hooks_riverpod 2.4.5 hooks_riverpod: ^2.4.5 copied to clipboard
A simple way to access state from anywhere in your application while robust and testable.
A reactive caching and data-binding framework. https://riverpod.dev
Riverpod makes working with asynchronous code a breeze by:
- handling errors/loading states by default. No need to manually catch errors
- natively supporting advanced scenarios, such as pull-to-refresh
- separating the logic from your UI
- ensuring your code is testable, scalable and reusable
riverpod | |
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flutter_riverpod | |
hooks_riverpod |
Welcome to Riverpod (anagram of Provider)!
For learning how to use Riverpod, see its documentation:
>>> https://riverpod.dev <<<
Long story short:
-
Define network requests by writing a function annotated with
@riverpod
:@riverpod Future<String> boredSuggestion(BoredSuggestionRef ref) async { final response = await http.get( Uri.https('https://boredapi.com/api/activity'), ); final json = jsonDecode(response.body); return json['activity']! as String; }
-
Listen to the network request in your UI and gracefully handle loading/error states.
class Home extends ConsumerWidget { @override Widget build(BuildContext context, WidgetRef ref) { final boredSuggestion = ref.watch(boredSuggestionProvider); // Perform a switch-case on the result to handle loading/error states return boredSuggestion.when( loading: () => Text('loading'), error: (error, stackTrace) => Text('error: $error'), data: (data) => Text(data), ); } }
See the FAQ if you have questions about what this means for provider.
Contributing #
Contributions are welcomed!
Here is a curated list of how you can help:
- Report bugs and scenarios that are difficult to implement
- Report parts of the documentation that are unclear
- Fix typos/grammar mistakes
- Update the documentation / add examples
- Implement new features by making a pull-request