<router-link>
<router-link>
is the component for enabling user navigation in a router-enabled app. The target location is specified with the to
prop. It renders as an <a>
tag with correct href
by default, but can be configured with the tag
prop. In addition, the link automatically gets an active CSS class when the target route is active.
<router-link>
is preferred over hard-coded <a href="...">
for the following reasons:
router-link
will intercept the click event so that the browser doesn't try to reload the page.base
option in HTML5 history mode, you don't need to include it in to
prop's URLs.v-slot
API (3.1.0+)router-link
exposes a low level customization through a scoped slot. This is a more advanced API that primarily targets library authors but can come in handy for developers as well, most of the time in a custom component like a NavLink or other.
When using the v-slot
API, it is required to pass one single child to router-link
. If you don't, router-link
will wrap its children in a span
element.
<router-link
to="/about"
v-slot="{ href, route, navigate, isActive, isExactActive }"
>
<NavLink :active="isActive" :href="href" @click="navigate"
>{{ route.fullPath }}</NavLink
>
</router-link>
href
: resolved url. This would be the href
attribute of an a
elementroute
: resolved normalized locationnavigate
: function to trigger the navigation. It will automatically prevent events when necessary, the same way router-link
doesisActive
: true
if the active class should be applied. Allows to apply an arbitrary classisExactActive
: true
if the exact active class should be applied. Allows to apply an arbitrary classSometimes we may want the active class to be applied to an outer element rather than the <a>
tag itself, in that case, you can wrap that element inside a router-link
and use the v-slot
properties to create your link:
<router-link
to="/foo"
v-slot="{ href, route, navigate, isActive, isExactActive }"
>
<li
:class="[isActive && 'router-link-active', isExactActive && 'router-link-exact-active']"
>
<a :href="href" @click="navigate">{{ route.fullPath }}</a>
</li>
</router-link>
TIPIf you add a
target="_blank"
to youra
element, you must omit the@click="navigate"
handler.
<router-link>
Propstype: string | Location
required
Denotes the target route of the link. When clicked, the value of the to
prop will be passed to router.push()
internally, so the value can be either a string or a location descriptor object.
<!-- literal string -->
<router-link to="home">Home</router-link>
<!-- renders to -->
<a href="home">Home</a>
<!-- javascript expression using `v-bind` -->
<router-link v-bind:to="'home'">Home</router-link>
<!-- Omitting `v-bind` is fine, just as binding any other prop -->
<router-link :to="'home'">Home</router-link>
<!-- same as above -->
<router-link :to="{ path: 'home' }">Home</router-link>
<!-- named route -->
<router-link :to="{ name: 'user', params: { userId: 123 }}">User</router-link>
<!-- with query, resulting in `/register?plan=private` -->
<router-link :to="{ path: 'register', query: { plan: 'private' }}"
>Register</router-link
>
type: boolean
default: false
Setting replace
prop will call router.replace()
instead of router.push()
when clicked, so the navigation will not leave a history record.
<router-link :to="{ path: '/abc'}" replace></router-link>
type: boolean
default: false
Setting append
prop always appends the relative path to the current path. For example, assuming we are navigating from /a
to a relative link b
, without append
we will end up at /b
, but with append
we will end up at /a/b
.
<router-link :to="{ path: 'relative/path'}" append></router-link>
type: string
default: "a"
Sometimes we want <router-link>
to render as another tag, e.g <li>
. Then we can use tag
prop to specify which tag to render to, and it will still listen to click events for navigation.
<router-link to="/foo" tag="li">foo</router-link>
<!-- renders as -->
<li>foo</li>
type: string
default: "router-link-active"
Configure the active CSS class applied when the link is active. Note the default value can also be configured globally via the linkActiveClass
router constructor option.
type: boolean
default: false
The default active class matching behavior is inclusive match. For example, <router-link to="/a">
will get this class applied as long as the current path starts with /a/
or is /a
.
One consequence of this is that <router-link to="/">
will be active for every route! To force the link into "exact match mode", use the exact
prop:
<!-- this link will only be active at `/` -->
<router-link to="/" exact></router-link>
Check out more examples explaining active link class live.
type: string | Array<string>
default: 'click'
Specify the event(s) that can trigger the link navigation.
type: string
default: "router-link-exact-active"
Configure the active CSS class applied when the link is active with exact match. Note the default value can also be configured globally via the linkExactActiveClass
router constructor option.
<router-view>
The <router-view>
component is a functional component that renders the matched component for the given path. Components rendered in <router-view>
can also contain its own <router-view>
, which will render components for nested paths.
Any non-name props will be passed along to the rendered component, however most of the time the per-route data is contained in the route's params.
Since it's just a component, it works with <transition>
and <keep-alive>
. When using the both together, make sure to use <keep-alive>
inside:
<transition>
<keep-alive>
<router-view></router-view>
</keep-alive>
</transition>
<router-view>
Propstype: string
default: "default"
When a <router-view>
has a name, it will render the component with the corresponding name in the matched route record's components
option. See Named Views for an example.
type: Array<RouteConfig>
Type declaration for RouteConfig
:
interface RouteConfig = {
path: string,
component?: Component,
name?: string, // for named routes
components?: { [name: string]: Component }, // for named views
redirect?: string | Location | Function,
props?: boolean | Object | Function,
alias?: string | Array<string>,
children?: Array<RouteConfig>, // for nested routes
beforeEnter?: (to: Route, from: Route, next: Function) => void,
meta?: any,
// 2.6.0+
caseSensitive?: boolean, // use case sensitive match? (default: false)
pathToRegexpOptions?: Object // path-to-regexp options for compiling regex
}
type: string
default: "hash" (in browser) | "abstract" (in Node.js)
available values: "hash" | "history" | "abstract"
Configure the router mode.
