2

So I found this Navigation Bar feature with Bootstrap-3, but as of now I am using Flow-Router instead of Iron-Router. Thus I am seeking to transform this helper function into Flow-Router terms:

Template.navItems.helpers({
    activeIfTemplateIs: function (template) {
      var currentRoute = Router.current();
      return currentRoute &&
        template === currentRoute.lookupTemplate() ? 'active' : '';
    }
});

I have made my own attempt at fixing the problem (haven't bothered testing it though, as many parts of my site/app are still not functional), but I require confirmation in the form of a "yes" or "no" and perhaps a bit more information on what I did wrong.

Template.navItems.helpers({
    activeIfTemplateIs: function (template) {
      var currentRoute = FlowRouter.current();
      return currentRoute &&
        template === currentRoute.name ? 'active' : '';
    }
});

I guided myself from the Flow-Router API. Is this solution correct or is it for one reason or another strictly bound to be used with Iron-Router?

3 Answers 3

6

After thinking about your real issue a bit further, I realized I'm doing this is in my app in a completely different way and that perhaps you might find that pattern useful. My app also uses bootstrap and has a nav where I want to highlight the active route (and un-highlight all other routes).

In iron-router, I do:

onAfterAction(){
  const selector = '.nav a[href="/' + Router.current().route.getName() + '"]'; // the nav item for the active route (if any)
  $('.nav-active').removeClass('nav-active'); // unhighlight any previously highlighted nav
  $(selector).addClass('nav-active'); // highlight the current nav (if it exists, many routes don't have a nav)
}

In Flow-Router, onAfterAction is replaced by triggersExit so you can do:

triggersExit(){
  const selector = '.nav a[href="' + FlowRouter.current().path + '"]';
  $('.nav-active').removeClass('nav-active');
  $(selector).addClass('nav-active');
}

I found this much more convenient than mucking with the spacebars templates.

FYI, you have a couple options to get the route name:

FlowRouter.getRouteName() // reactive

or

FlowRouter.current().route.name // NOT reactive
1
  • Thanks for letting us know that FlowRouter.getRouteName() is reactive. Exactly what I needed.
    – Dave Rapin
    Nov 2, 2015 at 17:03
3

Now you can use Active-Route package.

For example:

<a class="nav-tab {{isActivePath class='nav-current' path='/new'}}" href="/new">
  New
</a>
0
0

To give you a more complete picture, this is what did for my project.

Template HTML Code

<template name="topNavbar">
<nav class="navbar navbar-default">
  <ul class="nav navbar-nav">
    <li><a class="navbar-brand" href="/">Sample</a></li>

    <li class="{{ activeIfTemplateIs 'home' }}">
      <a href="/home">Home</a>
    </li>

    <li class="{{ activeIfTemplateIs 'users' }}">
      <a href="/users">Users</a>
    </li>

  </ul>
</nav>
</template>

JavaScript Code

Template.topNavbar.helpers({
  activeIfTemplateIs: function (template) {
    var currentRoute = FlowRouter.getRouteName();
    return currentRoute && template === currentRoute ? 'active' : '';
  }
});

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