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Defining Your Routes

When your application starts, the router matches the current URL to the routes that you've defined. The routes, in turn, are responsible for displaying templates, loading data, and setting up application state.

To define a route, run

ember generate route route-name

This creates a route file at app/routes/route-name.js, a template for the route at app/templates/route-name.hbs, and a unit test file at tests/unit/routes/route-name-test.js. It also adds the route to the router.

Basic Routes

The map() method of your Ember application's router can be invoked to define URL mappings. When calling map(), you should pass a function that will be invoked with the value this set to an object which you can use to create routes.

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('about', { path: '/about' });
  this.route('favorites', { path: '/favs' });
});

Now, when the user visits /about, Ember will render the about template. Visiting /favs will render the favorites template.

You can leave off the path if it is the same as the route name. In this case, the following is equivalent to the above example:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('about');
  this.route('favorites', { path: '/favs' });
});

Inside your templates, you can use {{link-to}} to navigate between routes, using the name that you provided to the route method.

{{#link-to "index"}}<img class="logo">{{/link-to}}

<nav>
  {{#link-to "about"}}About{{/link-to}}
  {{#link-to "favorites"}}Favorites{{/link-to}}
</nav>

The {{link-to}} helper will also add an active class to the link that points to the currently active route.

Multi-word route names are conventionally dasherized, such as:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('blog-post', { path: '/blog-post' });
});

The route defined above will by default use the blog-post.js route handler, the blog-post.hbs template, and be referred to as blog-post in any {{link-to}} helpers.

Multi-word route names that break this convention, such as:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('blog_post', { path: '/blog-post' });
});

will still by default use the blog-post.js route handler and the blog-post.hbs template, but will be referred to as blog_post in any {{link-to}} helpers.

Nested Routes

Often you'll want to have a template that displays inside another template. For example, in a blogging application, instead of going from a list of blog posts to creating a new post, you might want to have the post creation page display next to the list.

In these cases, you can use nested routes to display one template inside of another.

You can define nested routes by passing a callback to this.route:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('posts', function() {
    this.route('new');
  });
});

Assuming you have already generated the posts route, to generate the above nested route you would run:

ember generate route posts/new

And then add the {{outlet}} helper to your template where you want the nested template to display:

templates/posts.hbs
<h1>Posts</h1>
<!-- Display posts and other content -->
{{outlet}}

This router creates a route for /posts and for /posts/new. When a user visits /posts, they'll simply see the posts.hbs template. (Below, index routes explains an important addition to this.) When the user visits posts/new, they'll see the posts/new.hbs template rendered into the {{outlet}} of the posts template.

A nested route name includes the names of its ancestors. If you want to transition to a route (either via transitionTo or {{#link-to}}), make sure to use the full route name (posts.new, not new).

The application route

The application route is entered when your app first boots up. Like other routes, it will load a template with the same name (application in this case) by default. You should put your header, footer, and any other decorative content here. All other routes will render their templates into the application.hbs template's {{outlet}}.

This route is part of every application, so you don't need to specify it in your app/router.js.

Index Routes

At every level of nesting (including the top level), Ember automatically provides a route for the / path named index. To see when a new level of nesting occurs, check the router, whenever you see a function, that's a new level.

For example, if you write a simple router like this:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('favorites');
});

It is the equivalent of:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('index', { path: '/' });
  this.route('favorites');
});

The index template will be rendered into the {{outlet}} in the application template. If the user navigates to /favorites, Ember will replace the index template with the favorites template.

A nested router like this:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('posts', function() {
    this.route('favorites');
  });
});

Is the equivalent of:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('index', { path: '/' });
  this.route('posts', function() {
    this.route('index', { path: '/' });
    this.route('favorites');
  });
});

If the user navigates to /posts, the current route will be posts.index, and the posts/index template will be rendered into the {{outlet}} in the posts template.

If the user then navigates to /posts/favorites, Ember will replace the {{outlet}} in the posts template with the posts/favorites template.

Dynamic Segments

One of the responsibilities of a route is to load a model.

For example, if we have the route this.route('posts');, our route might load all of the blog posts for the app.

Because /posts represents a fixed model, we don't need any additional information to know what to retrieve. However, if we want a route to represent a single post, we would not want to have to hardcode every possible post into the router.

Enter dynamic segments.

A dynamic segment is a portion of a URL that starts with a : and is followed by an identifier.

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('posts');
  this.route('post', { path: '/post/:post_id' });
});

If the user navigates to /post/5, the route will then have the post_id of 5 to use to load the correct post. Ember follows the convention of :model-name_id for two reasons. The first reason is that Routes know how to fetch the right model by default, if you follow the convention. The second is that params is an object, and can only have one value associated with a key. To put it in code, the following will not work properly:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('photo', { path: '/photo/:id' }, function() {
    this.route('comment', { path: '/comment/:id' });
  });
});

But the following will:

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('photo', { path: '/photo/:photo_id' }, function() {
    this.route('comment', { path: '/comment/:comment_id' });
  });
});

In the next section, Specifying a Route's Model, you will learn more about how to load a model.

Wildcard / globbing routes

You can define wildcard routes that will match multiple URL segments. This could be used, for example, if you'd like a catch-all route which is useful when the user enters an incorrect URL not managed by your app. Wildcard routes begin with an asterisk.

app/router.js
Router.map(function() {
  this.route('not-found', { path: '/*path' });
});
app/templates/not-found.hbs
<p>Oops, the page you're looking for wasn't found</p>

In the above example we have successfully used a wildcard route to handle all routes not managed by our application so that when a user navigates to /a/non-existent/path they will be shown a message that says the page they're looking for wasn't found.

Route Handlers

To have your route do something beyond render a template with the same name, you'll need to create a route handler. The following guides will explore the different features of route handlers. For more information on routes, see the API documentation for the router and for route handlers.

© 2017 Yehuda Katz, Tom Dale and Ember.js contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://guides.emberjs.com/v2.15.0/routing/defining-your-routes