Do you need to use the "new" keyword in Dart?

In my Dart based application I just noticed that I can omit the new keyword and everything works perfectly fine.

Instead of final widget = new Widget(); I can also use final widget = Widget();.

Does this have any effect in code?


No, it does not. With Dart 2 (click for the announcement with more information) the new and also const keywords were made optional.

This means that new Widget() does the exact same as Widget() on its own.


The const keyword can, however, change a value that would not be a const implicitly to a const.
So you will have to explicitly specify const when needed.


In Dart 2, if you invoke a constructor like a function, without a new or const in front, then it is equivalent to using new. If you want a const invocation, then you should put const in front.

Inside a const expression, you don't need to write const again, and in some contexts that require const expressions (like switch case expressions and initializers of const variables), you don't even need the outer const.

So you don't ever need to write new.

Dart language team wants to allow expressions where you can insert either new or const and still have the invocation be correct (that is, a const constructor with constant arguments) to default to inserting const instead of new, hopefully in an early update to Dart 2. For that reason, I recommend writing new it in front of Object(), or any other const constructor where you need the object to be a new instance. That's a very rare case, usually you don't care about the identity of your immutable object (which is why inserting const is considered a good idea). (That plan didn't pan out, so you can ignore this.)