A router you wanted so bad in your project!
- Zero dependency, only 1.36 KB gzipped vs 11KB React Router.
- Supports both React and Preact! Read "Preact support" section for more details.
- No top-level
<Router />
component, it is fully optional. - Mimics React Router's best practices by providing
familiar
Route
,Link
,Switch
andRedirect
components. - Has hook-based API for more granular control over routing (like animations):
useLocation
,useRoute
anduseRouter
.
... I love Wouter. It’s tiny, fully embraces hooks, and has an intuitive and barebones API. I can accomplish everything I could with react-router with Wouter, and it just feels more minimalist while not being inconvenient.
Wouter provides a simple API that many developers and library authors appreciate. Some notable projects that use wouter: Ultra, React-three-fiber, Sunmao UI, Million and many more.
Check out this demo app below in order to get started:
import { Link, Route } from "wouter";
const App = () => (
<div>
<Link href="/users/1">
<a className="link">Profile</a>
</Link>
<Route path="/about">About Us</Route>
<Route path="/users/:name">{(params) => <div>Hello, {params.name}!</div>}</Route>
<Route path="/inbox" component={InboxPage} />
</div>
);
This library uses features like
destructuring assignment
and const/let
declarations and doesn't
ship with ES5 transpiled sources. If you aim to support browsers like IE11 and below → make sure you
run Babel over your node_modules
In addition, Event is also used. To be able to run successfully on IE browser, a polyfill is required.
Wouter comes with two kinds of APIs: low-level React Hooks API and more traditional component-based API similar to React Router's one.
You are free to choose whatever works for you: use hooks when you want to keep your app as small as possible or you want to build custom routing components; or if you're building a traditional app with pages and navigation — components might come in handy.
Check out also FAQ and Code Recipes for more advanced things like active links, default routes etc.
Hooks API:
useRoute
— shows whether or not current page matches the pattern provided.useLocation
— allows to manipulate current browser location, a tiny wrapper around the History API.useRouter
— returns a global router object that holds the configuration. Only use it if you want to customize the routing.
Component API:
<Route />
— conditionally renders a component based on a pattern.<Link />
— wraps<a>
, allows to perfom a navigation.<Switch />
— exclusive routing, only renders the first matched route.<Redirect />
— when rendered, performs an immediate navigation.<Router />
— an optional top-level component for advanced routing configuration.
Hooks make creating custom interactions such as route transitions or accessing router directly
easier. You can check if a particular route matches the current location by using a useRoute
hook:
import { useRoute } from "wouter";
import { Transition } from "react-transition-group";
const AnimatedRoute = () => {
// `match` is boolean
const [match, params] = useRoute("/users/:id");
return <Transition in={match}>Hi, this is: {params.id}</Transition>;
};
The low-level navigation in wouter is powered by the useLocation
hook, which is basically a
wrapper around the native browser location object. The hook rerenders when the location changes and
you can also perform a navigation with it, this is very similar to how you work with values returned
from the useState
hook:
import { useLocation } from "wouter";
const CurrentLocation = () => {
const [location, setLocation] = useLocation();
return (
<div>
{`The current page is: ${location}`}
<a onClick={() => setLocation("/somewhere")}>Click to update</a>
</div>
);
};
All the components including the useRoute
rely on useLocation
hook, so normally you only need
the hook to perform the navigation using a second value setLocation
. You can check out the source
code of the Redirect
component as
a reference.
The setter method of useLocation
can also accept an optional object with parameters to control how
the navigation update will happen.
It is not mandatory for custom location hooks to support this, however the built-in
pushState
-powered useLocation
hook accepts replace
flag to tell the hook to modify the current
history entry instead of adding a new one. It is the same as calling replaceState
. Example:
const [location, navigate] = useLocation();
navigate("/jobs"); // `pushState` is used
navigate("/home", { replace: true }); // `replaceState` is used
By default, wouter uses useLocation
hook that reacts to pushState
and replaceState
navigation and observes the current pathname including the leading slash e.g. /app/users
.
If you do need a custom history observer, for example, for hash-based routing, you can
implement your own hook and
customize it in a <Router />
component.
As an exercise, let's implement a simple location hook that listens to hash changes:
import { useState, useEffect } from "react";
import { Router, Route } from "wouter";
import { useLocationProperty, navigate } from "wouter/use-location";
// returns the current hash location in a normalized form
// (excluding the leading '#' symbol)
const hashLocation = () => window.location.hash.replace(/^#/, "") || "/";
const hashNavigate = (to) => navigate("#" + to);
const useHashLocation = () => {
const location = useLocationProperty(hashLocation);
return [location, hashNavigate];
};
const App = () => (
<Router hook={useHashLocation}>
<Route path="/about" component={About} />
...
