Type safe router for Vue.js
Get Started with our documentation or our intro video
# bun
bun add @kitbag/router
# yarn
yarn add @kitbag/router
# npm
npm install @kitbag/router
Create an array of possible routes. Learn more about defining routes.
// /routes.ts
import { createRoute } from '@kitbag/router'
const Home = { template: '<div>Home</div>' }
const About = { template: '<div>About</div>' }
export const routes = [
createRoute({ name: 'home', path: '/', component: Home }),
createRoute({ name: 'path', path: '/about', component: About }),
] as const
Create a router instance and pass it to the app as a plugin
import { createApp } from 'vue'
import { createRouter } from '@kitbag/router'
import { routes } from '/routes'
import App from './App.vue'
const router = createRouter(routes)
const app = createApp(App)
app.use(router)
app.mount('#app')
This block utilizes declaration merging to provide the internal types to match the actual router you're using. You put this in main.ts right after you call createRouter
, or you can export your router and put this interface inside of a router.d.ts
file, anywhere that your tsconfig can find it.
declare module '@kitbag/router' {
interface Register {
router: typeof router
}
}
To navigate to another route, you can use router.push
. This method will update the URL for the browser and also add the URL into the history so when a user uses the back button on their browser it will behave as expected.
import { defineAsyncComponent } from 'vue'
import { createRoute, useRouter } from '@kitbag/router'
const user = createRoute({
name: 'user',
path: '/user',
component: defineAsyncComponent(() => import('./UserPage.vue')),
})
const profile = createRoute({
parent: user,
name: 'profile',
path: '/profile',
component: defineAsyncComponent(() => import('./ProfilePage.vue')),
})
const settings = createRoute({
parent: user,
name: 'settings',
path: '/settings',
component: defineAsyncComponent(() => import('./SettingsPage.vue')),
})
const router = useRouter([user, profile, settings])
router.push('settings')
The push method also accepts a plain string if you know the URL you want to go to.
router.push('/user/settings')
router.push('https://github.com/kitbagjs/router')
This source
argument is type safe, expecting either a Url
or a valid route name
. URL is any string that starts with "http", "https", or a forward slash "/". Additionally if using the route name, push will require params be passed in if there are any.
If you only wish to change the params on the current route you can use router.route.update
.
router.route.update('myParam', 123)
or for setting multiple params at once
router.route.update({
myParam: 123,
tab: 'github',
})
Give your route components a place to be mounted
<!-- App.vue -->
<div class="app">
...
<!-- matched route.component gets rendered here -->
<router-view />
</div>
This component can be mounted anywhere you want route components to be mounted. Nested routes can also have a nested RouterView
which would be responsible for rendering any children that route may have. Read more about nested routes.
Use RouterLink for navigating between routes.
<template>
...
<!-- router-link renders as <a> with href -->
<router-link :to="(resolve) => resolve('home')">Go somewhere</router-link>
</template>
This component gives the router the power to change the URL without reloading the page.