Skip to content
forked from molefrog/wouter

⛸ A minimalistic (~1KB) routing for React. Nothing else but HOOKS.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

DisaPadla/wouter

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

61 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

wouter

Build Status

Wouter Logo by Katya Vakulenko

A tiny routing solution for modern React apps that relies on Hooks. A router you wanted so bad in your pet project!

  • Zero dependency, only 1.04KB gzipped vs 17KB React Router.
  • A top-level <Router /> component is fully optional.
  • Mimics React Router's best practices, however the library isn't a drop-in replacement.
  • Out of the box only supports History API, customization is possible via a <Router /> component.

How to get started?

Check out this demo app below in order to get started:

import { Link, Route } from "wouter";

const App = () => (
  <div>
    <Link href="/users/1">
      <a className="link">Profile</a>
    </Link>

    <Route path="/about">About Us</Route>
    <Route path="/users/:name">
      {params => <div>Hello, {params.name}!</div>}
    </Route>
    <Route path="/inbox" component={InboxPage} />
  </div>
);

The power of HOOKS!

wouter relies heavily on React Hooks. Thus it makes creating custom interactions such as route transitions or accessing router directly easier. You can check if a particular route matches the current location by using a useRoute hook:

import { useRoute } from "wouter";
import { Transition } from "react-transition-group";

const AnimatedRoute = () => {
  // `match` is boolean
  const [match, params] = useRoute("/users/:id");

  return <Transition in={match}>This is user ID: {params.id}</Transition>;
};

Matching Dynamic Segments

Just like in React Router you can make dynamic matches either with Route component or useRoute hook. useRoute returns a second parameter which is a hash of all dynamic segments matched. Similarily, the Route component passes these parameters down to its children via a function prop.

import { useRoute } from "wouter";

// /users/alex => [true, { name: "alex "}]
// /anything   => [false, null]
const [match, params] = useRoute("/users/:name");

// or with Route component
<Route path="/users/:name">
  {params => {
    /* { name: "alex" } */
  }}
</Route>;

wouter implements a limited subset of path-to-regexp package used by React Router or Express, and it supports the following patterns:

  • Named dynamic segments: /users/:foo.
  • Dynamic segments with modifiers: /foo/:bar*, /foo/baz? or /foo/bar+.

The library was designed to be as small as possible, so most of the additional matching feature were left out (see this issue for more info). If you do need to have path-to-regexp-like functionality you can customize a matcher function:

import { Router } from "wouter";
import createMatcher from "wouter/matcher";

import pathToRegexp from "path-to-regexp";

const App = () => (
  <Router matcher={createMatcher(pathToRegexp)}>
    {/* segment constraints aren't supported by wouter */}
    <Route path="/users/:id(\d+)" />}
  </Router>
);

Working with History

By default wouter creates an internal History object that observes the changes of the current location. If you need a custom history observer, for example for hash-based routing you can implement your own history.

import { Router, Route, useRouter } from "wouter"

const App => (
  <Router history={myHashHistory}>
    <Route path="/about" component={About} />
    ...
  </Router>
)

// you can later access the history object through the router object
const Foo = () => {
  const router = useRouter()

  // manually changes the location
  return <div onClick={() => router.history.push("/orders")}>My Orders</div>
}

Your feedback is welcome

Feel free to participate in development of the library, your feedback is much appreciated.

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to Katya Vakulenko for creating a project logo.

About

⛸ A minimalistic (~1KB) routing for React. Nothing else but HOOKS.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 100.0%