--- name: riverpod-codegen-and-hooks description: Use Riverpod code generation (@riverpod, riverpod_generator) and hooks (hooks_riverpod, HookConsumerWidget, flutter_hooks with Riverpod). Use when the user asks about @riverpod, code generation, riverpod_generator, when to use codegen, or using flutter_hooks with Riverpod (HookConsumerWidget, HookConsumer). --- # Riverpod — Code generation and hooks ## Code generation Code generation is **optional** in Riverpod. It changes the syntax for defining providers: you write an annotated function or class and the generator produces the provider. Use it if you already use code generation (e.g. Freezed, json_serializable); otherwise the extra build step may not be worth it. See riverpod-getting-started for setup (build_runner, riverpod_generator). ### Benefits - Clearer syntax: no manual provider type (Provider vs FutureProvider etc.); Riverpod infers it. - Parameters: any parameters (named, optional, defaults) instead of a single family parameter. - Stateful hot-reload for Riverpod code. - Better debugging via generated metadata. ### Syntax **Functional provider** (sync): ```dart @riverpod String example(Ref ref) { return 'foo'; } ``` **Class-based provider** (sync, with methods for side effects): ```dart @riverpod class Example extends _$Example { @override String build() => 'foo'; // Add methods to mutate state } ``` **Async:** Use `Future`/`FutureOr`/`Stream`; async functions get AsyncValue and loading/error handling automatically. **Auto-dispose:** On by default with codegen. Disable with `@Riverpod(keepAlive: true)`. ```dart @riverpod String example1(Ref ref) => 'foo'; @Riverpod(keepAlive: true) String example2(Ref ref) => 'foo'; ``` **Parameters:** Add parameters to the function (consistent == required): ```dart @riverpod Future fetchUser(Ref ref, {required int userId}) async { final json = await http.get('api/user/$userId'); return User.fromJson(json); } ``` Manual equivalent would be `FutureProvider.autoDispose.family(...)`. See riverpod-providers and riverpod-family for concepts. --- ## Hooks **Hooks** come from [flutter_hooks] (separate from Riverpod). They are for **local** widget state (e.g. TextEditingController, AnimationController) and can replace StatefulWidget or builder nesting. Use them only if you want hooks; they are not required for Riverpod. Newcomers should avoid hooks at first. ### Using hooks and Riverpod together You need both **flutter_hooks** and **hooks_riverpod**. Then either: **Option 1: HookConsumerWidget** — One base class that supports both hooks and ref: ```dart class Example extends HookConsumerWidget { @override Widget build(BuildContext context, WidgetRef ref) { final counter = useState(0); final value = ref.watch(myProvider); return Text('Hello $counter $value'); } } ``` **Option 2: HookConsumer** — Builder that combines HookBuilder + Consumer (works with flutter_riverpod only if you nest them; hooks_riverpod provides HookConsumer): ```dart return HookConsumer( builder: (context, ref, child) { final counter = useState(0); final value = ref.watch(myProvider); return Text('Hello $counter $value'); }, ); ``` **Option 3:** Nest `Consumer` and `HookBuilder` (no hooks_riverpod needed). ### Rules of hooks - Use hooks only in the **build** method of a widget that extends **HookWidget** (or HookConsumerWidget). - Do not use hooks conditionally or in loops; call order must be stable. See riverpod-consumers for Ref in widgets and the official docs for full codegen/hooks details.