I have a index file where I have
<BrowserRouter>
<Routes>
<Route path="/" element={Home}
<Route path="/home/student/info" element={Info} />
<Route path="/home/student/about" element={about} />
<Route path="/home/teacher/score" element={score} />
<Route path="/home/teacher/attendence" element={attendence} />
</Routes>
</BrowserRouter>
Here, I have this common path for "/home/student/". So How can I use a react sub path for this, rather than writing separate lines? I'm using react-router 6.
You can use nested routes. Put routes as children of the route component. Don't forget that in RRDv6 the element prop takes a ReactNode, e.g. JSX, and not a reference to a React component like v5.
<BrowserRouter>
<Routes>
<Route path="/" element={<Home />} />
<Route path="home">
<Route path="student">
<Route path="info" element={<Info />} />
<Route path="about" element={<About />} />
</Route>
<Route path="teacher">
<Route path="score" element={<Score />} />
<Route path="attendence" element={<Attendence />} />
</Route>
</Route>
</Routes>
</BrowserRouter>
You can read more about nested routes here.
Please am finding it difficult to create a route in react router
I want to create a route like this <Route path="/:storeId" component={StorePage} />
But I also have a route like this /stores
Any time I go to the /:storeId page it loads the /users page
Am just confuse
Here is the code
<Switch>
<ScrollToTop>
<MainLayout>
<Route exact path="/">
<Home />
</Route>
<Route exact path="/stores">
<Stores />
</Route>
<Route exact path="/:storeId">
<StorePage />
</Route>
</MainLayout>
</ScrollToTop>
</Switch>
Any help please.
You should do something like this
<Switch>
<Route exact path="/users">
<Users/>
</Route>
<Route path="/users/:id">
<UserById/>
</Route>
</Switch>
I'm working with reactJs and trying to create some nested routes.
Below you can see the routing parts of my files :
main.js :
ReactDOM.render(
<Router>
<App />
</Router>,
document.getElementById('page')
);
App.js :
class App extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<Header />
<Switch>
<Route exact path="/" component={Home} />
<Route path="/login" component={Login} />
<Route path="/signup" component={SignUp} />
<Route path="/contact" component={Contact} />
<ProtectedRoute path="/user/profile" component={Profile} />
<Route component={NotFound} />
</Switch>
<Footer />
</div>
);
}
}
Don't ask me why, but I want to create the following url's :
/signup : SignUp form
/signup/person : SignUp form part 2
/signup/person/:id : SignUp user id informations
I added this in my App.js file and It's works :
<Route exact path="/signup" component={SignUp} />
<Route exact path="/signup/person" component={SignUpPerson} />
<Route path="/signup/person/:id" component={SignUpId} />
But I want to know if it's a good way to create nested routes or it's better to separate the route like this post : https://stackoverflow.com/a/43846223/4023379
Or maybe an other way ?
Thanks
use nested routes if Pages have common logic/components like Header, Footer.
use separate routes if Page doesn't share similar logic. just because of url start with /singup not necessary mean you have to nested your components
So, switching to the latest React Router (1.0.0RC3). I have run into a piece of old functionality that I can't find how to replicate with the new 1.0 API.
In my Router, I always render a top-level App component, then a second-level Layout component, then a Page component. In the old React Router, I didn't have to put a path property on a Route, so I could "group" certain routes to have a parent component without adding another level to my url.
Below, you'll see that when hitting the / route, I try to load App, DefaultLayout, and Home. However, it won't render DefaultLayout without an explicit path property. So if I put path="app" on my default layout, it works, but I'm trying to not change my homepage route if possible.
I've tried leaving path off, putting an absolute path, using nested IndexRoutes (doesn't work). Is there still a way to do this in RR 1.0?
