leptos_router 0.0.3

Router for the Leptos web framework.
Documentation

Leptos Router

Leptos Router is a router and state management tool for web applications written in Rust using the Leptos web framework. It is ”isomorphic,” i.e., it can be used for client-side applications/single-page apps (SPAs), server-side rendering/multi-page apps (MPAs), or to synchronize state between the two.

Note: This is a work in progress. Docs are still being written, in particular passing client-side route [State] in History.state)

Philosophy

Leptos Router is built on a few simple principles:

  1. URL drives state. For web applications, the URL should be the ultimate source of truth for most of your app’s state. (It’s called a Universal Resource Locator for a reason!)

  2. Nested routing. A URL can match multiple routes that exist in a nested tree and are rendered by different components. This means you can navigate between siblings in this tree without re-rendering or triggering any change in the parent routes.

  3. Route-based data loading. Each route should know exactly which data it needs to render itself when the route is defined. This allows each route’s data to be reloaded independently, and allows data from nested routes to be loaded in parallel, avoiding waterfalls.

  4. Progressive enhancement. The [A] and [Form] components resolve any relative nested routes, render actual <a> and <form> elements, and (when possible) upgrading them to handle those navigations with client-side routing. If you’re using them with server-side rendering (with or without hydration), they just work, whether JS/WASM have loaded or not.

Example


use leptos::*;
use leptos_router::*;

pub fn router_example(cx: Scope) -> Element {
view! {
cx,
<div id="root">
// we wrap the whole app in a <Router/> to allow client-side navigation
// from our nav links below
<Router>
// <nav> and <main> will show on every route
<nav>
// LR will enhance the active <a> link with the [aria-current] attribute
// we can use this for styling them with CSS like `[aria-current] { font-weight: bold; }`
<A href="contacts">"Contacts"</A>
<A href="about">"About"</A>
<A href="settings">"Settings"</A>
</nav>
<main>
// <Routes/> both defines our routes and shows them on the page
<Routes>
// our root route: the contact list is always shown
<Route
path=""
element=move |cx| view! { cx,  <ContactList/> }
>
// users like /gbj or /bob
<Route
path=":id"
element=move |cx| view! { cx,  <Contact/> }
/>
// a fallback if the /:id segment is missing from the URL
<Route
path=""
element=move |_| view! { cx,  <p class="contact">"Select a contact."</p> }
/>
</Route>
// LR will automatically use this for /about, not the /:id match above
<Route
path="about"
element=move |cx| view! { cx,  <About/> }
/>
</Routes>
</main>
</Router>
</div>
}
}

type ContactSummary = (); // TODO!
type Contact = (); // TODO!()

// contact_data reruns whenever the :id param changes
async fn contact_data(id: String) -> Contact {
todo!()
}

// contact_list_data *doesn't* rerun when the :id changes,
// because that param is nested lower than the <ContactList/> route
async fn contact_list_data() -> Vec<ContactSummary> {
todo!()
}

#[component]
fn ContactList(cx: Scope) -> Element {
// loads the contact list data once; doesn't reload when nested routes change
let contacts = create_resource(cx, || (), |_| contact_list_data());
view! {
cx,
<div>
// show the contacts
<ul>
{move || contacts.read().map(|contacts| view! { cx, <li>"todo contact info"</li> } )}
</ul>

// insert the nested child route here
<Outlet/>
</div>
}
}

#[component]
fn Contact(cx: Scope) -> Element {
let params = use_params_map(cx);
let data = create_resource(
cx,
move || params.with(|p| p.get("id").cloned().unwrap_or_default()),
move |id| contact_data(id)
);
todo!()
}

#[component]
fn About(cx: Scope) -> Element {
todo!()
}