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@remix-run/router

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  • License MIT

Nested/Data-driven/Framework-agnostic Routing

Package Exports

  • @remix-run/router
  • @remix-run/router/dist/router.cjs.js
  • @remix-run/router/dist/router.js
  • @remix-run/router/package.json

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (@remix-run/router) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

Remix Router

The @remix-run/router package is a framework-agnostic routing package (sometimes referred to as a browser-emulator) that serves as the heart of React Router and Remix and provides all the core functionality for routing coupled with data loading and data mutations. It comes with built-in handling of errors, race-conditions, interruptions, cancellations, lazy-loading data, and much, much more.

If you're using React Router, you should never import anything directly from the @remix-run/router - you should have everything you need in react-router-dom (or react-router/react-router-native if you're not rendering in the browser). All of those packages should re-export everything you would otherwise need from @remix-run/router.

[!WARNING]

This router is a low-level package intended to be consumed by UI layer routing libraries. You should very likely not be using this package directly unless you are authoring a routing library such as react-router-dom or one of it's other UI ports.

API

A Router instance can be created using createRouter:

// Create and initialize a router.  "initialize" contains all side effects
// including history listeners and kicking off the initial data fetch
let router = createRouter({
  // Required properties
  routes: [{
    path: '/',
    loader: ({ request, params }) => { /* ... */ },
    children: [{
      path: 'home',
      loader: ({ request, params }) => { /* ... */ },
    }]
  },
  history: createBrowserHistory(),

  // Optional properties
  basename, // Base path
  mapRouteProperties, // Map framework-agnostic routes to framework-aware routes
  future, // Future flags
  hydrationData, // Hydration data if using server-side-rendering
}).initialize();

Internally, the Router represents the state in an object of the following format, which is available through router.state. You can also register a subscriber of the signature (state: RouterState) => void to execute when the state updates via router.subscribe();

interface RouterState {
  // False during the initial data load, true once we have our initial data
  initialized: boolean;
  // The `history` action of the most recently completed navigation
  historyAction: Action;
  // The current location of the router.  During a navigation this reflects
  // the "old" location and is updated upon completion of the navigation
  location: Location;
  // The current set of route matches
  matches: DataRouteMatch[];
  // The state of the current navigation
  navigation: Navigation;
  // The state of any in-progress router.revalidate() calls
  revalidation: RevalidationState;
  // Data from the loaders for the current matches
  loaderData: RouteData;
  // Data from the action for the current matches
  actionData: RouteData | null;
  // Errors thrown from loaders/actions for the current matches
  errors: RouteData | null;
  // Map of all active fetchers
  fetchers: Map<string, Fetcher>;
  // Scroll position to restore to for the active Location, false if we
  // should not restore, or null if we don't have a saved position
  // Note: must be enabled via router.enableScrollRestoration()
  restoreScrollPosition: number | false | null;
  // Proxied `preventScrollReset` value passed to router.navigate()
  preventScrollReset: boolean;
}

All navigations are done through the router.navigate API which is overloaded to support different types of navigations:

// Link navigation (pushes onto the history stack by default)
router.navigate("/page");

// Link navigation (replacing the history stack)
router.navigate("/page", { replace: true });

// Pop navigation (moving backward/forward in the history stack)
router.navigate(-1);

// Form submission navigation
let formData = new FormData();
formData.append(key, value);
router.navigate("/page", {
  formMethod: "post",
  formData,
});

// Relative routing from a source routeId
router.navigate("../../somewhere", {
  fromRouteId: "active-route-id",
});

Fetchers

Fetchers are a mechanism to call loaders/actions without triggering a navigation, and are done through the router.fetch() API. All fetch calls require a unique key to identify the fetcher.

// Execute the loader for /page
router.fetch("key", "/page");

// Submit to the action for /page
let formData = new FormData();
formData.append(key, value);
router.fetch("key", "/page", {
  formMethod: "post",
  formData,
});

Revalidation

By default, active loaders will revalidate after any navigation or fetcher mutation. If you need to kick off a revalidation for other use-cases, you can use router.revalidate() to re-execute all active loaders.

Future Flags

We use Future Flags in the router to help us introduce breaking changes in an opt-in fashion ahead of major releases. Please check out the blog post and React Router Docs for more information on this process. The currently available future flags in @remix-run/router are:

Flag Description
v7_normalizeFormMethod Normalize useNavigation().formMethod to be an uppercase HTTP Method
v7_prependBasename Prepend the basename to incoming router.navigate/router.fetch paths