Connect your Preact components up to that address bar.
preact-router
provides a <Router />
component that conditionally renders its children when the URL matches their path
. It also automatically wires up <a />
elements to the router.
π Note: This is not a preact-compatible version of React Router.
preact-router
is a simple URL wiring and does no orchestration for you.If you're looking for more complex solutions like nested routes and view composition, react-router works great with preact as long as you alias in preact-compat. React Router 4 even works directly with Preact, no compatibility layer needed!
import Router from 'preact-router';
import { h, render } from 'preact';
/** @jsx h */
const Main = () => (
<Router>
<Home path="/" />
<About path="/about" />
// Advanced is an optional query
<Search path="/search/:query/:advanced?" />
</Router>
);
render(<Main />, document.body);
If there is an error rendering the destination route, a 404 will be displayed.
π Pages are just regular components that get mounted when you navigate to a certain URL.
Any URL parameters get passed to the component as props
.
Defining what component(s) to load for a given URL is easy and declarative.
You can even mix-and-match URL parameters and normal props
.
You can also make params optional by adding a ?
to it.
<Router>
<A path="/" />
<B path="/b" id="42" />
<C path="/c/:id" />
<C path="/d/:optional?/:params?" />
<D default />
</Router>
Lazy loading (code splitting) with preact-router
can be implemented easily using the AsyncRoute module:
import AsyncRoute from 'preact-async-route';
<Router>
<Home path="/" />
<AsyncRoute
path="/friends"
getComponent={ () => import('./friends').then(module => module.default) }
/>
<AsyncRoute
path="/friends/:id"
getComponent={ () => import('./friend').then(module => module.default) }
loading={ () => <div>loading...</div> }
/>
</Router>
preact-router
includes an add-on module called match
that lets you wire your components up to Router changes.
Here's a demo of <Match>
, which invokes the function you pass it (as its only child) in response to any routing:
import Router from 'preact-router';
import Match from 'preact-router/match';
render(
<div>
<Match path="/">
{ ({ matches, path, url }) => (
<pre>{url}</pre>
) }
</Match>
<Router>
<div default>demo fallback route</div>
</Router>
</div>
)
// another example: render only if at a given URL:
render(
<div>
<Match path="/">
{ ({ matches }) => matches && (
<h1>You are Home!</h1>
) }
</Match>
<Router />
</div>
)
<Link>
is just a normal link, but it automatically adds and removes an "active" classname to itself based on whether it matches the current URL.
import { Router, Link } from 'preact-router';
render(
<div>
<nav>
<Link activeClassName="active" href="/">Home</Link>
<Link activeClassName="active" href="/foo">Foo</Link>
<Link activeClassName="active" href="/bar">Bar</Link>
</nav>
<Router>
<div default>
this is a demo route that always matches
</div>
</Router>
</div>
)
Sometimes it's necessary to bypass preact-router's link handling and let the browser perform routing on its own.
This can be accomplished by adding a native
boolean attribute to any link:
<a href="/foo" native>Foo</a>
The Router
notifies you when a change event occurs for a route with the onChange
callback:
import { render, Component } from 'preact';
import { Router, route } from 'preact-router';
class App extends Component {
// some method that returns a promise
isAuthenticated() { }
handleRoute = async e => {
switch (e.url) {
case '/profile':
const isAuthed = await this.isAuthenticated();
if (!isAuthed) route('/', true);
break;
}
};
render() {
return (
<Router onChange={this.handleRoute}>
<Home path="/" />
<Profile path="/profile" />
</Router>
);
}
}
Can easily be implemented with a custom Redirect
component;
import { Component } from 'preact';
import { route } from 'preact-router';
export default class Redirect extends Component {
componentWillMount() {
route(this.props.to, true);
}
render() {
return null;
}
}
Now to create a redirect within your application, you can add this Redirect
component to your router;
<Router>
<Bar path="/bar" />
<Redirect path="/foo" to="/bar" />
</Router>
It's possible to use alternative history bindings, like /#!/hash-history
:
import { h } from 'preact';
import Router from 'preact-router';
import { createHashHistory } from 'history';
const Main = () => (
<Router history={createHashHistory()}>
<Home path="/" />
<About path="/about" />
<Search path="/search/:query" />
</Router>
);
render(<Main />, document.body);
Its possible to programmatically trigger a route to a page (like window.location = '/page-2'
)
import { route } from 'preact-router';
route('/page-2') // appends a history entry
route('/page-3', true) // replaces the current history entry