connected-react-router-config
v6.2.7
Published
A Redux binding for React Router v4
Downloads
105
Readme
Breaking change in v5.0.0! Please read How to migrate from v4 to v5.
v6.0.0 requires React v16.4.0 and React Redux v6.0 or later.
Connected React Router
A Redux binding for React Router v4
Main features
:sparkles: Synchronize router state with redux store through uni-directional flow (i.e. history -> store -> router -> components).
:gift: Support React Router v4.
:sunny: Support functional component hot reloading while preserving state (with react-hot-reload).
:tada: Dispatching of history methods (push
, replace
, go
, goBack
, goForward
) works for both redux-thunk and redux-saga.
:snowman: Nested children can access routing state such as the current location directly with react-redux
's connect
.
:clock9: Support time traveling in Redux DevTools.
:gem: Support Immutable.js
:muscle: Support TypeScript
Installation
Connected React Router requires React 16.4 and React Redux 6.0 or later.
$ npm install --save connected-react-router-config
Or
$ yarn add connected-react-router-config
Usage
Step 1
In your root reducer file,
- Create a function that takes
history
as an argument and returns a root reducer. - Add
router
reducer into root reducer by passinghistory
toconnectRouter
. - Note: The key MUST be
router
.
// reducers.js
import { combineReducers } from 'redux'
import { connectRouter } from 'connected-react-router-config'
export default (history) => combineReducers({
router: connectRouter(history),
... // rest of your reducers
})
Step 2
When creating a Redux store,
- Create a
history
object. - Provide the created
history
to the root reducer creator. - Use
routerMiddleware(history)
if you want to dispatch history actions (e.g. to change URL withpush('/path/to/somewhere')
).
// configureStore.js
...
import { createBrowserHistory } from 'history'
import { applyMiddleware, compose, createStore } from 'redux'
import { routerMiddleware } from 'connected-react-router-config'
import createRootReducer from './reducers'
...
export const history = createBrowserHistory()
export default function configureStore(preloadedState) {
const store = createStore(
createRootReducer(history), // root reducer with router state
preloadedState,
compose(
applyMiddleware(
routerMiddleware(history), // for dispatching history actions
// ... other middlewares ...
),
),
)
return store
}
Step 3
- Wrap your react-router v4 routing with
ConnectedRouter
and pass thehistory
object as a prop. - Place
ConnectedRouter
as a child ofreact-redux
'sProvider
.
// index.js
...
import { Provider } from 'react-redux'
import { Route, Switch } from 'react-router' // react-router v4
import { ConnectedRouter } from 'connected-react-router-config'
import configureStore, { history } from './configureStore'
...
const store = configureStore(/* provide initial state if any */)
ReactDOM.render(
<Provider store={store}>
<ConnectedRouter history={history}> { /* place ConnectedRouter under Provider */ }
<> { /* your usual react-router v4 routing */ }
<Switch>
<Route exact path="/" render={() => (<div>Match</div>)} />
<Route render={() => (<div>Miss</div>)} />
</Switch>
</>
</ConnectedRouter>
</Provider>,
document.getElementById('react-root')
)
Note: the history
object provided to router
reducer, routerMiddleware
, and ConnectedRouter
component must be the same history
object.
Now, it's ready to work!
Examples
See the examples folder
FAQ
- How to navigate with Redux action
- How to get the current browser location (URL)
- How to set Router props e.g. basename, initialEntries, etc.
- How to hot reload functional components
- How to hot reload reducers
- How to support Immutable.js
- How to implement server-side rendering (sample codebase)
- How to migrate from v4 to v5
- How to use your own context with react-redux
Build
npm run build
Generated files will be in the lib
folder.
Development
When testing the example apps with npm link
or yarn link
, you should explicitly provide the same Context
to both Provider
and ConnectedRouter
to make sure that the ConnectedRouter
doesn't pick up a different ReactReduxContext
from a different node_modules
folder.
In index.js
.
...
import { Provider, ReactReduxContext } from 'react-redux'
...
<Provider store={store} context={ReactReduxContext}>
<App history={history} context={ReactReduxContext} />
</Provider>
...
In App.js
,
...
const App = ({ history, context }) => {
return (
<ConnectedRouter history={history} context={context}>
{ routes }
</ConnectedRouter>
)
}
...
Contributors
See Contributors and Acknowledge.