If building a custom layer (Creating New Layers), consider using FlutterMapState
directly instead.
When changes happen to FlutterMap
's internal state, such as a change to the current position or zoom, it emits a MapEvent
, which can be handled by you.
There's two ways to catch all emitted MapEvent
s, and use them/the Stream<MapEvent>
directly.
These methods expose the raw MapEvent
, and is recommended in cases where multiple events need to be caught, or there's no more specific callback method available in MapOptions
.
Listening to a MapController
's mapEventStream
Specifying a callback method in MapOptions.onMapEvent
If only a couple of events need to be caught, such as just an onTap
handler, it is possible to avoid handling the raw Stream
of MapEvent
s. Instead, MapOptions
has callbacks available for the following events:
onTap
onLongPress
onPositionChanged
onPointerDown
/onPointerUp
/onPointerHover
/onPointerCancel
onMapReady
Primarily used for advanced MapController
#usage-in-initstate
The MapEventTap
event may be emitted (or the onTap
callback called) 250ms after the actual tap occurred, as this is the acceptable delay between the two taps in a double tap zoom gesture.
If this causes noticeable jank or a bad experience (for example, on desktop platforms), disable InteractiveFlag
.doubleTapZoom
:
This disables the double tap handler, so the MapEventTap
is emitted 'instantly' on tap.