</Router>
);
▶ Demo Sandbox: hash-based routing
If you're building an advanced integration, for example custom location hook, you might want to get access to the global router object. The router is a simple object that holds current matcher function and a custom location hook function.
Normally, router is constructed internally on demand, but it can also be customized via a top-level
Router
component (see the section above). The
useRouter
hook simply returns a current router object:
import { useRouter } from "wouter";
import useLocation from "wouter/use-location";
const Custom = () => {
const router = useRouter();
// router.hook is useLocation by default
// you can also use router as a mediator object
// and store arbitrary data on it:
router.lastTransition = { path: "..." };
};
Route
represents a piece of the app that is rendered conditionally based on a pattern. Pattern is
a string, which may contain special characters to describe dynamic segments, see
Matching Dynamic Segments section below for details.
The library provides multiple ways to declare a route's body:
import { Route } from "wouter";
// simple form
<Route path="/home"><Home /></Route>
// render-prop style
<Route path="/users/:id">
{params => <UserPage id={params.id} />}
</Route>
// the `params` prop will be passed down to <Orders />
<Route path="/orders/:status" component={Orders} />
Link component renders an <a />
element that, when clicked, performs a navigation. You can
customize the link appearance by providing your own component or a link element as children
:
import { Link } from "wouter"
// All of these will produce the same html:
// <a href="/foo" class="active">Hello!</a>
// lazy form: `a` element is constructed around children
<Link href="/foo" className="active">Hello!</Link>
// when using your own component or jsx the `href` prop
// will be passed down to an element
<Link href="/foo"><a className="active">Hello!</a></Link>
<Link href="/foo"><A>Hello!</A></Link>
If you wrap a custom component with Link
, wouter won't install event listeners so make sure the
component handles onClick
and href
props properly:
import { Link } from "wouter";
const MyButton = (props) => {
// it is recommended to use <a>'s when possible (they play nicely with SSR and are SEO-friendly),
// but wouter's Links should work with almost anything, as long as the `onClick` is handled.
return (
<div title={props.href}>
<button onClick={props.onClick}>Home</button>
</div>
);
};
// in your app
<Link href="/home">
<MyButton />
</Link>;
There are cases when you want to have an exclusive routing: to make sure that only one route is
rendered at the time, even if the routes have patterns that overlap. That's what Switch
does: it
only renders the first matching route.
import { Route, Switch } from "wouter";
<Switch>
<Route path="/orders/all" component={AllOrders} />
<Route path="/orders/:status" component={Orders} />
{/*
in wouter, any Route with empty path is considered always active.
This can be used to achieve "default" route behaviour within Switch.
Note: the order matters! See examples below.
*/}
<Route>This is rendered when nothing above has matched</Route>
</Switch>;
Check out FAQ and Code Recipes section for more advanced use
of Switch
.
When mounted performs a redirect to a path
provided. Uses useLocation
hook internally to trigger
the navigation inside of a useEffect
block.
If you need more advanced logic for navigation, for example, to trigger the redirect inside of an
event handler, consider using
useLocation
hook instead:
import { useLocation } from "wouter";
const [location, setLocation] = useLocation();
fetchOrders().then((orders) => {
setOrders(orders);
setLocation("/app/orders");
});
Unlike React Router, routes in wouter don't have to be wrapped in a top-level component. An internal router object will be constructed on demand, so you can start writing your app without polluting it with a cascade of top-level providers. There are cases however, when the routing behaviour needs to be customized.
These cases include hash-based routing, basepath support, custom matcher function etc.
A router is a simple object that holds the routing configuration options. You can always obtain this
object using a useRouter
hook. The list of currently
available options:
hook: () => [location: string, setLocation: fn]
— is a React Hook function that subscribes to location changes. It returns a pair of currentlocation
string e.g./app/users
and asetLocation
function for navigation. You can use this hook from any component of your app by callinguseLocation()
hook.
Read more → Customizing the location hook.
-
matcher: (pattern: string, path: string) => [match: boolean, params: object]
— a custom function used for matching the current location against the user-defined patterns like/app/users/:id
. Should return a match result and an hash of extracted parameters. It should return[false, null]
when there is no match. -
base: string
— an optional setting that allows to specify a base path, such as/app
. All application routes will be relative to that path. Prefixing a route with~
will make it absolute, bypassing the base path.
Just like in React Router, you can make dynamic matches either with Route
component or useRoute
hook. useRoute
returns a second parameter which is a hash of all dynamic segments matched.
