svelte-router-spa
v7.0.1
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A full featured router component for Svelte and your Single Page Applications.
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Svelte Router SPA
What is Svelte Router SPA
Svelte Router adds routing to your Svelte apps. It keeps your routes organized in a single place.
With Svelte Router SPA you have all the features you need to create modern web applications with minimal configuration.
It's designed for Single Page Applications (SPA). If you need Server Side Rendering then consider using Svelte Kit.
-- Svelte Router SPA is feature complete. No new features will be added, only bugfixes will be solved --.
Index
Features
- Define your routes in a single interface
- Layouts global, per page or nested.
- Nested routes.
- Named params.
- Localisation.
- Guards to protect urls. Public and private urls.
- Route prefix.
- Track pageviews in Google Analytics (optional).
- Use standard
<a href="/about-us">About</a>
elements to navigate between pages (or use<Navigate />
for bonus features).
Svelte Router is smart enought to inject the corresponding params to each Route component. Every Route component has information about their named params, query params and child route.
You can use all that information (availabe in the currentRoute property) to help you implement your business logic and secure the app.
Install
To install Svelte Router on your svelte app:
with npm
npm i svelte-router-spa
with Yarn
yarn add svelte-router-spa
Usage
Ensure your local server is configured in SPA mode. In a default Svelte installation you need to edit your package.json and add -s to sirv public
.
"start": "sirv public -s"
Instead of having your routes spread inside your code Svelte Router SPA lets you define them inside a file where you can easily identify all available routes.
Add a routes.js file with your routes info. Example:
import Login from './views/public/login.svelte'
import PublicIndex from './views/public/index.svelte'
import PublicLayout from './views/public/layout.svelte'
import AdminLayout from './views/admin/layout.svelte'
import AdminIndex from './views/admin/index.svelte'
import EmployeesIndex from './views/admin/employees/index.svelte'
function userIsAdmin() {
//check if user is admin and returns true or false
}
const routes = [
{
name: '/',
component: PublicLayout,
},
{ name: 'login', component: Login, layout: PublicLayout },
{
name: 'admin',
component: AdminLayout,
onlyIf: { guard: userIsAdmin, redirect: '/login' },
nestedRoutes: [
{ name: 'index', component: AdminIndex },
{
name: 'employees',
component: '',
nestedRoutes: [
{ name: 'index', component: EmployeesIndex },
{ name: 'show/:id', component: EmployeesShow },
],
},
],
},
]
export { routes }
Import the routes into your main component (probably App.svelte)
<script>
import { Router } from 'svelte-router-spa'
import { routes } from './routes'
</script>
<Router {routes} />
That's all
Layouts and route info
Every Route file will receive a currentRoute property with information about the current route, params, queries, etc.
You can add any number of layouts nested inside Router. For instance assuming that I want two layouts one for public pages and the other for private admin pages I would create these two files:
Filename: public_layout.svelte
<script>
import { Route } from 'svelte-router-spa'
import TopHeader from './top_header.svelte'
export let currentRoute
const params = {}
</script>
<div class="app">
<TopHeader />
<section class="section">
<Route {currentRoute} {params} />
</section>
</div>
Filename: admin_layout.svelte
<script>
import { Route } from "svelte-router-spa";
export let currentRoute;
const params = {}
</script>
<div>
<h1>Admin Layout</h1>
<Route {currentRoute} {params} />
</div>
The route page will take care of rendering the appropriate component inside the layout. It will also pass a property called currentRoute to the component with information about the route, nested and query params.
Tip: You can have any number of layouts and you can nest them into each other as much as you want. Just remember to add a Route component where the content should be rendered inside the layout.
Tip: The Route component will pass a property to the rendered component named currentRoute with information about the current route, params, queries, etc.
