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Use Svelte with abstract-state-router!

Usage

const StateRouter = require('abstract-state-router')
const makeSvelteStateRenderer = require('svelte-state-renderer')


const defaultParameters = {
	props: {
		annoy() {
			alert('Modal dialogs are annoying')
		}
	}
}

const renderer = makeSvelteStateRenderer(defaultParameters)
const stateRouter = StateRouter(renderer, document.querySelector('body'))

// add whatever states to the state router

stateRouter.evaluateCurrentRoute('login')

makeSvelteStateRenderer(defaultParameters)

Any parameters you pass in the defaultParameters object will be passed to all Svelte components when they are constructed. In addition, any members of the methods object will be added to the object itself.

In templates

To access the asr object with its makePath and stateIsActive and go and getActiveState functions, you can export let asr in your template.

You will access any properties of the object returned by your resolve function in the same way – if your resolve function returns { userId: 13 } then you would access that value by putting export let userId into your component.

<script>
	export let asr
	export let userId
</script>

<a
	href="{ asr.makePath('app.topics.tasks', { topicId: topic.id }) }"
	class="{ asr.stateIsActive('app.topics.tasks', { topicId: topic.id }) ? 'active' : '' }"
>
	{topic.name}
</a>

To embed child states, add a <uiView></uiView> element to the parent template.

Passing templates to addState

When calling the abstract-state-router's addState function, you may provide any of these values as the template:

License

WTFPL