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sheet-router is a fast, modular client-side router. It enables view composition and is tuned for performance by statically declaring routes in a radix-trie. Weighs 1.5KB minified and gzipped.

Installation

$ npm install sheet-router

Features

Usage

sheet-router tries to make routing understandable and pleasant to work with. It does so by using a lisp-like structure which is internally compiled to an efficient data structure. Here each route takes either an array of children or a callback, which are then translated to paths that take callbacks

const sheetRouter = require('sheet-router')
const html = require('bel')

// default to `/404` if no path matches
const router = sheetRouter({ default: '/404' }, [
  ['/', (params) => html`<div>Welcome to router land!</div>`],
  ['/:username', (params) => html`<div>${params.username}</div>`, [
    ['/orgs', (params) => html`<div>${params.username}'s orgs!</div>`]
  ]],
  ['/404', (params) => html`<div>Oh no, path not found!</div>`],
])

router('/hughsk/orgs')

history

Interacting with the browser history is a common action, sheet-router supports this out of the box. When the forwards or backwards buttons in the browser are clicked, or history.back / history.go are called sheet-router will update accordingly.

const history = require('sheet-router/history')
history(function (href) {
  router(href)
  console.log('history changed: ' + href)
})

hash

Interacting with hash changes is often a common fallback scenario for those who don't have support for browser history. Whenever a hashchange event is triggered, sheet-router will trigger an update as seen below. However in order to match hash prefixed routes, the hash-match module can be used to normalize routes (ex: #/foo becomes /foo).

const hash = require('sheet-router/hash')
const match = require('hash-match')
hash(function (href) {
  router(match(href))
  console.log('hash location changed: ' + href)
})

href

In HTML links are represented with <a href=""> style tags. Sheet-router can be smart about these and handle them globally. This way there's no need to attach specific listeners to each link and static HTML templates can be upgraded seemlessly to include single-page routing.

const href = require('sheet-router/href')
href(function (href) {
  router(href)
  console.log('link was clicked: ' + href)
})

You can ignore specific links that you do not want to process through routing by adding the data-no-routing attribute.

<a href="/my-external-link" data-no-routing>Non routed link</a>
<a href="/another-external-link" data-no-routing="true">Not routed either</a>

Also, if you pass an optional root node reference as a second argument to href, it will never intercept clicks outside that node. This is useful when your app is confined to a widget in a larger document.

href(function (href) {
  router(href)
  console.log('link was clicked: ' + href)
}, document.getElementById("app-root"))

qs

Sometimes query strings must be decoded. In order to do this, the ./qs.js file is included.

const qs = require('./qs')
qs('https://www.npmjs.com/search?q=query+string')
// => { q: 'query+string' }

walk

Sometimes it's necessary to walk the trie to apply transformations. In order to access the raw callback and prevent unnecessary function calls we need to disable the default thunking mechanism by passing { thunk: false }:

const sheetRouter = require('sheet-router')
const walk = require('sheet-router/walk')

const router = sheetRouter({ thunk: false }, [
  ['/multiply', (x, y) => x * y],
  ['/divide', (x, y) => x / y]
])

walk(router, (route, cb) => {
  const y = 2
  return function (params, x) {
    return cb(x, y)
  }
})

router('/multiply', 4)
// => 8
router('/divide', 8)
// => 4

We could change our transformed function to be thunked by changing walk to return a function, and setting { thunk: 'match' } so only the match function thunks. This is pretty advanced stuff, so don't sweat it too much - but it's super useful to create performant frameworks!

const router = sheetRouter({ thunk: 'match' }, [
  ['/foo', (x, y) => x * y],
  ['/bar', (x, y) => x / y]
])

walk(router, (route, cb) => {
  const y = 2
  return function (params) {
    return function (x) {
      return cb(x, y)
    }
  }
})

router('/multiply', 4)
// => 8
router('/multiply', 4)
// => 8 (but this time around this is computed faster)
router('/divide', 8)
// => 4

create-location

Sometimes you want to mirror the browser location API inside an object to use inside a framework. The hard part is to compute the new href from a set of changes. create-location provides an API to do just that:

const createLocation = require('sheet-router/create-location')

document.location = '/foo/bar#hey?beep=boop'
var location = createLocation()
// => {
//    pathname: '/',
//    hash: '#hey',
//    search: { beep: 'boop' },
//    href: '/foo/bar#hey?beep=boop'
//  }

const hashPatch = { hash: '#oh-no' }
var location = createLocation(location, hashPatch)
// => {
//    pathname: '/',
//    hash: '#oh-no',
//    search: { beep: 'boop' },
//    href: '/foo/bar#oh-no?beep=boop'
//  }

const uriPatch = '/hey/hello'
var location = createLocation(location, uriPatch)
// => {
//    pathname: '/hey/hello',
//    hash: '',
//    search: { },
//    href: '/hey/hello'
//  }

virtual-dom example

const render = require('virtual-dom/create-element')
const sheetRouter = require('sheet-router')
const h = require('virtual-dom/h')
const hyperx = require('hyperx')

const html = hyperx(h)

const router = sheetRouter([
  ['/foo/bar', (params, h, state) => html`<div>hello world!</div>`]
])

const node = render(router('/foo/bar', h, { name: 'Jane' }))
document.body.appendChild(node)
<body>
  <div>hello world</div>
</body>

react example

const sheetRouter = require('sheet-router')
const render = require('react-dom')
const hyperx = require('hyperx')
const react = require('react')

const html = hyperx(react.createElement)

const router = sheetRouter([
  ['/foo/bar', (params, h, state) => html`<div>hello world!</div>`]
])

render(router('/foo', react.createElement, { name: 'Jane' }), document.body)
<body>
  <div>hello world</div>
</body>

API

router = sheetRouter(opts?, [routes])

Create a new router from a nested array. Takes an optional options object as the first argument. Options are:

router(path, [,...])

Match a route on the router. Takes a path and an arbitrary list of arguments that are then passed to the matched routes. Cleans urls to only match the pathname.

history(cb(href))

Call a callback to handle html5 pushsState history.

href(cb(href))

Call a callback to handle <a href="#"> clicks.

See Also

License

MIT