Anatomy of a route
Each route is an object that may have the following properties:
function userIsAdmin() {
// return true or false
}
{
name: 'about-us',
component: About,
layout: PublicLayout,
redirectTo: 'company',
onlyIf: { guard: userIsAdmin, redirect: '/login' },
lang: { es: 'acerca-de' },
nestedRoutes: [
{ name: 'our-values', component: CompanyValues, lang: { es: 'nuestros-valores' } }
]
}
name (required): The name that will be used in the url. This is the default name for the route if no localisation is defined or no language is set.
component (required if no layout is present): A component that will be rendered when this route is active. If the route has nestedRoutes the component should be a Layout.
layout (required if no component is present): A component that acts as a layout (a container for other child components).
Either a component or a layout should be specified. Both can not be empty.
nestedRoutes: An array of routes.
redirectTo: A url or pathname (https://yourwebsite.com) or (/my-product).
onlyIf: An object to conditionally render a route. If guard returns true then route is rendered. If guard is false it redirects to redirect.
lang: An object with route names localised. Check Localisation
Routes can contain as many nested routes as needed.
They can also contain as many layouts as needed. Layouts can be nested into other layouts.
In the following example both the home root ('/' and 'login' will use the same layout). Admin, employees and employeesShow will use the admin layout and employees will also use the employees layout, rendered inside the admin layout.
Example of routes:
const routes = [
{
name: '/',
component: PublicIndex,
layout: PublicLayout,
},
{ name: 'login', component: Login, layout: PublicLayout },
{
name: 'admin',
component: AdminIndex,
layout: AdminLayout,
nestedRoutes: [
{
name: 'employees',
component: EmployeesIndex,
nestedRoutes: [
{
name: 'show/:id',
component: EmployeesShowLayout,
nestedRoutes: [
{ name: 'index', component: EmployeesShow },
{ name: 'list', component: EmployeesShowList },
],
},
],
},
],
},
]
The routes that this file will parse successfully are:
/
/login
/admin
/admin/employees
/admin/employees/show
/admin/employees/show/{id}
/admin/employees/show/{id}/list
Using named params as first part of path name (not recommended)
Svelte Router is usually smart enough to find the right route for you. It means that you don't need to care about the order in which you write your routes. There is an exception to this rule: If you define a named param as the very first part of the path like: /:user-name/edit
In this specific case order matters and you should add that route after all other routes.
This is not recommended and you should always start your routes with a static path name. You can add as many named params as you need after the first static name.
function userIsAdmin() {
// return true or false
}
{
name: 'about-us',
component: About,
lang: { es: 'acerca-de' },
nestedRoutes: [
{
name: 'our-values', component: CompanyValues, lang: { es: 'nuestros-valores' }
}
]
},
{
name: '/',
component: HomeComponent
},
{
name: '/project/:name',
component: ProjectComponent
},
{
name: '/:user-name/edit',
component: EditUserComponent
}
API
Router
import { Router } from 'svelte-router-spa'
This is the main component that needs to be included before any other content as it holds information about your routes and which route should be rendered.
The simplest approach (although not required) is to have an App.svelte file like this:
<script>
import { Router } from 'svelte-router-spa'
import { routes } from './routes'
let options = { gaPageviews: true}
</script>
<Router {routes} {options} />
The layout and/or the component that matches the active route will be rendered inside Router.
Options is an object that supports three properties:
gaPageviews that will record route changes as pageviews in Google Analytics. It's disabled by default.
lang a string that sets the language that the router will use to match the active route. Check Localisation
defaultLanguage If no language is set the active route will return this value as the active language.
Route
import { Route } from 'svelte-router-spa'
This component is only needed if you create a layout. It will take care of rendering the content for the child components or child layouts recursively. You can have as many nested layouts as you need.
The info about the current route will be received as a property so you need to define currentRoute and export it.
It will also accept an object called named params where you can send any aditional params to the rendered component. This is usefull if you add any logic in your template, to check user's permission for instance, and want to send extra info to the rendered component.
currentRoute has all the information about the current route and the child routes.
Route is smart enough to expose the named params in the route component where they will be rendered.
