A simple minimalistic JavaScript router with a fallback for older browsers.
Via npm with npm install navigo
or drop lib/navigo.min.js
into your page.
var router = new Navigo(root = null, useHash=false);
The constructor of the library accepts two argument - root
and useHash
. The first one is the main URL of your application. If you call the constructor without parameters then Navigo figures out the root URL based on your routes.
If useHash
set to true
then the router uses an old routing approach with hash in the URL. Navigo anyways falls back to this mode if there is no History API supported.
router
.on('/products/list', function () {
// display all the products
})
.resolve();
or skip the first parameter and provide only a function and the router will fallback every non-existing URL to your handler. (suitable for displaying home page)
router
.on(function () {
// show home page here
// or handle page-not-found case
})
.resolve();
or use the following to pass multiple routes at once:
router
.on({
'/products/list': function () { ... },
'/products': function () { ... },
...
})
.resolve();
Navigo also supports a parameterized URLs:
router
.on('/user/:id/:action', function (params) {
// If we have http://site.com/user/42/save as a url then
// params.id = 42
// params.action = save
})
.resolve();
We may also send a regular expression:
router
.on(/users\/(\d+)\/(\w+)\/?/, function (id, action) {
// If we have http://site.com/user/42/save as a url then
// id = 42
// action = save
})
.resolve();
Wild card is also supported:
router
.on('/user/*', function () {
// This function will be called on every
// URL that starts with /user
})
.resolve();
The order of routes adding do matter. The URL which is added earlier and matches wins. For example:
router
.on({
'products/:id': function () {
setContent('Products');
},
'products': function () {
setContent('About');
},
'*': function () {
setContent('Home')
}
})
.resolve();
It is important to add products/:id
first because otherwise you may fall into products
every time.
Have in mind that every call of on
do not trigger a route check (anymore). You have to run resolve
method manually to get the routing works.
You may need to provide a fallback handler. A handler that is fired if none of the routes match:
router.on(function fallback() {
// ...
});
Use the navigate
method:
router.navigate('/products/list');
You may also specify an absolute path. For example:
router.navigate('http://site.com/products/list', true);
If you want to bind page links to Navigo you have to add data-navigo
attribute. For example:
<a href="about" data-navigo>About</a>
It's translated to:
// the html to: <a href="javascript:void(0);" data-navigo>About</a>
var location = link.getAttribute('href');
...
link.addEventListener('click', e => {
e.preventDefault();
router.navigate(location);
});
Use the following API to give a name to your route and later generate URLs:
router = new Navigo('http://site.com/', true);
router.on({
'/trip/:tripId/edit': { as: 'trip.edit', uses: handler },
'/trip/save': { as: 'trip.save', uses: handler },
'/trip/:action/:tripId': { as: 'trip.action', uses: handler }
});
console.log(router.generate('trip.edit', { tripId: 42 })); // --> /trip/42/edit
console.log(router.generate('trip.action', { tripId: 42, action: 'save' })); // --> /trip/save/42
console.log(router.generate('trip.save')); // --> /trip/save
The resolving of the routes happen when resolve
method is fired which happen:
- if you manually run
router.resolve()
- every time when the page's URL changes
- if you call
navigate
Sometimes you need to update the URL but you don't want to resolve your callbacks. In such cases you may call .pause(true)
and do .navigate('new/url/here')
. For example:
r.pause(true);
r.navigate('/en/products');
r.pause(false);
The route will be changed to /en/products
but if you have a handler for that path will not be executed.
router.on(function)
- adding a new routerouter.on(string, function)
- adding a new routerouter.on(object)
- adding a new routerouter.navigate(path='', absolute=false)
- ifabsolute
isfalse
then Navigo finds the root path of your app based on the provided routes.router.resolve(currentURL=undefined)
- ifcurrentURL
is provided then the method tries resolving the registered routes to that URL and notwindow.location.href
.router.destroy
- removes all the registered routes and stops the URL change listening.router.link(path)
- it returns a full url of the givenpath
router.pause(boolean)
- it gives you a chance to change the route without resolving. Make sure that you callrouter.pause(false)
so you return to the previous working state.router.disableIfAPINotAvailable()
- well, it disables the route if History API is not supported
npm i
npm test
- A general handler for when Navigo matches some of the rules