Implement Next.js style page directories in your single page application. Supports React projects created using Vite or CRA (or any other webpack implementation).
This package is no longer actively maintained and has been superseded by Sceptre.
Install the package using NPM
npm install react-router-tree
Pages are defined using a folder structure in your application. Subfolders denote path segments, while pages map to index.tsx
or index.jsx
files. In react-router-tree, each page is given it's own directory, in which assets and styles can be placed, allowing for a clean and structured page setup.
Each page is expected to contain a default export of it's RouteObject
. For TypeScript users a defineRoute
helper function is included. The path
property will automatically be populated when parsing the tree, so it may be omitted.
import { defineRoute } from "react-router-tree";
function IndexPage() {
return (
<div>
Page content
</div>
)
}
export default defineRoute({
element: <IndexPage />
});
Parameters can be defined by using [name]
as folder name. This will automatically translate into :name
when building routes.
We also support a other parameter type: ...
which will match any path segment.
Folders named @
will map to the index page of the parent directory.
You can add a parent pages by making a folder named _
anywhere in your file tree. Parent pages are responsible for placing an <Outlet />
where child routes will be rendered. Routes can be parented any number of times, each rendering in its closest parent outlet.
Visual example:
/example/_ - Responsible for rendering outlet 1
/example/@ - Rendered inside outlet 1
/example/page/_ - Rendered inside outlet 1 and responsible for rendering outlet 2
/example/page/@ - Rendered inside outlet 2
/example/page/child - Rendered inside outlet 2
The route object returned from a page allows defining a list of alternative routes that can be used to reach the page. These alternative paths are relative to the route itself and share the same meta.
Example:
export default defineRoute({
element: <HelpPage />,
alternatives: [
{ path: 'instructions' },
{ path: 'sub/path/:param' }
]
});
pages/
@/
index.tsx
styles.tsx
help/
index.tsx
style.scss
settings/
_/
index.tsx
overview/
index.tsx
[param]/
index.tsx
folder/
_/
index.tsx
[...]/
index.tsx
style.scss
The above example translates to the given routes
/
/help
/settings/overview
/settings/:param
/folder/*
// Using vite:
const pageTree: RouteTree = {
prefix: './pages',
routes: import.meta.glob('./pages/**/index.tsx', { eager: true })
};
// Using Create React App:
const pageTree: RouteTree = {
prefix: './',
routes: require.context('./pages/', true, /\index\.tsx$/)
};
// Combine page trees into a single array of routes
const routes = buildRouteObjects(pageTree);
An example implementation can be found here.
This package was originally developed for use in Vindigo, a free and open source task planner.
react-router-tree is licensed under MIT
Copyright (c) 2022-present, Starlane Studios