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router.js

router.js is a lightweight JavaScript library (under 1k!) that builds on route-recognizer to provide an API for handling routes.

In keeping with the Unix philosophy, it is a modular library that does one thing and does it well.

Usage

Create a new router:

var router = new Router();

Add a simple new route description:

router.map(function(match) {
  match("/posts/:id").to("showPost");
  match("/posts").to("postIndex");
  match("/posts/new").to("newPost");
});

Add your handlers:

router.handlers.showPost = {
  deserialize: function(params) {
    return App.Post.find(params.id);
  },

  setup: function(post) {
    // render a template with the post
  }
};

router.handlers.postIndex = {
  deserialize: function(params) {
    return App.Post.findAll();
  },

  setup: function(posts) {
    // render a template with the posts
  }
};

router.handlers.newPost = {
  setup: function(post) {
    // render a template with the post
  }
};

Use another modular library to listen for URL changes, and tell the router to handle a URL:

urlWatcher.onUpdate(function(url) {
  router.handleURL(url);
});

The router will parse the URL for parameters and then pass the parameters into the handler's deserialize method. It will then pass the return value of deserialize into the setup method. These two steps are broken apart to support async loading via promises (see below).

To transition into the state represented by a handler without changing the URL, use router.transitionTo:

router.transitionTo('showPost', post);

If you pass an extra parameter to transitionTo, as above, the router will pass it to the handler's serialize method to extract the parameters. Let's flesh out the showPost handler:

router.handlers.showPost = {
  // when coming in from a URL, convert parameters into
  // an object
  deserialize: function(params) {
    return App.Post.find(params.id);
  },

  // when coming in from `transitionTo`, convert an
  // object into parameters
  serialize: function(object) {
    return { id: post.id };
  },

  setup: function(post) {
    // render a template with the post
  }
};

Changing the URL

As a modular library, router.js does not express an opinion about how to reflect the URL on the page. Many other libraries do a good job of abstracting hash and pushState and working around known bugs in browsers.

The router.updateURL hook will be called to give you an opportunity to update the browser's physical URL as you desire:

router.updateURL = function(url) {
  window.location.hash = url;
};

Always In Sync

No matter whether you go to a handler via a URL change or via transitionTo, you will get the same behavior.

If you enter a state represented by a handler through a URL:

  • the handler will convert the URL's parameters into an object, and pass it in to setup
  • the URL is already up to date

If you enter a state via transitionTo:

  • the handler will convert the object into params, and update the URL.
  • the object is already available to pass into setup

This means that you can be sure that your application's top-level objects will always be in sync with the URL, no matter whether you are extracting the object from the URL or if you already have the object.

Asynchronous Loading

When extracting an object from the parameters, you may need to make a request to the server before the object is ready.

You can easily achieve this by returning a promise from your deserialize method. Because jQuery's Ajax methods already return promises, this is easy!

router.handlers.showPost = {
  deserialize: function(params) {
    return $.getJSON("/posts/" + params.id).then(function(json) {
      return new App.Post(json.post);
    });
  },

  serialize: function(post) {
    return { id: post.get('id') };
  },

  setup: function(post) {
    // receives the App.Post instance
  }
};

You can register a loading handler for router.js to call while it waits for promises to resolve:

router.handlers.loading = {
  // no deserialize or serialize because this is not
  // a handler for a URL

  setup: function() {
    // show a loading UI
  }
}

Nesting

You can nest routes, and each level of nesting can have its own handler.

If you move from one child of a parent route to another, the parent will not be set up again unless it deserializes to a different object.

Consider a master-detail view.

router.map(function(match) {
  match("/posts").to("posts", function(match) {
    match("/").to("postIndex");
    match("/:id").to("showPost");
  });
});

router.handlers.posts = {
  deserialize: function() {
    return $.getJSON("/posts").then(function(json) {
      return App.Post.loadPosts(json.posts);
    });
  },

  // no serialize needed because there are no
  // dynamic segments

  setup: function(posts) {
    var postsView = new App.PostsView(posts);
    $("#master").append(postsView.el);
  }
};

router.handlers.postIndex = {
  setup: function() {
    $("#detail").hide();
  }
};

router.handlers.showPost = {
  deserialize: function(params) {
    return $.getJSON("/posts/" + params.id, function(json) {
      return new App.Post(json.post);
    });
  }
};

router.handlers.loading = {
  setup: function() {
    $("#content").hide();
    $("#loading").show();
  },

  exit: function() {
    $("#loading").hide();
    $("#content").show();
  }
};

You can also use nesting to build nested UIs, setting up the outer view when entering the handler for the outer route, and setting up the inner view when entering the handler for the inner route.

