87

How to navigate relative from /questions/123/step1 to /questions/123/step2 within a component using Router without string concatenation and specifying /questions/123/?

I've added an own answer below. Please feel free to suggest a better answer. ;-) I guess there are better approaches.

4 Answers 4

139

After doing some more research I came across with

this.router.createUrlTree(['../step2'], {relativeTo: this.activatedRoute});

and

this.router.navigate(['../step2'], {relativeTo: this.activatedRoute});

First approach (Router.createUrlTree API) did not work for me, i.e. nothing happened. Second approach (Router.navigate API) works.

Update 2016-10-12

There is another stackoverflow question as well:

Update 2016-10-24

Documentation:

Update 2019-03-08

It seems that there were changes in Angular 7.1. There is an answer in another post how to solve it with Angular 7.1. Please refer to https://stackoverflow.com/a/38634440/42659.

3
  • according to my test it should be this.router.navigate(['step2'], {relativeTo: this.activatedRoute}); without ../ before path.
    – Xin Meng
    Oct 18, 2017 at 9:33
  • 1
    @XinMeng the ../ is specific to this example, here the goal is trying to go up one level, and then add step2. so for example /parent/child would become /parent/step2 whereas in your example it becomes /parent/child/step2. Your example is valid code as well, but for the specific question asked the answer is correct.
    – Joo Beck
    Dec 14, 2017 at 16:59
  • 1
    One gotcha I had was the ActivatedRoute doesn't know about the current route if the class you're injecting it into has @Injectable({providedIn:'root'}).
    – IBN
    Jun 10, 2020 at 5:02
25

First, inject router & ActivatedRoute on constructor

constructor(private route:ActivatedRoute,private router:Router) { }

then use to Click Event:

onEditClick(){
        this.router.navigate(['edit'],{relativeTo:this.route});

You navigate to the expected page.In my scenario, I wanted to go recipe /1 to edit the recipe. http://localhost:4200/recipes/1/edit

5

Note: the routes are case sensitive so make sure you match the casing across

This worked for me for Angular 8:
From the parent component / page, to navigate to the sub page using typescript:

this.router.navigate(['subPage'], { relativeTo: this.route });

My router in the parent's module looks like this:

const routes: Routes = [
  {
    path: '',
    component: MyPage,
    children: [
      { path: 'subPage', component: subPageComponent}
    ]
  }
];

And on the parent's html page use the following to navigate using a link:

<a [routerLink]="'subPage'">Sub Page Link</a>
<router-outlet></router-outlet>
1

You may use below,

Assumption is questions is loaded into your primary router-outlet

  this.router.navigate([
      '/',
      { 
        outlets: {
          primary: [
              // below may be replaced with different variables
              'questions',
              '123',  
              'step2'
          ]
        }
      }
  ])

Hope this helps!!

1
  • Thanks. But I would like to avoid to write the complete route path.
    – Thomas
    Aug 26, 2016 at 7:39

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