreviations longer than two letters like words:
HttpRequest, not HTTPRequest.
- Avoid abbreviations unless the abbreviation is more common than the full term.
- Prefer putting the most descriptive noun last in names.
- Use terms consistently throughout your code.
- Follow mnemonic conventions for type parameters:
E (element), K/V (key/value), T/S/U (generic types).
- Consider making code read like a sentence when designing APIs.
- Prefer a noun phrase for non-boolean properties or variables.
- Prefer a non-imperative verb phrase for boolean properties or variables; prefer the positive form.
- Consider omitting the verb for named boolean parameters.
- Avoid starting a function or method name with
get; prefer removing get and using a getter when the API conceptually exposes a property.
2. Types and Functions
- Use class modifiers (
final, sealed, interface, base, mixin) to control whether a class can be extended or implemented.
- Type annotate variables without initializers.
- Type annotate fields and top-level variables if the type isn't obvious.
- Annotate return types on function declarations.
- Annotate parameter types on function declarations.
- Write type arguments on generic invocations that aren't inferred.
- Annotate with
dynamic instead of letting inference fail.
- Use
Future<void> as the return type of async members that do not produce values.
- Use getters for operations that conceptually access properties.
- Use setters for operations that conceptually change properties.
- Use a function declaration to bind a function to a name.
- Use inclusive start and exclusive end parameters to accept a range.
// Prefer: explicit class modifier
final class AppConfig {
final String apiUrl;
final int timeout;
const AppConfig({required this.apiUrl, required this.timeout});
}
// Prefer: sealed for exhaustive pattern matching
sealed class Result<T> {}
class Success<T> extends Result<T> { final T value; Success(this.value); }
class Failure<T> extends Result<T> { final Exception error; Failure(this.error); }
3. Style
dart format .
- Format code with
dart format — don't manually format.
- Use curly braces for all flow control statements.
- Prefer
final over var when variable values won't change.
- Use
const for compile-time constants.
- Prefer lines 80 characters or fewer for readability.
4. Imports and Files
- Don't import libraries inside the
src directory of another package.
- Don't allow import paths to reach into or out of
lib.
- Prefer relative import paths within a package.
- Don't use
/lib/ or ../ in import paths.
- Consider writing a library-level doc comment for library files.
5. Structure
- Keep files focused on a single responsibility.
- Limit file length to maintain readability.
- Group related functionality together.
- Prefer making fields and top-level variables
final.
- Consider making constructors
const if the class supports it.
- Prefer making declarations private — only expose what's necessary.
6. Usage Patterns
// Adjacent string concatenation (not +)
final greeting = 'Hello, '
'world!';
// Collection literals
final list = [1, 2, 3];
final map = {'key': 'value'};
// Initializing formals
class Point {
final double x, y;
Point(this.x, this.y);
}
// Empty constructor body
class Empty {
Empty(); // not Empty() {}
}
// rethrow to preserve stack trace
try {
doSomething();
} catch (e) {
log(e);
rethrow;
}
- Use
whereType<T>() to filter a collection by type.
- Follow a consistent rule for
var and final on local variables.
- Initialize fields at their declaration when possible.
- Override
hashCode if you override ==; ensure == obeys mathematical equality rules.
- Prefer specific exception handling: use
on SomeException catch (e) instead of broad catch (e) or .catchError handlers.
7. Documentation
/// Returns the sum of [a] and [b].
///
/// Throws [ArgumentError] if either value is negative.
int add(int a, int b) { ... }
- Format comments like sentences (capitalize, end with period).
- Use
/// doc comments — not /* */ block comments — for types and members.
- Prefer writing doc comments for public APIs; consider them for private APIs too.
- Start doc comments with a single-sentence summary, separated into its own paragraph.
- Avoid redundancy with the surrounding context.
- Start function/method comments with a third-person verb if the main purpose is a side effect.
- Start with a noun or non-imperative verb phrase if returning a value is the primary purpose.
- Start boolean variable/property comments with "Whether" followed by a noun or gerund phrase.
- Use
[identifier] in doc comments to refer to in-scope identifiers.
- Use prose to explain parameters, return values, and exceptions (e.g., "The [param]", "Returns", "Throws" sections).
- Put doc comments before metadata annotations.
- Document why code exists or how it should be used, not just what it does.
8. Testing Patterns
- Write unit tests for business logic, using
group and descriptive test names:
import 'package:test/test.dart';
void main() {
group('CartService', () {
late CartService cart;
setUp(() => cart = CartService());
test('addItem increases item count', () {
cart.addItem(Product(id: '1', name: 'Widget', price: 9.99));
expect(cart.items, hasLength(1));
});
test('removeItem decreases total price', () {
final product = Product(id: '1', name: 'Widget', price: 9.99);
cart.addItem(product);
cart.removeItem(product.id);
expect(cart.totalPrice, equals(0.0));
});
});
}
- Write widget tests using
testWidgets and WidgetTester:
import 'package:flutter_test/flutter_test.dart';
void main() {
testWidgets('LoginButton shows loading indicator when tapped',
(WidgetTester tester) async {
await tester.pumpWidget(const MaterialApp(home: LoginScreen()));
await tester.tap(find.byType(ElevatedButton));
await tester.pump();
expect(find.byType(CircularProgressIndicator), findsOneWidget);
});
}
9. Code Review Workflow
When reviewing Dart code for Effective Dart compliance, the agent should check:
- Naming — verify all identifiers follow the conventions in Section 1.
- Type annotations — confirm public API parameters, return types, and uninitialized variables are annotated.
- Class modifiers — verify
final, sealed, or interface is used where appropriate.
- Documentation — confirm all public members have
/// doc comments with a single-sentence summary.
- Style — run
dart format --output=none --set-exit-if-changed . to verify formatting.
- Analysis — run
dart analyze and confirm zero issues.
References