Routes at any nested level can deserialize parameters into a promise. The router will remain in the loading state until all promises are resolved. If a parent state deserializes the parameters into a promise, that promise will be resolved before a child route is handled.

Transition Callbacks

When the URL changes and a handler becomes active, router.js invokes a number of callbacks:

  • deserialize on all recognized handlers, if the transition occurred through the URL
  • serialize on as many handlers as necessary to consume the passed in contexts, if the transition occurred through transitionTo. A context is consumed if the handler's route fragment has a dynamic segment and the handler has a deserialize method.
  • enter only when the handler becomes active, not when it remains active after a change
  • setup when the handler becomes active, or when the handler's context changes

For handlers that are no longer active after a change, router.js invokes the exit callback.

The order of callbacks are:

  • exit in reverse order
  • enter starting from the first new handler
  • setup starting from the first handler whose context has changed

For example, consider the following tree of handlers. Each handler is followed by the URL segment it handles.

|~index ("/")
| |~posts ("/posts")
| | |-showPost ("/:id")
| | |-newPost ("/new")
| | |-editPost ("/edit")
| |~about ("/about/:id")

Consider the following transitions:

  1. A URL transition to /posts/1.
    1. Triggers the deserialize callback on the index, posts, and showPost handlers
    2. Triggers the enter callback on the same
    3. Triggers the setup callback on the same
  2. A direct transition to newPost
    1. Triggers the exit callback on showPost
    2. Triggers the enter callback on newPost
    3. Triggers the setup callback on newPost
  3. A direct transition to about with a specified context object
    1. Triggers the exit callback on newPost and posts
    2. Triggers the serialize callback on about
    3. Triggers the enter callback on about
    4. Triggers the setup callback on about

Nesting Without Handlers

You can also nest without extra handlers, for clarity.

For example, instead of writing:

router.map(function(match) {
  match("/posts").to("postIndex");
  match("/posts/new").to("newPost");
  match("/posts/:id/edit").to("editPost");
  match("/posts/:id").to("showPost");
});

You could write:

router.map(function(match) {
  match("/posts", function(match) {
    match("/").to("postIndex");
    match("/new").to("newPost");

    match("/:id", function(match) {
      match("/").to("showPost");
      match("/edit").to("editPost");
    });
  });
});

Typically, this sort of nesting is more verbose but makes it easier to change patterns higher up. In this case, changing /posts to /pages would be easier in the second example than the first.

Both work identically, so do whichever you prefer.

Events

When handlers are active, you can trigger events on the router. The router will search for a registered event backwards from the last active handler.

You specify events using an events hash in the handler definition:

handlers.postIndex = {
  events: {
    expand: function(handler) {
      // the event gets a reference to the handler
      // it is triggered on as the first argument
    }
  }
}

For example:

router.map(function(match) {
  match("/posts").to("posts", function(match) {
    match("/").to("postIndex");
    match("/:id").to("showPost");
    match("/edit").to("editPost");
  });
});

router.handlers.posts = {
  events: {
    collapseSidebar: function(handler) {
      // do something to collapse the sidebar
    }
  }
};

router.handlers.postIndex = {};
router.handlers.showPost = {};

router.handlers.editPost = {
  events: {
    collapseSidebar: function(handler) {
      // override the collapseSidebar handler from
      // the posts handler
    }
  }
};

// trigger the event
router.trigger('collapseSidebar');

When at the postIndex or showPost route, the collapseSidebar event will be triggered on the posts handler.

When at the editPost route, the collapseSidebar event will be triggered on the editPost handler.

When you trigger an event on the router, router.js will walk backwards from the last active handler looking for an events hash containing that event name. Once it finds the event, it calls the function with the handler as the first argument.

This allows you to define general event handlers higher up in the router's nesting that you override at more specific routes.

Route Recognizer

router.js uses route-recognizer under the hood, which uses an NFA to match routes. This means that even somewhat elaborate routes will work:

router.map(function(match) {
  // this will match anything, followed by a slash,
  // followed by a dynamic segment (one or more non-
  // slash characters)
  match("/*page/:location").to("showPage");
});

If there are multiple matches, route-recognizer will prefer routes with fewer dynamic segments, so /posts/edit will match in preference to /posts/:id if both match.

More to Come

router.js is functional today. I plan to add more features before a first official release:

  • A failure handler if any of the promises are rejected
  • An exit callback on a handler when the app navigates to a page no longer represented by the handler
  • Improved hooks for external libraries that manage the physical URL.
  • Testing support
  • The ability to dispatch events to the current handler or parent handlers.

router.js will be the basis for the router in Ember.js.