#332

Global Rank · of 600 Skills

flutter-setting-up-on-windows AI Agent Skill

View Source: flutter/skills

Medium

Installation

npx skills add flutter/skills --skill flutter-setting-up-on-windows

5.6K

Installs

Setting Up Flutter for Windows Development

Contents

Core Requirements

Configure the Windows environment to support both Flutter framework execution and native C/C++ compilation. Differentiate strictly between Visual Studio (required for Windows desktop C++ compilation) and VS Code (the recommended Dart/Flutter code editor).

Workflow: Installing and Configuring the SDK

Follow this sequential workflow to initialize the Flutter SDK on a Windows machine.

  • Download the latest stable Flutter SDK for Windows.
  • Extract the SDK to a directory with standard user privileges (e.g., C:\src\flutter). Do not install in protected directories like C:\Program Files\.
  • Copy the absolute path to the Flutter SDK's bin directory.
  • Open Windows Environment Variables settings and append the bin directory path to the system or user PATH variable.
  • Open a new terminal session to apply the PATH changes.
  • Feedback Loop: Run validator -> review errors -> fix.
    1. Execute flutter doctor -v.
    2. Review the output for missing dependencies or path issues.
    3. Resolve any flagged errors before proceeding to tooling setup.

Workflow: Configuring Tooling and IDEs

  • Install Visual Studio (not VS Code).
  • Select and install the Desktop development with C++ workload during the Visual Studio installation process. This is mandatory for compiling Windows desktop applications.
  • Install your preferred code editor (VS Code, Android Studio, or IntelliJ).
  • Install the official Flutter and Dart extensions/plugins within your chosen editor.

Workflow: Configuring Target Platforms

Apply conditional logic based on the specific platform you are targeting for development.

If targeting Windows Desktop:

  • Ensure the Visual Studio C++ workload is fully updated.
  • Restart your IDE so it detects the Windows desktop device.
  • To disable platforms you do not intend to compile for, execute flutter config --no-enable-<platform> (e.g., flutter config --no-enable-windows-desktop).

If targeting Android on Windows:

  • For physical devices: Enable Developer Options and USB debugging on the device. Install the specific OEM USB drivers for Windows.
  • For emulators: Open the Android Virtual Device (AVD) manager. Under "Emulated Performance" -> "Graphics acceleration", select an option specifying "Hardware" to enable hardware acceleration.
  • Verify the device connection by running flutter devices.

Workflow: Building and Packaging for Windows

To distribute a Windows desktop application, assemble the compiled executable and its required dependencies into a single distributable archive.

  • Execute flutter build windows to compile the release build.
  • Navigate to build\windows\runner\Release\.
  • Create a new staging directory for the distribution zip.
  • Copy the following assets from the Release directory into the staging directory:
    • The application executable (.exe).
    • All generated .dll files.
    • The entire data directory.
  • Copy the required Visual C++ redistributables into the staging directory alongside the executable:
    • msvcp140.dll
    • vcruntime140.dll
    • vcruntime140_1.dll
  • Compress the staging directory into a .zip file for distribution.

Workflow: Generating and Installing Certificates

If you require a self-signed certificate for MSIX packaging or local testing, use OpenSSL.

  • Install OpenSSL and add its bin directory to your PATH environment variable.
  • Generate a private key: openssl genrsa -out mykeyname.key 2048
  • Generate a Certificate Signing Request (CSR): openssl req -new -key mykeyname.key -out mycsrname.csr
  • Generate the signed certificate (CRT): openssl x509 -in mycsrname.csr -out mycrtname.crt -req -signkey mykeyname.key -days 10000
  • Generate the .pfx file: openssl pkcs12 -export -out CERTIFICATE.pfx -inkey mykeyname.key -in mycrtname.crt
  • Install the .pfx certificate on the local Windows machine. Place it in the Certificate Store under Trusted Root Certification Authorities prior to installing the application.

Examples

Windows Distribution Directory Structure

When assembling your Windows build for distribution, ensure the directory structure strictly matches the following layout before zipping:

Release_Archive/
│   my_flutter_app.exe
│   flutter_windows.dll
│   msvcp140.dll
│   vcruntime140.dll
│   vcruntime140_1.dll

└───data/
    │   app.so
    │   icudtl.dat
    │   ...

Installs

Installs 5.6K
Global Rank #332 of 600

Security Audit

ath Safe
socket Safe
Alerts: 0 Score: 90
snyk Medium
zeroleaks Safe
Score: 93
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How to use this skill

1

Install flutter-setting-up-on-windows by running npx skills add flutter/skills --skill flutter-setting-up-on-windows in your project directory. Run the install command above in your project directory. The skill file will be downloaded from GitHub and placed in your project.

2

No configuration needed. Your AI agent (Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, etc.) automatically detects installed skills and uses them as context when generating code.

3

The skill enhances your agent's understanding of flutter-setting-up-on-windows, helping it follow established patterns, avoid common mistakes, and produce production-ready output.

What you get

Skills are plain-text instruction files — not executable code. They encode expert knowledge about frameworks, languages, or tools that your AI agent reads to improve its output. This means zero runtime overhead, no dependency conflicts, and full transparency: you can read and review every instruction before installing.

Compatibility

This skill works with any AI coding agent that supports the skills.sh format, including Claude Code (Anthropic), Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, Aider, and other tools that read project-level context files. Skills are framework-agnostic at the transport level — the content inside determines which language or framework it applies to.

Data sourced from the skills.sh registry and GitHub. Install counts and security audits are updated regularly.

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