https://ui-router.github.io/sample-app-angular-hybrid/#!/mymessages/inbox/5648b50d5d8be25776881a3f
This sample app is intended to demonstrate a non-trivial ui-router application.
- Multiple sub-modules
- Managed state lifecycle
- Application data lifecycle
- Authentication (simulated)
- Authenticated and unauthenticated states
- REST data retrieval (simulated)
- Lazy loaded sub module (Contacts)
npm install
npm start
The sample app has also been migrated to use the Angular CLI instead of custom webpack config.
This can be seen in the angular-cli
branch.
Because it uses the CLI, it can also be live edited using stackblitz:
https://stackblitz.com/github/ui-router/sample-app-angular-hybrid/tree/angular-cli
We're using the State and Transition Visualizer to visually represent the current state tree, as well as the transitions between states. Explore how transitions work by hovering over them, and clicking to expand details (params and resolves).
Note how states are entered when they were previously not active, exited and re-entered when parameters change, and how parent states whose parameters did not change are retained. Each of these (exited, entered, retained) correspond to a Transition Hook.
The application is written in Typescript and utilizes ES6 modules. We are loading and bundling modules using webpack.
There are many ways to structure a ui-router app. We aren't super opinionated on application structure. Use what works for you. We organized ours in the following way:
- Sub-module (feature) organization
- Each feature gets its own directory.
- Features contain states and components
- Specific types of helper code (directives, services, etc) used only within a feature may live in a subdirectory
named after its type (
/mymessages/directives
)
- Leveraging ES6 modules
- Each state is defined in its own file
- Each component (controller + template) is defined in its own file
- Components exported themselves
- Components are then imported into a states where they are composed into the state definition.
- States export themselves
- The
feature.module.js
imports all states for the feature and registers then with the$stateProvider
- A single angular module is defined for the entire application
- Created, then exported from
bootstrap/ngmodule.js
- The ng module is imported into some other module whenever services, config blocks, directives, etc need to be registered with angular.
- Created, then exported from
- Defining custom, app-specific global behaviors
- Add metadata to a state, or state tree
- Check for metadata in transition hooks
- Example:
routerhooks/redirectTo.js
- If a transition directly to a state with a
redirectTo
property is started, the transition will be redirected to the state which the property names.
- If a transition directly to a state with a
- Example:
routerhooks/authRequired.js
- If a transition to a state with a truthy
data.authRequired: true
property is started and the user is not currently authenticated
- If a transition to a state with a truthy
- Defining a default substate for a top-level state
- Example: declaring
redirectTo: 'mymessages.folder'
inmymessages/mymessages.states.js
(mymessages state)
- Example: declaring
- Defining a default parameter for a state
- Example:
folderId
parameter defaults to 'inbox' inmymessages/mymessages.states.js
(folder state)
- Example:
- Application data lifecycle
- Data loading is managed by the state declaration, via the
resolve:
block - Data is fetched before the state is entered
- Data is fetched according to state parameters
- The state is entered when the data is ready
- The resolved data is injected into the components
- The resolve data remains loaded until the state is exited
- Data loading is managed by the state declaration, via the
- Lazy Loading
- The contacts module is an Angular
NgModule
. It is defined as a "future state", and lazy loaded just before any contacts state is activated.
- The contacts module is an Angular