Example:
<script>
import { Route } from 'svelte-router-spa'
import TopHeader from './top_header.svelte'
import FooterContent from './footer_content.svelte'
export let currentRoute
const params = { validCheck: true }
</script>
<div class="app">
<TopHeader />
<section class="section">
<Route {currentRoute} {params} />
<p>Route params are: {currentRoute.namedParams} and {currentRoute.queryParams}</p>
</section>
<FooterContent />
</div>
currentRoute
This object is propagated from Route to the components it renders. It contains information about the current route and the child routes.
These are the properties available in this object:
- name
- component
- layout
- queryParams
- namedParams
- childRoute
- language
Example:
const routes = [
{
name: '/public',
component: PublicLayout,
nestedRoutes: [
{
name: 'about-us',
component: 'AboutUsLayout',
nestedRoutes: [
{ name: 'company', component: CompanyPage },
{ name: 'people', component: PeoplePage },
],
},
],
},
]
That configuration will parse correctly the following routes:
/public
/public/about-us
/public/about-us/company
/public/about-us/people/:name
If the user visits /public/about-us/people/jack the following components will be rendered:
Router -> PublicLayout(Route) -> AboutUsLayout(Route) -> PeoplePage
Inside PeoplePage you can get all the information about the current route like this:
<script>
export let currentRoute
</script>
<h1>Your name is: {currentRoute.namedParams.name}</h1>
This will render:
<h1>Your name is: Jack</h1>
Navigate
import { Navigate } from 'svelte-router-spa'
params
- to (Required) String A valid route to navigate to.
- title (Optional) String A title for the a element.
- styles (Optional) String Class styles to be applied to the a class element.
- lang (Optional) String A language to convert the route to.
Navigate is a wrapper around the < a href="" > element to help you generate links quick and easily.
It adds an active class to the styles if the generated route is the active one.
Check navigateTo belown for more information about the language param.
Example:
<script>
import { Navigate } from 'svelte-router-spa'
</script>
<div class="app">
<h1>My content</h1>
<p>Now I want to generate a <Navigate to="admin/employees">link to /admin/employees</Navigate></p>
</div>
navigateTo
import { navigateTo } from 'svelte-router-spa'
params
- route name (Required) String A valid route to navigate to.
- language (Optional) String A language to convert the route to.
navigateTo allows you to programatically navigate to a route from inside your app updating the browser url and history.
navigateTo receives a route name as a param and an optional language and will try to navigate to that route.
When a language is provided navigateTo will try to convert the route name to the localised version of the route.
// Example route
{
name: '/setup',
component: 'SetupComponent',
lang: { es: 'configuracion' }
}
navigateTo('setup') // Will redirect to /setup
navigateTo('setup', 'es') // Will redirect to /configuracion
routeIsActive
import { routeIsActive } from 'svelte-router-spa'
Returns a boolean indicating if the path is the current active route.
This is useful, for instance to set an active class on a menu.
Params
- pathName (required): A string with the path that you want to check.
- includePath (optional | default is false): A boolean indicating if pathName should match exactly the current route or if it should be included.
The Navigate component does this automatically and adds an active class if the generated route is the active one. Navigate sets includePath to false
Example:
<script>
import { routeIsActive } from 'svelte-router-spa'
</script>
<a href="/contact-us" class:active={routeIsActive('/contact-us')}>
Say hello
</a>
// If current route is /admin/companies/show/my-company
routeIsActive('admin') // returns false
routeIsActive('show/my-company') // returns false
routeIsActive('admin/companies/show/my-company') // returns true
routeIsActive('admin', true) // returns true
routeIsActive('show/my-company', true) // returns true
routeIsActive('my-company', true) // returns true
routeIsActive('other-company', true) // returns false
If includePath is true and the current route is /admin/companies/show/my-company
localisedRoute
import { localisedRoute } from 'svelte-router-spa'
params
- route name (Required) String A valid route to navigate to.
- language (Required) String A language to convert the route to.
localisedRoute returns a string with the route localised to the specified language.
// Example route
{
name: '/setup',
component: 'SetupComponent',
lang: { es: 'configuracion', it: 'configurazione' }
}
localisedRoute('setup', 'es') // Will return the string "/configuracion"
localisedRoute('setup', 'it') // Will return the string "/configurazione"
Not Found - 404
Default behaviour
Svelte Router redirects to a 404.html page if a route is not found. Most hosting providers support this configuration and will serve a 404.html page automatically for not found pages. Just add a 404.html page in the same directory where your index.html file is.
