Andrew Coelho 4e5eb34864 Change tutorial structure to individual folders for each lesson 8 年 前
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modules 4e5eb34864 Change tutorial structure to individual folders for each lesson 8 年 前
README.md 4e5eb34864 Change tutorial structure to individual folders for each lesson 8 年 前
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index.js 4e5eb34864 Change tutorial structure to individual folders for each lesson 8 年 前
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README.md

Nested Routes

The navigation we added to App should probably be present on every screen. Without React Router, we could wrap that ul into a component, say Nav, and render a Nav on every one of our screens.

This approach isn't as clean as the application grows. React Router provides another way to share UI like this with nested routes, a trick it learned from Ember (/me tips hat).

Nested UI and Nested URLs

Have you ever noticed your app is just a series of boxes inside boxes inside boxes? Have you also noticed your URLs tend to be coupled to that nesting? For example given this url, /repos/123, our components would probably look like this:

<App>       {/*  /          */}
  <Repos>   {/*  /repos     */}
    <Repo/> {/*  /repos/123 */}
  </Repos>
</App>

And our UI something like:

         +-------------------------------------+
         | Home Repos About                    | <- App
         +------+------------------------------+
         |      |                              |
Repos -> | repo |  Repo 1                      |
         |      |                              |
         | repo |  Boxes inside boxes          |
         |      |  inside boxes ...            | <- Repo
         | repo |                              |
         |      |                              |
         | repo |                              |
         |      |                              |
         +------+------------------------------+

React Router embraces this by letting you nest your routes, which automatically becomes nested UI.

Sharing Our Navigation

Lets nest our About and Repos components inside of App so that we can share the navigation with all screens in the app. We do it in two steps:

First, let the App Route have children, and move the other routes underneath it.

// index.js
// ...
render((
  <Router history={hashHistory}>
    <Route path="/" component={App}>
      {/* make them children of `App` */}
      <Route path="/repos" component={Repos}/>
      <Route path="/about" component={About}/>
    </Route>
  </Router>
), document.getElementById('app'))

Next, render children inside of App.

// modules/App.js
// ...
  render() {
    return (
      <div>
        <h1>Ghettohub Issues</h1>
        <ul role="nav">
          <li><Link to="/about">About</Link></li>
          <li><Link to="/repos">Repos</Link></li>
        </ul>

        {/* add this */}
        {this.props.children}

      </div>
    )
  }
// ...

Alright, now go click the links and notice that the App component continues to render while the child route's component gets swapped around as this.props.children :)

React Router is constructing your UI like this:

// at /about
<App>
  <About/>
</App>

// at /repos
<App>
  <Repos/>
</App>

By Small and Simple Things are Great Things Brought to Pass

The best way to build large things is to stitch small things together.

This is the real power of React Router, every route can be developed (even rendered!) as an independent application. Your route configuration stitches all these apps together however you'd like. Applications inside of Applications, boxes inside of boxes.

What happens if you move the About route outside of App?

Okay, now put it back.


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