Axis
The two cardinal directions in two dimensions.
The axis is always relative to the current coordinate space. This means, for example, that a [horizontal] axis might actually be diagonally from top right to bottom left, due to some local transform applied to the scene.
Examples#
Showcase#
import flet as ft
def showcase_card(axis: ft.Axis) -> ft.Container:
return ft.Container(
width=350 if axis == ft.Axis.HORIZONTAL else 220,
padding=12,
border=ft.Border.all(1, ft.Colors.RED),
border_radius=10,
bgcolor=ft.Colors.SURFACE_CONTAINER_LOW,
content=ft.Column(
spacing=8,
horizontal_alignment=ft.CrossAxisAlignment.CENTER,
controls=[
ft.Text(axis.name, weight=ft.FontWeight.BOLD),
ft.SegmentedButton(
direction=axis,
selected=["medium"],
segments=[
ft.Segment(value="small", label="Small"),
ft.Segment(value="medium", label="Medium"),
ft.Segment(value="large", label="Large"),
],
),
],
),
)
def main(page: ft.Page):
page.theme_mode = ft.ThemeMode.DARK
page.horizontal_alignment = ft.CrossAxisAlignment.CENTER
page.appbar = ft.AppBar(title="Axis Showcase")
page.add(
ft.Text("Compare horizontal vs vertical segment layout."),
ft.Row(
wrap=True,
spacing=12,
expand=True,
scroll=ft.ScrollMode.AUTO,
alignment=ft.MainAxisAlignment.CENTER,
controls=[showcase_card(axis) for axis in ft.Axis],
),
)
ft.run(main)