Custom behaviour
If you define a 404 route it will be rendered instead of the default behaviour.
// Example of a custom 404 route
{
name: '404',
path: '404',
component: MyCustomNotFoundcomponent
}
Route prefix
You can easily constrain all your routes to a specific path like /blog
<Router { routes } options={ {prefix: 'blog'} } />
With this option you don't have to define all your routes starting with blog they will be prefixed automatically.
Using prefix has two advantages:
- You don't need to create a top level route in your routes file and then add every route as a nested route.
- Routes that don't start with the prefix will not be returned as 404 since they are out of the scope of the prefixed routes so you can navigate to them.
Google Analytics
If you want to track route changes as pageviews in Google Analytics just add
<Router { routes } options={ {gaPageviews: true} } />
Localisation
How localisation works depends on the lang param being passed to the Router component. If a language is specified the router will try to match a route in that language only. If no language is specified then the router will try to find a route in any language available.
const options = { lang: 'de' }
<Router {routes} {options} />
Let's see some examples using the following routes.
const routes = [
{
name: '/',
component: PublicIndex,
},
{ name: 'login', component: Login, lang: { es: 'iniciar-sesion' } },
{ name: 'signup', component: SignUp, lang: { es: 'registrarse' } },
{
name: 'admin',
component: AdminIndex,
lang: { es: 'administrador' },
nestedRoutes: [
{
name: 'employees',
component: EmployeesIndex,
lang: { es: 'empleados' },
nestedRoutes: [
{
name: 'show/:id',
component: ShowEmployeeLayout,
lang: { es: 'mostrar/:id' },
nestedRoutes: [
{
name: 'index',
component: ShowEmployee,
},
{
name: 'calendar/:month',
component: CalendarEmployee,
lang: { es: 'calendario/:month', de: 'kalender/:month' },
},
],
},
],
},
],
},
]
If we don't specify a language the following routes are valid:
/login
/setup
/admin/employees
/admin/employees/show/123
/admin/employees/show/123/calendar/june
/iniciar-sesion
/registrarse
/administrador/empleados
/administrador/empleados/mostrar/123
/administrador/empleados/mostrar/123/calendario/junio
If we specify a language the router will try to find routes only in that language so if in our current example we set the lang variable to 'es' these routes will be invalid and the router will return a 404 page:
/login
/setup
/admin/employees
/admin/employees/show/123
/admin/employees/show/123/calendar/june
However these other routes will be valid:
/iniciar-sesion
/registrarse
/administrador/empleados
/administrador/empleados/mostrar/123
/administrador/empleados/mostrar/123/calendario/junio
currentRoute will return the language of the matched route.
Another example: In the routes above there is only one german localised route for calendar so this url will be valid:
/admin/employees/show/123/kalender/april
The router will match the default route for all paths that are not localised and will match the german one for the one that specfies a localisation.
That route will set 'de' as the language in currentRoute
Rendering a page in different languages
If you use Navigate and navigateTo to generate links and navigate to different parts of your application an automatic language conversion will be done for you.
Both Navigate and navigateTo support an aditional parameter with a language. If a language is provided they will try to convert the default route into the corresponding one for that language.
Example:
// Example route
{
name: '/setup',
component: 'SetupComponent',
lang: { es: 'configuracion' }
}
navigateTo('setup') // Will redirect to /setup
navigateTo('setup', 'es') // Will redirect to /configuracion
There is also available a function called localisedRoute that will return a string with the translated route, in case you want the translation but not navigating to the route.
The router options accept a property called defaultLanguage This value will be returned by the activeRoute object if there is no language selected.
Example of use
Demanda is an open source e-commerce application made with Ruby on Rails for the backend and Svelte for the frontend. It is a very good example of how to use Svelte Router SPA.
Credits
Svelte Router has been developed by Jorge Alvarez