If your Flutter app offers any third-party login on iOS — Google, Facebook, anything — Apple's App Review guideline 4.8 forces you to also offer Sign in with Apple. That part is non-negotiable. .p8 keys, capabilities, entitlements, deep links — and most of it is only documented across three or four different Apple and Supabase pages that don't quite agree with each other. This is the guide I wis
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The previous two posts covered how events flow from the SDK to the UI. This post focuses on visualizing one specific type of event: tool calls. Tool invocations are the most frequent operations in an Agent application. A typical task might call tools twenty or thirty times—reading files, writing files, executing commands, searching code. If every tool call renders as the same gray block, it's hard
Post 1 covered how AgentBridge converts the SDK's AsyncStream<SDKMessage> into [AgentEvent]. This post looks at what [AgentEvent] becomes — how TimelineView renders 18 event types, handles scroll behavior, and stays smooth when the event count gets large. TimelineView is the main body of the workspace, filling all the space between the sidebar and the input box. Its view hierarchy is shallow: Time
Dart's concurrency model is unusual: single-threaded event loop by default, with explicit Isolates for true parallelism. No shared memory, no race conditions, no mutex locks. This guide covers everything from the simple compute() helper to long-lived Isolate workers, structured concurrency patterns, and Stream-based reactive flows. Concept Dart Isolates JavaScript Workers Java Threads Memor
Monetization is where most indie SaaS apps die. Not because the product is bad, but because the pricing is wrong, the freemium tier is too generous, or the upgrade path is invisible. This guide covers the full stack: value-based pricing principles, freemium architecture, Stripe + Supabase implementation, and conversion optimization. The classic mistake: pricing based on features ("get 5 exports pe
Supabase Edge Functions run on Deno Deploy and are far more capable than simple REST handlers. This guide covers three advanced patterns every indie developer should know: streaming responses (for LLM integrations), WebSocket upgrades (for real-time features), and background jobs using EdgeRuntime.waitUntil. The most common use case is streaming LLM output without blocking the client. // supabase/
Accessibility is not an afterthought — it's a quality signal. For Flutter Web, getting WCAG 2.2 compliance right requires understanding how Flutter's Semantics tree maps to browser accessibility APIs. This guide walks through practical implementation: contrast ratios, keyboard navigation, screen reader support, and automated testing. Flutter Web uses a hybrid rendering approach (CanvasKit or HTML)