Is it possible to have multiple router-outlet in the same template?
If yes then how to configure the routes?
I am using angular2 beta.
Is it possible to have multiple router-outlet in the same template?
If yes then how to configure the routes?
I am using angular2 beta.
yes you can, but you need to use aux routing. you will need to give a name to your router-outlet:
<router-outlet name="auxPathName"></router-outlet>
and setup your route config:
@RouteConfig([
{path:'/', name: 'RetularPath', component: OneComponent, useAsDefault: true},
{aux:'/auxRoute', name: 'AuxPath', component: SecondComponent}
])
Check out this example, and also this video.
Update for RC.5 Aux routes has changed a bit: in your router outlet use a name:
<router-outlet name="aux">
In your router config:
{path: '/auxRouter', component: secondComponentComponent, outlet: 'aux'}
You can have multiple router-outlet in same template by configuring your router and providing name to your router-outlet, you can achieve this as follows.
Advantage of below approach is thats you can avoid dirty looking URL with it. eg: /home(aux:login) etc.
Assuming on load you are bootstraping appComponent.
app.component.html
<div class="layout">
<div class="page-header">
//first outlet to load required component
<router-outlet name='child1'></router-outlet>
</div>
<div class="content">
//second outlet to load required component
<router-outlet name='child2'></router-outlet>
</div>
</div>
Add following to your router.
{
path: 'home', // you can keep it empty if you do not want /home
component: 'appComponent',
children: [
{
path: '',
component: childOneComponent,
outlet: 'child1'
},
{
path: '',
component: childTwoComponent,
outlet: 'child2'
}
]
}
Now when /home is loaded appComponent will get load with allocated template, then angular router will check the route and load the children component in specified router outlet on the basis of name.
Like above you can configure your router to have multiple router-outlet in same route.
Aux routes syntax has changed with the new RC.3 router.
There are some known issues with aux routes but basic support is available.
You can define routes to show components in a named <router-outlet>
Route config
{path: 'chat', component: ChatCmp, outlet: 'aux'}
Named router outlet
<router-outlet name="aux">
Navigate aux routes
this._router.navigateByUrl("/crisis-center(aux:chat;open=true)");
It seems navigating aux routes from routerLink is not yet supported
<a [routerLink]="'/team/3(aux:/chat;open=true)'">Test</a>
<a [routerLink]="['/team/3', {outlets: {aux: 'chat'}}]">c</a>
Not tried myself yet
See also Angular2 router in one component
RC.5 routerLink DSL (same as createUrlTree
parameter) https://angular.io/docs/ts/latest/api/router/index/Router-class.html#!#createUrlTree-anchor
<a [routerLink]="[{ outlets: { list:['streams'], details:['parties'] } }]">Link</a>
<div id="list">
<router-outlet name="list"></router-outlet>
</div>
<div id="details">
<router-outlet name="details"></router-outlet>
</div>
`
{
path: 'admin',
component: AdminLayoutComponent,
children:[
{
path: '',
component: AdminStreamsComponent,
outlet:'list'
},
{
path: 'stream/:id',
component: AdminStreamComponent,
outlet:'details'
}
]
}
Yes you can as said by @tomer above. i want to add some point to @tomer answer.
router-outlet
where you want to load the second routing view in your view. (aux routing angular2.)In angular2 routing few important points are here.
for more info read out here and here.
import {RouteConfig, AuxRoute} from 'angular2/router';
@RouteConfig([
new AuxRoute({path: '/home', component: HomeCmp})
])
class MyApp {}
There seems to be another (rather hacky) way to reuse the router-outlet in one template. This answer is intendend for informational purposes only and the techniques used here should probably not be used in production.
https://stackblitz.com/edit/router-outlet-twice-with-events
The router-outlet is wrapped by an ng-template. The template is updated by listening to events of the router. On every event the template is swapped and re-swapped with an empty placeholder. Without this "swapping" the template would not be updated.
This most definetly is not a recommended approach though, since the whole swapping of two templates seems a bit hacky.
in the controller:
ngOnInit() {
this.router.events.subscribe((routerEvent: Event) => {
console.log(routerEvent);
this.myTemplateRef = this.trigger;
setTimeout(() => {
this.myTemplateRef = this.template;
}, 0);
});
}
in the template:
<div class="would-be-visible-on-mobile-only">
This would be the mobile-layout with a router-outlet (inside a template):
<br>
<ng-container *ngTemplateOutlet="myTemplateRef"></ng-container>
</div>
<hr>
<div class="would-be-visible-on-desktop-only">
This would be the desktop-layout with a router-outlet (inside a template):
<br>
<ng-container *ngTemplateOutlet="myTemplateRef"></ng-container>
</div>
<ng-template #template>
<br>
This is my counter: {{counter}}
inside the template, the router-outlet should follow
<router-outlet>
</router-outlet>
</ng-template>
<ng-template #trigger>
template to trigger changes...
</ng-template>
You can not use multiple router outlets in the same template with ngIf
condition. But you can use it in the way shown below:
<div *ngIf="loading">
<span>loading true</span>
<ng-container *ngTemplateOutlet="template"></ng-container>
</div>
<div *ngIf="!loading">
<span>loading false</span>
<ng-container *ngTemplateOutlet="template"></ng-container>
</div>
<ng-template #template>
<router-outlet> </router-outlet>
</ng-template>
This worked for me and pretty straight-forward and simple.
<div *ngIf="authenticated">
<ng-container *ngTemplateOutlet="template"></ng-container>
</div>
<div *ngIf="!authenticated">
<ng-container *ngTemplateOutlet="template"></ng-container>
</div>
<ng-template #template>
<router-outlet></router-outlet>
</ng-template>