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Showing content from https://github.com/atomic-router/atomic-router below:

atomic-router/atomic-router: Platform-agnostic router that does not break your architecture

Simple routing implementation that provides abstraction layer instead of inline URL's and does not break your architecture

โ—๏ธ Attention: At the moment atomic-router team collecting issues and feature requests to improve current design. Upgrade atomic-router version with caution. We are going to write migration guide when/if the release will contain breaking changes. Thank you for reporting issues ๐Ÿงก

Get view-library bindings
$ npm install effector atomic-router

Create your routes wherever you want:

// pages/home
import { createRoute } from 'atomic-router';
export const homeRoute = createRoute();

// pages/posts
import { createRoute } from 'atomic-router';
export const postsRoute = createRoute<{ postId: string }>();

And then create a router

// app/routing
import { createHistoryRouter } from 'atomic-router';
import { createBrowserHistory, createMemoryHistory } from 'history';
import { homeRoute } from '@/pages/home';
import { postsRoute } from '@/pages/posts';

const routes = [
  { path: '/', route: homeRoute },
  { path: '/posts', route: postsRoute },
];

const router = createHistoryRouter({
  routes: routes,
});

// Attach history
const history = isSsr ? createMemoryHistory() : createBrowserHistory();
router.setHistory(history);

There are 3 purposes for using atomic routes:

Fetch post on page open
  1. In your model, create effect and store which you'd like to trigger:
export const getPostFx = createEffect<{ postId: string }, Post>(
  ({ postId }) => {
    return api.get(`/posts/${postId}`);
  }
);

export const $post = restore(getPostFx.doneData, null);
  1. And just trigger it when postPage.$params change:
//route.ts
import { createRoute } from 'atomic-router';
import { getPostFx } from './model';

const postPage = createRoute<{ postId: string }>();

sample({
  source: postPage.$params,
  filter: postPage.$isOpened,
  target: getPostFx,
});
Avoid breaking architecture

Imagine that we have a good architecture, where our code can be presented as a dependency tree.
So, we don't make neither circular imports, nor they go backwards.
For example, we have Card -> PostCard -> PostsList -> PostsPage flow, where PostsList doesn't know about PostsPage, PostCard doesn't know about PostsList etc.

But now we need our PostCard to open PostsPage route.
And usually, we add extra responisbility by letting it know what the route is

const PostCard = ({ id }) => {
  const post = usePost(id);

  return (
    <Card>
      <Card.Title>{post.title}</Card.Title>
      <Card.Description>{post.title}</Card.Description>
      {/* NOOOO! */}
      <Link to={postsPageRoute} params={{ postId: id }}>
        Read More
      </Link>
    </Card>
  );
};

With atomic-router, you can create a "personal" route for this card:

const readMoreRoute = createRoute<{ postId: id }>();

And then you can just give it the same path as your PostsPage has:

const routes = [
  { path: '/posts/:postId', route: readMoreRoute },
  { path: '/posts/:postId', route: postsPageRoute },
];

Both will work perfectly fine as they are completely independent

// Params is an object-type describing query params for your route
const route = createRoute<Params>();

// Stores
route.$isOpened; // Store<boolean>
route.$params; // Store<{ [key]: string }>
route.$query; // Store<{ [key]: string }>

// Events (only watch 'em)
route.opened; // Event<{ params: RouteParams, query: RouteQuery }>
route.updated; // Event<{ params: RouteParams, query: RouteQuery }>
route.closed; // Event<{ params: RouteParams, query: RouteQuery }>

// Effects
route.open; // Effect<RouteParams>
route.navigate; // Effect<{ params: RouteParams, query: RouteQuery }>

// Note: Store, Event and Effect is imported from 'effector' package

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