Similarily, the Route
component passes these parameters down to its children via a function prop.
import { useRoute } from "wouter";
// /users/alex => [true, { name: "alex "}]
// /anything => [false, null]
const [match, params] = useRoute("/users/:name");
// or with Route component
<Route path="/users/:name">
{(params) => {
/* { name: "alex" } */
}}
</Route>;
wouter implements a limited subset of
path-to-regexp
package used by React Router or
Express, and it supports the following patterns:
- Named dynamic segments:
/users/:foo
. - Dynamic segments with modifiers:
/foo/:bar*
,/foo/baz?
or/foo/bar+
.
The library was designed to be as small as possible, so most of the additional matching features were left out (see this issue for more info).
The <Router />
component accepts an optional prop called matcher
which allows to customize how a
path is matched against the pattern. By default, a built-in matcher function is used, which
implements basic functionality such as wildcard parameters (see above).
However, if you do need to have more advanced functionality, you can specify your own matcher which should look like:
/*
* accepts a pattern and a path as strings, should return a pair of values:
* [success, params]
*/
// returns [false, null] when there is no match
matcher("/users", "/");
// [true, { id: "101" }]
matcher("/users/:id", "/users/101");
Most of the packages for parsing route patterns work with regular expressions (see
path-to-regexp
or a super-tiny alternative
regexparam
), so to make it easier for you wouter provides
a factory function for transforming
a regexp-based pattern builder into a matcher. It also makes sure that the expensive transform
operation isn't called on each render by utilizing a simple cache.
import { Router } from "wouter";
import makeCachedMatcher from "wouter/matcher";
/*
* This function specifies how strings like /app/:users/:items* are
* transformed into regular expressions.
*
* Note: it is just a wrapper around `pathToRegexp`, which uses a
* slightly different convention of returning the array of keys.
*
* @param {string} path — a path like "/:foo/:bar"
* @return {{ keys: [], regexp: RegExp }}
*/
const convertPathToRegexp = (path) => {
let keys = [];
// we use original pathToRegexp package here with keys
const regexp = pathToRegexp(path, keys, { strict: true });
return { keys, regexp };
};
const customMatcher = makeCachedMatcher(convertPathToRegexp);
function App() {
return (
<Router matcher={customMatcher}>
{/* at the moment wouter doesn't support inline regexps, but path-to-regexp does! */}
<Route path="/(resumes|cover-letters)/:id" component={Dashboard} />
</Router>
);
}
You can! Wrap your app with <Router base="/app" />
component and that should do the trick:
import { Router, Route, Link } from "wouter";
const App = () => (
<Router base="/app">
{/* the link's href attribute will be "/app/users" */}
<Link href="/users">Users</Link>
<Route path="/users">The current path is /app/users!</Route>
</Router>
);
Note: the base path feature is only supported by the default browser History API location hook
(the one exported from "wouter/use-location"
). If you're implementing your own location hook,
you'll need to add base path support yourself.
One of the common patterns in application routing is having a default route that will be shown as a
fallback, in case no other route matches (for example, if you need to render 404 message). In
wouter this can easily be done as a combination of <Switch />
component and a default route:
import { Switch, Route } from "wouter";
<Switch>
<Route path="/about">...</Route>
<Route>404, Not Found!</Route>
</Switch>;
Note: the order of switch children matters, default route should always come last. If you want to
have access to the matched segment of the path you can use :param*
:
<Switch>
<Route path="/users">...</Route>
{/* will match anything that starts with /users/, e.g. /users/foo, /users/1/edit etc. */}
<Route path="/users/:rest*">...</Route>
{/* will match everything else */}
<Route path="/:rest*">{(params) => `404, Sorry the page ${params.rest} does not exist!`}</Route>
</Switch>
There are cases when you need to highlight an active link, for example, in the navigation bar. While
this functionality isn't provided out-of-the-box, you can easily write your own <Link />
wrapper
and detect if the path is active by using the useRoute
hook. The useRoute(pattern)
hook returns
a pair of [match, params]
, where match
is a boolean value that tells if the pattern matches
current location:
const [isActive] = useRoute(props.href);
return (
<Link {...props}>
<a className={isActive ? "active" : ""}>{props.children}</a>
</Link>
);
If a trailing slash is important for your app's routing, you could specify a custom matcher that
implements the strict
option support.
import makeMatcher from "wouter/matcher";
import { pathToRegexp } from "path-to-regexp";
const customMatcher = makeMatcher((path) => {
let keys = [];
const regexp = pathToRegexp(path, keys, { strict: true });
return { keys, regexp };
});
const App = () => (
<Router matcher={customMatcher}>
<Route path="/foo">...</Route>
<Route path="/foo/">...</Route>
</Router>
);
Unlike React Router, there is no first-class support for route nesting. However, thanks to the base path support, you can easily implement a nesting router yourself!
