This package enables UI-Router to route to both AngularJS components (and/or templates) and React components. Your app will be hosted by AngularJS while you incrementally migrate to React.
import { ReactAboutComponent } from "./about.component";
/// ...
$stateProvider.state({
name: 'home',
url: '/home',
component: 'ng1HomeComponent' // AngularJS component or directive name
})
.state({
name: 'about',
url: '/about',
component: ReactAboutComponent // React component class reference
});
.state({
name: 'other',
url: '/other',
template: '<h1>Other</h1>', // AngularJS template/controller
controller: function($scope) { /* do stuff */ }
})
When routing to a React component, that component can use the standard
React directives (UIView, UISref, UISrefActive) from @uirouter/react
.
When routing to an AngularJS component or template, that component uses the standard
AngularJS directives (ui-view, ui-sref, ui-sref-active) from @uirouter/angularjs
.
Remove angular-ui-router
(or @uirouter/angularjs
) from your package.json and replace it with @uirouter/react-hybrid
.
Add the react
and react-dom
dependencies.
dependencies: {
...
"angular": "^1.6.0",
"react": "^15.4.0",
"react-dom": "^15.4.0",
...
"@uirouter/react-hybrid": "^0.0.8",
...
}
import { UI_ROUTER_REACT_HYBRID } from '@uirouter/react-hybrid';
let ng1module = angular.module("myApp", ['ui.router', UI_ROUTER_REACT_HYBRID]);
Your existing AngularJS routes work the same as before.
var foo = {
name: 'foo',
url: '/foo',
component: 'fooComponent'
};
$stateProvider.state(foo);
var bar = {
name: 'foo.bar',
url: '/bar',
templateUrl: '/bar.html',
controller: 'BarController'
};
$stateProvider.state(bar);
Use component:
in your state declaration.
var leaf = {
name: 'foo.bar.leaf',
url: '/leaf',
component: MyReactComponentClass
};
$stateProvider.state(leaf);
An AngularJS <ui-view>
can have default content.
This default content is rendered when no state is filling the ui-view
with a component.
For example, a parent state may render a ui-view
portal, but want Default Content
to display
when no child state is active: <ui-view>Default Content</ui-view>
.
The @uirouter/react-hybrid
project sets the default content to an adapter component, <react-ui-view-adapter>
.
The react-ui-view-adapter
then renders a React <UIView/>
.
When a state loads an AngularJS view into the AngularJS <ui-view>
, it replaces the react-ui-view-adapter
default content.
When a state loads a React Component into the React <UIView/>
component, it is nested inside the AngularJS components like so:
<ui-view> // angularjs
<react-ui-view-adapter> // angularjs
<UIView> // react
<RoutedReactComponent/> //react
</UIView>
</react-ui-view-adapter>
</ui-view>
In AngularJS, each <ui-view>
provides the state context to its children elements, such as ui-sref
or ui-view
.
The state context allows a ui-sref
to use relative links, for example.
AngularJS provides this context by setting hidden data on its DOM element, using angular.element(el).data('$uiView')
.
Any nested ui-view
or ui-sref
fetches the context by asking for angular.element(childel).inheritedData('$uiView')
.
In React, each UIView
provides the state context to its children elements using React context.
The nested UIView
or UISref
fetches the state context using the React context API.
There is some glue provided by @uirouter/react-hybrid
which bridges these two context mechanisms.
When a React UIView
component is rendered, it is wrapped in a UIRouterReactContext
component.
The component finds the state context by looking first via React props, and second via AngularJS DOM data.
It then provides the state context to its children using React props.
The <react-ui-view-adapter>
wraps a React UIView
component.
When the react UIView
is filled by a state's react component, the react-ui-view-adapter
gets the state context for the newly filled UIView
.
It then provides that context to AngularJS components using AngularJS DOM data.