The current codebase has most of the existing features on Vue Router v3.x and is usable. It supports all the merged RFCs.
Since the library is still unstable and because we want feedback on bugs and missing features, it will probably go through a few breaking changes.
Check the playground or e2e tests for a usage example.
Breaking changes compared to [email protected]
-
The
mode: 'history'
option has been replaced with a more flexible one namedhistory
:import { createRouter, createWebHistory } from 'vue-router' // there is also createWebHashHistory and createMemoryHistory createRouter({ history: createWebHistory(), routes: [], })
-
base
option is now passed as the first argument tocreateWebHistory
(and other histories) -
Catch all routes (
/*
) must now be defined using a parameter with a custom regex:/:catchAll(.*)
-
router.match
androuter.resolve
are merged together intorouter.resolve
with a slightly different signature. Check it's typing through autocomplete or Router'sresolve
method -
router.getMatchedComponents
is now removed as they can be retrieved fromrouter.currentRoute.value.matched
:router.currentRoute.value.matched .flatMap(record => Object.values(record.components))
-
If you use a
transition
, you may need to wait for the router to be ready before mounting the app:app.use(router) // Note: on Server Side, you need to manually push the initial location router.isReady().then(() => app.mount('#app'))
Otherwise there will be an initial transition as if you provided the
appear
prop totransition
because the router displays its initial location (nothing) and then displays the first location. This happens because navigations are all asynchronous now. If you have navigation guards upon the initial navigation, you might not want to block the app render until they are resolved. -
On SSR, you need to manually pass the appropriate history by using a ternary:
// router.js let history = isServer ? createMemoryHistory() : createWebHistory() let router = createRouter({ routes, history }) // somewhere in your server-entry.js router.push(req.url) // request url router.isReady().then(() => { // resolve the request })
-
The object returned in
scrollBehavior
is now similar toScrollToOptions
:x
is renamed toleft
andy
is renamed totop
.
To make typings more consistent and expressive, some types have been renamed. Keep in mind these can change until stable release to ensure consistency. Some type properties might have changed as well.
vue-router@3 |
vue-router@4 |
---|---|
RouteConfig | RouteRecordRaw |
Location | RouteLocation |
Route | RouteLocationNormalized |
These are technically breaking changes but they fix an inconsistent behavior.
- Pushing or resolving a non existent named route throws an error instead of navigating to
/
and displaying nothing. - resolving(
router.resolve
) or pushing (router.push
) a location with missing params no longer warns and produces an invalid URL (/
), but explicitly throws an Error instead. - Empty children
path
does not append a trailing slash (/
) anymore to make it consistent across all routes:- By default no route has a trailing slash but also works with a trailing slash
- Adding
strict: true
to a route record or to the router options (alongsideroutes
) will disallow an optional trailing slash - Combining
strict: true
with a trailing slash in your routes allows you to enforce a trailing slash in your routes. In the case of nested routes, make sure to add the trailing slash to the parent and not the empty child:let routes = [ { path: '/parent/', children: [{ path: '' }, { path: 'child1/' }, { path: 'child2/' }], }, ]
- To redirect the user to trailing slash routes (or the opposite), you can setup a
beforeEach
navigation guard that ensures the presence of a trailing slash:router.beforeEach((to, from, next) => { if (to.path.endsWith('/')) next() else next({ path: to.path + '/', query: to.query, hash: to.hash }) })
- Because of the change above, relative children path
redirect
on an empty path are not supported anymore. Use named routes instead:Note this will work if// replace let routes = [ { path: '/parent', children: [ // this would now redirect to `/home` instead of `/parent/home` { path: '', redirect: 'home' }, { path: 'home' }, ], }, ] // with let routes = [ { path: '/parent', children: [ { path: '', redirect: { name: 'home' } }, { path: 'home', name: 'home' }, ], }, ]
path
was/parent/
as the relative locationhome
to/parent/
is indeed/parent/home
but the relative location ofhome
to/parent
is/home
KeepAlive
is only partially supported. Namely, the context (this
) is not working properly- Partial support of per-component navigation guards.
beforeRouteEnter
doesn't invoke its callback
See Contributing Guide.