hash
: uses the URL hash for routing. Works in all Vue-supported browsers, including those that do not support HTML5 History API.
history
: requires HTML5 History API and server config. See HTML5 History Mode.
abstract
: works in all JavaScript environments, e.g. server-side with Node.js. The router will automatically be forced into this mode if no browser API is present.
type: string
default: "/"
The base URL of the app. For example, if the entire single page application is served under /app/
, then base
should use the value "/app/"
.
type: string
default: "router-link-active"
Globally configure <router-link>
default active class. Also see router-link.
type: string
default: "router-link-exact-active"
Globally configure <router-link>
default active class for exact matches. Also see router-link.
type: Function
Signature:
type PositionDescriptor =
{ x: number, y: number } |
{ selector: string } |
?{}
type scrollBehaviorHandler = (
to: Route,
from: Route,
savedPosition?: { x: number, y: number }
) => PositionDescriptor | Promise<PositionDescriptor>
For more details see Scroll Behavior.
type: Function
Provide custom query string parse / stringify functions. Overrides the default.
type: boolean
default: true
Controls whether the router should fallback to hash
mode when the browser does not support history.pushState
but mode is set to history
.
Setting this to false
essentially makes every router-link
navigation a full page refresh in IE9. This is useful when the app is server-rendered and needs to work in IE9, because a hash mode URL does not work with SSR.
type: Vue instance
The root Vue instance the router
was injected into.
type: string
The mode the router is using.
type: Route
The current route represented as a Route Object.
Signatures:
router.beforeEach((to, from, next) => {
/* must call `next` */
})
router.beforeResolve((to, from, next) => {
/* must call `next` */
})
router.afterEach((to, from) => {})
Add global navigation guards. See Navigation Guards for more details.
All three methods return a function that removes the registered guard/hook.
Signatures:
router.push(location, onComplete?, onAbort?)
router.push(location).then(onComplete).catch(onAbort)
router.replace(location, onComplete?, onAbort?)
router.replace(location).then(onComplete).catch(onAbort)
router.go(n)
router.back()
router.forward()
Programmatically navigate to a new URL. See Programmatic Navigation for more details.
Signature:
const matchedComponents: Array<Component> = router.getMatchedComponents(location?)
Returns an Array of the components (definition/constructor, not instances) matched by the provided location or the current route. This is mostly used during server-side rendering to perform data prefetching.
Signature:
const resolved: {
location: Location;
route: Route;
href: string;
} = router.resolve(location, current?, append?)
Reverse URL resolving. Given location in form same as used in <router-link/>
.
current
is the current Route by default (most of the time you don't need to change this)append
allows you to append the path to the current
route (as with router-link
)Signature:
router.addRoutes(routes: Array<RouteConfig>)
Dynamically add more routes to the router. The argument must be an Array using the same route config format with the routes
constructor option.
Signature:
router.onReady(callback, [errorCallback])
This method queues a callback to be called when the router has completed the initial navigation, which means it has resolved all async enter hooks and async components that are associated with the initial route.
This is useful in server-side rendering to ensure consistent output on both the server and the client.
The second argument errorCallback
is only supported in 2.4+. It will be called when the initial route resolution runs into an error (e.g. failed to resolve an async component).
Signature:
router.onError(callback)
Register a callback which will be called when an error is caught during a route navigation. Note for an error to be called, it must be one of the following scenarios:
The error is thrown synchronously inside a route guard function;
The error is caught and asynchronously handled by calling next(err)
inside a route guard function;
An error occurred when trying to resolve an async component that is required to render a route.
A route object represents the state of the current active route. It contains parsed information of the current URL and the route records matched by the URL.
The route object is immutable. Every successful navigation will result in a fresh route object.
The route object can be found in multiple places:
Inside components as this.$route
Inside $route
watcher callbacks
As the return value of calling router.match(location)
Inside navigation guards as the first two arguments:
router.beforeEach((to, from, next) => {
// `to` and `from` are both route objects
})
Inside the scrollBehavior
function as the first two arguments:
const router = new VueRouter({
scrollBehavior(to, from, savedPosition) {
// `to` and `from` are both route objects
}
})
$route.path
type: string
A string that equals the path of the current route, always resolved as an absolute path. e.g. "/foo/bar"
.
$route.params
type: Object
An object that contains key/value pairs of dynamic segments and star segments. If there are no params the value will be an empty object.
$route.query
type: Object
An object that contains key/value pairs of the query string. For example, for a path /foo?user=1
, we get $route.query.user == 1
. If there is no query the value will be an empty object.
$route.hash
type: string
The hash of the current route (with the #
), if it has one. If no hash is present the value will be an empty string.
$route.fullPath
type: string
The full resolved URL including query and hash.
$route.matched
Array<RouteRecord>
An Array containing route records for all nested path segments of the current route. Route records are the copies of the objects in the routes
configuration Array (and in children
Arrays):
const router = new VueRouter({
routes: [
// the following object is a route record
{
path: '/foo',
component: Foo,
children: [
// this is also a route record
{ path: 'bar', component: Bar }
]
}
]
})
When the URL is /foo/bar
, $route.matched
will be an Array containing both objects (cloned), in parent to child order.
$route.name
The name of the current route, if it has one. (See Named Routes)
$route.redirectedFrom
The name of the route being redirected from, if there were one. (See Redirect and Alias)
These properties are injected into every child component by passing the router instance to the root instance as the router
option.
this.$router
The router instance.
this.$route
The current active Route. This property is read-only and its properties are immutable, but it can be watched.
beforeRouteEnter
beforeRouteUpdate
beforeRouteLeave
See In Component Guards.
© 2013–present Evan You
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://router.vuejs.org/api/