export const routes = (
<Router history={createBrowserHistory()}>
<Route path="/" component={App}>
<Route component={DefaultLayout}> // Requires `path` Here
<IndexRoute component={Home} />
<Route path="about" component={About} />
<Route path="contact" component={Contact} />
<Route path="careers" component={Careers} />
</Route>
<Route path="blog" component={BlogLayout}>
<IndexRoute component={BlogHome} />
<Route path="posts/:post_name" component={BlogPost} />
</Route>
</Route>
</Router>
);
If I understood you correctly, your routes should look like:
export const routes = (
<Router history={createBrowserHistory()}>
<Route component={App}>
<Route path="/" component={DefaultLayout}> // Requires `path` Here
<IndexRoute component={Home} />
<Route path="about" component={About} />
<Route path="contact" component={Contact} />
<Route path="careers" component={Careers} />
</Route>
<Route path="blog" component={BlogLayout}>
<IndexRoute component={BlogHome} />
<Route path="posts/:post_name" component={BlogPost} />
</Route>
</Route>
</Router>
);
I have the following:
<Route name="app" path="/" handler={App}>
<Route name="dashboards" path="dashboards" handler={Dashboard}>
<Route name="exploreDashboard" path="exploreDashboard" handler={ExploreDashboard} />
<Route name="searchDashboard" path="searchDashboard" handler={SearchDashboard} />
<DefaultRoute handler={DashboardExplain} />
</Route>
<DefaultRoute handler={SearchDashboard} />
</Route>
When using the DefaultRoute, SearchDashboard renders incorrectly since any *Dashboard needs to rendered within Dashboard.
I would like for my DefaultRoute within the "app" Route to point to the Route "searchDashboard". Is this something that I can do with React Router, or should I use normal Javascript (for a page redirect) for this?
Basically, if the user goes to the home page I want to send them instead to the search dashboard. So I guess I'm looking for a React Router feature equivalent to window.location.replace("mygreathostname.com/#/dashboards/searchDashboard");
You can use Redirect instead of DefaultRoute
<Redirect from="/" to="searchDashboard" />
Update 2019-08-09 to avoid problem with refresh use this instead, thanks to Ogglas
<Redirect exact from="/" to="searchDashboard" />
Source:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/43958016/3850405
Update for version 6.4.5 to 6.8.1 <:
Use replace={true} for Navigate component.
<Routes>
<Route path="/" element={<Navigate to="/searchDashboard" replace={true} />}>
<Route path="searchDashboard" element={<SearchDashboard/>} />
<Route
path="*"
element={<Navigate to="/" replace={true} />}
/>
</Route>
</Routes>
https://reactrouter.com/en/6.4.5/components/navigate
https://reactrouter.com/en/6.8.1/components/navigate
Thanks to #vicky for pointing this out in comments.
Update:
For v6 you can do it like this with Navigate. You can use a "No Match" Route to handle "no match" cases.
<Routes>
<Route path="/" element={<Navigate to="/searchDashboard" />}>
<Route path="searchDashboard" element={<SearchDashboard/>} />
<Route
path="*"
element={<Navigate to="/" />}
/>
</Route>
</Routes>
https://reactrouter.com/docs/en/v6/getting-started/tutorial#adding-a-no-match-route
https://stackoverflow.com/a/69872699/3850405
Original:
The problem with using <Redirect from="/" to="searchDashboard" /> is if you have a different URL, say /indexDashboard and the user hits refresh or gets a URL sent to them, the user will be redirected to /searchDashboard anyway.
If you wan't users to be able to refresh the site or send URLs use this:
<Route exact path="/" render={() => (
<Redirect to="/searchDashboard"/>
)}/>
Use this if searchDashboard is behind login:
<Route exact path="/" render={() => (
loggedIn ? (
<Redirect to="/searchDashboard"/>
) : (
<Redirect to="/login"/>
)
)}/>
I was incorrectly trying to create a default path with:
<IndexRoute component={DefaultComponent} />
<Route path="/default-path" component={DefaultComponent} />
But this creates two different paths that render the same component. Not only is this pointless, but it can cause glitches in your UI, i.e., when you are styling <Link/> elements based on this.history.isActive().
The right way to create a default route (that is not the index route) is to use <IndexRedirect/>:
<IndexRedirect to="/default-path" />
<Route path="/default-path" component={DefaultComponent} />
This is based on react-router 1.0.0. See https://github.com/rackt/react-router/blob/master/modules/IndexRedirect.js.
UPDATE : 2020
Instead of using Redirect, Simply add multiple route in the path
Example:
<Route exact path={["/","/defaultPath"]} component={searchDashboard} />
Jonathan's answer didn't seem to work for me. I'm using React v0.14.0 and React Router v1.0.0-rc3. This did:
<IndexRoute component={Home}/>.
So in Matthew's Case, I believe he'd want:
<IndexRoute component={SearchDashboard}/>.