const NestedRoutes = (props) => {
const router = useRouter();
const [parentLocation] = useLocation();
const nestedBase = `${router.base}${props.base}`;
// don't render anything outside of the scope
if (!parentLocation.startsWith(nestedBase)) return null;
// we need key to make sure the router will remount when base changed
return (
<Router base={nestedBase} key={nestedBase}>
{props.children}
</Router>
);
};
const App = () => (
<Router base="/app">
<NestedRoutes base="/dashboard">
{/* the real url is /app/dashboard/users */}
<Link to="/users" />
<Route path="/users" />
</NestedRoutes>
</Router>
);
While wouter doesn't currently support multipath routes, you can achieve that in your app by
specifying a custom matcher
function:
import makeMatcher from "wouter/matcher";
const defaultMatcher = makeMatcher();
/*
* A custom routing matcher function that supports multipath routes
*/
const multipathMatcher = (patterns, path) => {
for (let pattern of [patterns].flat()) {
const [match, params] = defaultMatcher(pattern, path);
if (match) return [match, params];
}
return [false, null];
};
const App = () => (
<Router matcher={multipathMatcher}>
<Route path={["/app", "/home"]}>...</Route>
</Router>
);
Yes! Although the project isn't written in TypeScript, the type definition files are bundled with the package.
Preact exports are available through a separate package named wouter-preact
(or within the
wouter/preact
namespace, however this method isn't recommended as it requires React as a peer
dependency):
- import { useRoute, Route, Switch } from "wouter";
+ import { useRoute, Route, Switch } from "wouter-preact";
You might need to ensure you have the latest version of Preact X with support for hooks.
In order to render your app on the server, you'll need to wrap your app with top-level Router and
specify ssrPath
prop (usually, derived from current request).
import { renderToString } from "react-dom/server";
import { Router } from "wouter";
const handleRequest = (req, res) => {
// top-level Router is mandatory in SSR mode
const prerendered = renderToString(
<Router ssrPath={req.path}>
<App />
</Router>
);
// respond with prerendered html
};
On the client, the static markup must be hydrated in order for your app to become interactive. Note
that to avoid having hydration warnings, the JSX rendered on the client must match the one used by
the server, so the Router
component must be present.
import { hydrateRoot } from "react-dom/client";
const root = hydrateRoot(
domNode,
// during hydration `ssrPath` is set to `location.pathname`
<Router>
<App />
</Router>
);
We've got some great news for you! If you're a minimalist bundle-size nomad and you need a damn
simple routing in your app, you can just use the
useLocation
hook which is only 400 bytes gzipped
and manually match the current location with it:
import useLocation from "wouter/use-location";
const UsersRoute = () => {
const [location] = useLocation();
if (location !== "/users") return null;
// render the route
};
Wouter's motto is "Minimalist-friendly".
Testing Wouter is a breeze with React Testing
Library. Add a
custom render function with a parameter to initialize the route and test
against the render or window.location
.
/* testUtils.js */
import {render} from '@testing-library/react'
export const renderWithRouter = (ui, {route = '/'} = {}) => {
window.history.pushState({}, 'Test page', route)
return {
...render(ui),
}
}
export * from '@testing-library/react';
/* App.js */
import { Redirect, Route, Switch } from "wouter";
import './App.css';
function App() {
return (
<div className="App">
<Switch>
<Route path="/"><h1>Home</h1></Route>
<Route path="/orders"><h1>All Orders</h1></Route>
<Route path="/orders/:id">
{params => <h1>Order {params?.id}</h1>}
</Route>
<Route path="/deprecated">
<Redirect to="/" />
</Route>
<Route>Sorry, we couldn't find that page.</Route>
</Switch>
</div>
);
}
export default App;
/* App.test.js */
import { renderWithRouter, screen } from './testUtils';
import App from './App';
describe('<App />', () => {
it('displays a message on unknown routes', () => {
renderWithRouter(<App />, {route: '/unknown'});
const title = screen.getByText("Sorry, we couldn't find that page.");
expect(title).toBeInTheDocument();
});
it('displays Orders at /orders', () => {
renderWithRouter(<App />, {route: '/orders'});
const title = screen.getByRole('heading', {name: /All Orders/});
expect(title).toBeInTheDocument();
});
it('displays Orders by id /orders/:id', () => {
renderWithRouter(<App />, {route: '/orders/1'});
const title = screen.getByRole('heading', {name: /Order 1/});
expect(title).toBeInTheDocument();
});
it('redirects a deprecated route', () => {
renderWithRouter(<App />, {route: '/deprecated'});
const title = screen.getByRole('heading', {name: /Home/});
expect(title).toBeInTheDocument();
expect(window.location.pathname).toBe('/');
});
});
Wouter illustrations and logos were made by Katya Simacheva and Katya Vakulenko.