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next-route

v2.0.0

Published

Routing sugar for next.js for the 99% case

Downloads

32

Readme

Route

Simplified custom routing for next.js.

This module is high-level, but will cover your 99% use case.

It comes with the following interfaces:

// server-side request handler
import Route from 'next-route'

// universal <Link /> proxy component
import Link from 'next-route/link'

// universal <Router /> proxy component
import Router from 'next-route/router'

Usage

const app = require('next')({ dev: true })
const Route = require('next-route')

app.prepare().then(() => {
  createServer(Route(app))
  .listen(3000, (err) => {
    if (err) throw err
    console.log('> Ready on http://localhost:3000')
  })
})

Specifying Routes

This map will be pulled in from your package.json:

"routes": {
    "/": "/landing",
    "/:date/:post": "/blogpost",
    "/:post": "/blogpost",
    "/about": "/about",
    "/404": "/404",
  }

Things to note:

  • The routing map uses the same logic and low-level module as express's routing.
  • Any parameters resolved by the routing (e.g. ":post") will be passed into getInitialProps as query parameters

Using <Link /> & Router

Once you start using custom routing like this, your <Link /> and Router functions get a bit more difficult. For example, if we have a blogpost at /hello-world, in order to get the routing working properly, we'll need to do the following:

<Link href="/blogpost?post=hello-world" as="/hello-world">Hello World</Link>

This is certainly doable, but next-route provides a bit of sugar over this to bring back the old functionality:

import Link from 'next-route/link'
<Link href="/hello-world">Hello World</Link>

Which will format the props and pass them into next/link. The same goes for Router's push and replace methods.

Note that router is not a full replacement for next/router. Use this library only for its Router.push & Router.replace methods.

Installation

npm install next-route

License

MIT