Source: https://github.com/rackt/react-router/blob/master/docs/guides/advanced/ComponentLifecycle.md
Since V6 was released recently, the accepted answer won't work since Redirect no more exists in V6. Consider using Navigate.
<Route path="/" element={<Navigate to="/searchDashboard" />} />
Ref:- V6 docs
import { Route, Redirect } from "react-router-dom";
class App extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<Route path='/'>
<Redirect to="/something" />
</Route>
//rest of code here
this will make it so that when you load up the server on local host it will re direct you to /something
May 2022
Import Navigate
import { Routes, Route, Navigate } from 'react-router-dom';
Add
<Route path="/" element={<Navigate replace to="/home" />} />
For example:
import React from 'react';
import { Routes, Route, Navigate } from 'react-router-dom';
import Home from './pages/Home';
import Login from './pages/Login';
const Main = () => {
return (
<Routes>
<Route path="/" element={<Navigate replace to="/home" />} />
<Route path='home' element={<Home />}></Route>
<Route path='login' element={<Login />}></Route>
</Routes>
);
}
export default Main;
Done!
I ran into a similar issue; I wanted a default route handler if none of the route handler matched.
My solutions is to use a wildcard as the path value. ie
Also make sure it is the last entry in your routes definition.
<Route path="/" component={App} >
<IndexRoute component={HomePage} />
<Route path="about" component={AboutPage} />
<Route path="home" component={HomePage} />
<Route path="*" component={HomePage} />
</Route>
For those coming into 2017, this is the new solution with IndexRedirect:
<Route path="/" component={App}>
<IndexRedirect to="/welcome" />
<Route path="welcome" component={Welcome} />
<Route path="about" component={About} />
</Route>
<Route name="app" path="/" handler={App}>
<Route name="dashboards" path="dashboards" handler={Dashboard}>
<Route name="exploreDashboard" path="exploreDashboard" handler={ExploreDashboard} />
<Route name="searchDashboard" path="searchDashboard" handler={SearchDashboard} />
<DefaultRoute handler={DashboardExplain} />
</Route>
<Redirect from="/*" to="/" />
</Route>
The preferred method is to use the react router IndexRoutes component
You use it like this (taken from the react router docs linked above):
<Route path="/" component={App}>
<IndexRedirect to="/welcome" />
<Route path="welcome" component={Welcome} />
<Route path="about" component={About} />
</Route>
Firstly u need to install:
npm install react-router-dom;
Then u need to use your App.js (in your case it can be different) and do the modification below.
In this case I selected the Redirect to get proper rendering process.
import { BrowserRouter as Router, Route, Switch, Redirect } from "react-router-dom";
<Router>
<Suspense fallback={<Loading />}>
<Switch>
<Route exact path="/">
<Redirect to="/Home" component={Routes.HomePage}/>
</Route>
<Route exact path="/Biz" component={Routes.Biz} />
</Switch>
</Suspense>
</Router>
U successfully do the modification above u can see the redirect URL is on your browser path and rendering process also working properly according to their component.
Some time ago, we had an opportunity to use the component named "DefaultRoute" in the react routing.
Now, its depreciated method, and it’s not so popular to use it, you can create the custom route named default or whatever, but still, it’s not how we do it in modern React.js development.
It’s just because using the "DefaultRoute" route, we can cause some rendering problems, and its the thing that we definitely would like to avoid.
Here is how I do it-
<Router>
<div className="App">
<Navbar />
<TabBar />
<div className="content">
<Route exact path={["/default", "/"]}> //Imp
<DefStuff />
</Route>
<Route exact path="/otherpage">
<Otherstuff />
</Route>
<Redirect to="/defult" /> //Imp
</div>
</div>
</Router>
Use:
<Route path="/" element={<Navigate replace to="/expenses" />} />
In context:
import { BrowserRouter, Routes, Route, Navigate } from "react-router-dom";
<BrowserRouter>
<Routes>
<Route element={<App />}>
<Route path="/expenses" element={<Expenses />} />
<Route path="/invoices" element={<Invoices />} />
</Route>
<Route path="/" element={<Navigate replace to="/expenses" />} />
</Routes>
</BrowserRouter>
You use it like this to redirect on a particular URL and render component after redirecting from old-router to new-router.
<Route path="/old-router">
<Redirect exact to="/new-router"/>
<Route path="/new-router" component={NewRouterType}/>
</Route>