The first version of Flutter was known as "Sky" and ran on the Android operating system.[31] It was unveiled at the 2015 Dart developer summit with the stated intent of being able to render consistently at 120 frames per second.[31] On December 4, 2018, Flutter 1.0 was released at the Flutter conference in London.[32]
On May 6, 2020, the Dart software development kit (SDK) version 2.8 and Flutter 1.17.0 were released, adding support for the Metal API.[33]
On March 3, 2021, Google released Flutter 2 during an online Flutter Engage event.[8][34] It added a Canvas-based renderer for web in addition to the HTML-based renderer and early-access desktop application support for Windows, macOS, and Linux.[34][8] It also shipped with Dart 2.0 which included support for null-safety.[8][35] Null safety was initially optional as it was a breaking change and was made mandatory in Dart 3 released in 2023.[35][36]
On May 12, 2022, Flutter 3 and Dart 2.17 were released with support for all desktop platforms as stable.[37]
On October 27, 2024, a number of Flutter community developers announced Flock, a fork of Flutter intended to be easier to contribute to while still keeping in sync with all changes made in the upstream code base.[38][39]
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