react-keenrouter
v4.3.0
Published
React router with componentless route matching
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react-keenrouter
React router with componentless route matching
Features
- componentless route matching
- doesn't enforce route collocation and tight coupling within a route hierarchy;
- works the same way both for components and dynamic route-based prop values;
- is akin to the common React pattern of conditional rendering;
- the history-based route link components
<A>
and<Area>
with the props similar to those of the ordinary HTML link elements<a>
and<area>
(allowing for quick migration back and forth and working more like a polyfill to ordinary links); - the
<Router>
component fit for both browser and server rendering; - the utility converting plain HTML links (that can't be easily replaced with React components) to history-based links.
Example
import {A, useRoute} from 'react-keenrouter';
const appRoutes = {
HOME: '/',
INTRO: '/intro',
SECTION: /^\/section\/(?<id>\d+)\/?$/,
};
const allKnownRoutes = Object.values(appRoutes);
export const App = () => {
// the `useRoute()` hook subscribes the component to URL changes
let [route, withRoute] = useRoute();
return (
<div className="app">
<nav>
{/* the route link component `A` looks similar to the
plain HTML link as it serves a similar purpose */}
<A
href={appRoutes.HOME}
// `withRoute()` checks the current location and
// works similar to the conditional ternary operator;
// below, it roughly means:
// `home location ? 'active' : undefined`
// (the omitted third parameter is `undefined`)
className={withRoute(appRoutes.HOME, 'active')}
>
Home
</A>
{' | '}
<A
href={appRoutes.INTRO}
className={withRoute(appRoutes.INTRO, 'active')}
>
Intro
</A>
</nav>
{withRoute(
appRoutes.HOME, (
<main id="home">
<h1>Home</h1>
<ul>
<li>
<A href="/section/1">Section #1</A>
</li>
<li>
<A href="/section/2">Section #2</A>
</li>
</ul>
</main>
),
)}
{/* although `withRoute()` calls may appear in groups like
in this example, they work independently from each other
and may as well be used uncoupled in different places of
an application */}
{withRoute(
appRoutes.INTRO, (
<main className="section" id="intro">
<h1>Intro</h1>
</main>
),
)}
{/* the second and the third parameter of `withRoute()` can
be functions of `{href, params}`, with `params`
containing the capturing groups of the location pattern
if it is a regular expression */}
{withRoute(appRoutes.SECTION, ({params}) => (
<main className="section">
<h1>Section #{params.id}</h1>
</main>
))}
{/* below, rendering `null` if the current location
matches `allKnownRoutes`, and the 404 error screen
otherwise */}
{withRoute(
allKnownRoutes,
null, (
<main className="error section">
<h1>404 Not found</h1>
</main>
),
)}
<footer>
<hr/>
<button
onClick={() => {
// `route` has a `window.location`-like API and can
// be handy for direct manipulation of the location
route.assign(appRoutes.HOME);
}}
>
Home
</button>
</footer>
</div>
);
};
import {createRoot} from 'react-dom/client';
import {App} from './App';
createRoot(document.querySelector('#app')).render(<App/>);
The route
object returned from the useRoute()
hook is an instance of the NavigationLocation
class provided by the wrapping <Router>
component. If there is no <Router>
up the React node tree (like with <App/>
in the example above), a default route
based on the current page location is used. A wrapping <Router>
can be useful to provide a custom route
prop value that accepts either a string location or a NavigationLocation
class instance.
Custom routing
The default route
object returned from the useRoute()
hook responds to changes in the entire URL, with pathname
, search
, and hash
combined. This can be changed by providing an instance of a customized extension of the NavigationLocation
class to the Router
component.
import {NavigationLocation} from 'react-keenrouter';
export class PathLocation extends NavigationLocation {
deriveHref(location) {
// disregarding `search` and `hash`
return getPath(location, {search: false, hash: false});
}
}
import {createRoot} from 'react-dom/client';
import {Router} from 'react-keenrouter';
import {PathLocation} from './PathLocation';
createRoot(document.querySelector('#app')).render(
<Router route={new PathLocation()}>
<App/>
</Router>,
);
Extending the NavigationLocation
class gives plenty of room for customization. This approach allows in fact to go beyond the URL-based routing altogether.
Server-side rendering (SSR)
For the initial render on the server, the <Router>
component can be used to pass the current route location to the application in essentially the same way as it can be done in the client-side code:
// On the Express server
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
let html = ReactDOMServer.renderToString(
<Router route={req.originalUrl}><App/></Router>,
);
// Sending the resulting HTML to the client.
});
Converting plain links
The useRouteLinks()
hook can be helpful when it's necessary to convert plain HTML links to SPA route links if the route link component is not applicable right away (for instance, in a server-fetched static chunk of HTML content):
useRouteLinks(containerRef, '.content a');
// `containerRef` is a value returned from the React's `useRef()` hook.