ez-client-router
v0.0.3
Published
An easy to use client side router custom element
Downloads
10
Maintainers
Readme
ez-client-router
Easy to use client router custom element. No frameworks, no polyfills, no dependencies.
Installation
npm i --save ez-client-router
Basic Usage
You have to create a router element by extending the RouterElement base class. You can then insert your routes into the router element and it will take care fo the rest.
my-custom-router.js
import { RouterElement } from 'ez-client-router';
import { HelloWorld } from './src/pages/hello-world.js';
// Optionally declare the component if it doesn't exist.
if (customElements.get('my-hello-world') === undefined) {
customElements.define('my-hello-world', HelloWorld);
}
export class MyCustomRouter extends RouterElement {
constructor() {
super():
}
connectedCallback() {
// Create your routes.
this.routes = [
{
"path": "", // Path to the base route.
"go": () => `<my-hello-world></my-hello-world>` // Template you wish to render.
}
];
super.connectedCallback(); // Run the connected callback of the RouterElement.
}
}
index.html
<script type="module">
import { MyCustomRouter } from './src/components/my-custom-router.js';
customElements.define('my-custom-router', MyCustomRouter);
</script>
<my-custom-router></my-custom-router>
Features
Variables in the path.
ez-client-router supports variables in the path. You can declare the variables in the path surrounding them in curly braces. Here is an example:
/blog/{postId}
The variable will be applied to the component at that path as an attribute. This route:
{
path: '/blog/{post-id}',
go: ({ variables }) => {
return `
<my-blog-post post-id="${variables['post-id']}"></my-blog-post>
`;
}
}
With this URL:
/post/123
Will render:
<my-blog-post post-id="123"></my-blog-post>
Path variables can only be composed of alphanumeric characters and hyphens.
Path not found
When you try to reach a route that is not defined, the router will render a notFound message. You can customize this message by creating your own custom notFound function and setting this.innerHTML to the template you desire.
class MyRouter extends RouterElement {
constructor() {
super();
}
notFound() {
this.innerHTML = `Oh no! We couldn't find that page.`;
}
connectedCallback() {
this.routes = [
{
path: '/',
go: () => `<my-home-page></my-home-page>`
}
];
super.connectedCallback();
}
}