Book Image

Angular Router

By : Victor Savkin
Book Image

Angular Router

By: Victor Savkin

Overview of this book

Managing state transitions is one of the hardest parts of building applications. This is especially true on the web, where you also need to ensure that the state is reflected in the URL. In addition, you might want to split applications into multiple bundles and load them on demand. Doing this transparently isn’t easy. The Angular router solves these problems. Using the router, you can declaratively specify application states, manage state transitions while taking care of the URL, and load bundles on demand. This book is a complete description of the Angular router written by its designer. It goes far beyond a how-to-get-started guide and talks about the library in depth. The mental model, design constraints, and the subtleties of the API-everything is covered. You’ll learn in detail how to use the router in your own applications. Predominantly, you’ll understand the inner workings of the router and how you can configure it to work with any edge cases you come across in your sites. Throughout the book, you’ll see examples from real-world use in the MailApp application. You can view the full source of this application and see how the router code works to manage the state of the application and define what is visible on screen. Reading this book will give you deep insights into why the router works the way it does and will make you an Angular router expert.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Angular Router
Credits
About the Author
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Summary


We've learned a lot! First, we talked about how the router does matching. It goes through the provided routes, one by one, checking if the URL starts with a route's path. Then, we learned that the router does not have any notion of specificity. It just traverses the configuration in the depth-first order, and it stops after finding the path matching the whole URL, that is, the order of routes in the configuration matters. After that, we talked about empty-path routes that do not consume any URL segments, and about componentless routes that do not instantiate any components. We showed how we can use them to handle advanced use cases.