I was wondering if there is a way to name my routes in Angular7 so I could just call [routerLink]="myRouteName"
instead of [routerLink]="/my/route/path"
.
If so, how can I achieve this?
I was wondering if there is a way to name my routes in Angular7 so I could just call [routerLink]="myRouteName"
instead of [routerLink]="/my/route/path"
.
If so, how can I achieve this?
Considering you want to configure the routes names while you are creating the route configuration.
Lets leverage routes'
data property to add names to routes. (A small extra data in every route should not affect any performance).
But first, let's create a class which conatains a static property for holding route names and their actual paths.
export class RouteNames {
public static routeNamesObject = {}
}
Now in your routing component where you have defined the routes, let's have it like:
const routes: Routes = [
{path: "hello/:id", component: HelloComponent, data: {routeName: "Hello1"}},
{path: "hello", component: HelloComponent, data: { routeName: "Hello2" }}
]
Just after this variable initialization set the RouteNames class's static prop
routes.forEach((eachRoute) => {
RouteNames.routeNamesObject[eachRoute.data.routeName] = eachRoute.path; // now all route paths are added to this prop
})
Make a public variable in your component to access the static class
Like in app.component.ts: (You don't need injection)
public routeNames = RouteNames;
Then the app.component.html
will be something like:
<button [routerLink]="routeNames.routeNamesObject['Hello2']">Click to Navigate to Hello</button>
"routeNames.routeNamesObject['...']"
would be to define a pipe (say url
) that does this, e.g. routerLink="{{ 'Hello2' | url }}"
. This way you avoid having to define the route names locally in every component that needs them.
interface NamedRoute implements Route { name: string}
and type NamedRoutes = NamedRoute[]
and use those interfaces instead. A route would then simply look like {path: "hello", component: HelloComponent, name: "Hello2" }
.
NamedRouterModule
that registers the names in the forRoot
/forChild
method, can also get rid of the overhead of registering the names yourself with routes.forEach(...)
. Maybe I should create package...
<a [routerLink]="routerLinkVariable"></a>
So this variable (routerLinkVariable) could be defined inside your class and it should have a value like below
export class myComponent {
public routerLinkVariable = "/my/route/path"; // the value of the variable is string!
}
I managed to do this like this (bonus if someone can tell me how to remove the Array loop):
custom-route.interface.ts -- this is to add name to our route object
export interface ICustomRoute extends Route {
name?: string;
}
In routing.module.ts (or wherever you have stored your routes):
const routes: ICustomRoute[] = [
{ path: 'some/random/page1', component: TestComponent, name: 'page1' },
{ path: 'some/random/page2', component: Test2Component, name: 'page2' },
{ path: 'page3', component: Test3Component, name: 'page3' },
];
Now the name is being passed into your routing module so now you have to catch the name and handle it. You can do this in a number of ways, I ended up using a directive (I saw @Safron mentioned a pipe as well)
named-routerlink.directive.ts
@Directive({
selector: 'a[namedRouterLink]'
})
export class NamedRouterLinkDirective extends RouterLinkWithHref{
@Input('namedRouterLink')
set namedRouterLink(val: any) {
const selectedRoute = this.myRoute.config.filter( x => x['name'] == val)[0];
this.routerLink = "/" + selectedRoute['path']
};
constructor(router: Router, route: ActivatedRoute, locationStrategy: LocationStrategy, private myRoute: Router){
super(router, route, locationStrategy)
}
}
And then obviously use like this:
<a namedRouterLink="page1">Page 1</a>
Pipe Version:
@Pipe({name: 'getRoute' })
export class RoutePipe implements PipeTransform {
constructor(private router: Router){}
transform(routeName: string): string {
const selectedRoute = this.router.config.filter( x => x['name'] == routeName)[0];
return "/" + selectedRoute['path']
}
}
Pipe Example:
<a namedRouterLink="{{ 'page1' | getRoute }}">Page 1</a>
You can use constant file for that so that it can be reusable in other components too.
export const ROUTE_URL = {
myRouteName: '/my/route/path',
};
As many as you have.
then use that constant on .TS
and use it in the view.
View:
<a [routerLink]="routerUrls.myRouteName"></a>
.TS:
public routerUrls= ROUTE_URL;
Even on your route file
{ path: 'xyz', loadChildren: ROUTE_URL.myRouteName},
.TS
in a variable and then that variable can be used in the view. We are using constant file for usability of code, otherwise that url can also be in that variable directly.
Dec 4, 2018 at 14:29
/my/contract/<id>/details/foo
?
In your class
public routeName = '/customRoute/myExample'
Then in your template
[routerLink]="routeName"
This should pull that value through, i think thats what you are asking for. This will only work if the customRoute
is actually a valid route name you have made.