21
votes

Using angular2, I want to open an auxiliary route programmatically in my component.

This code opens the route with the 'list' path and it opens the route in the correct named router outlet, but I am not sure how to pass parameters to the route:

this.router.navigate(['./', { outlets: { 'list-outlet': 'list' } }]);
2

2 Answers

27
votes

The route for the component that displays the details for a specific product would need a route parameter for the ID of that product. We could implement this using the following Routes:

export const routes: Routes = [
  { path: '', redirectTo: 'product-list', pathMatch: 'full' },
  { path: 'product-list', component: ProductList },
  { path: 'product-details/:id', component: ProductDetails }
];

Note :id in the path of the product-details route, which places the parameter in the path. For example, to see the product-details page for product with ID 5, you must use the following URL: localhost:3000/product-details/5 Linking to Routes with Parameters

In the ProductList component you could display a list of products. Each product would have a link to the product-details route, passing the ID of the product:

<a *ngFor="let product of products"
  [routerLink]="['/product-details', product.id]">
  {{ product.name }}
</a>

Note that the routerLink directive passes an array which specifies the path and the route parameter. Alternatively we could navigate to the route programmatically:

goToProductDetails(id) {
  this.router.navigate(['/product-details', id]);
}

The ProductDetails component must read the parameter, then load the product based on the ID given in the parameter. The ActivatedRoute service provides a params Observable which we can subscribe to to get the route parameters (see Observables)

import { Component, OnInit, OnDestroy } from '@angular/core';
import { ActivatedRoute } from '@angular/router';

@Component({
  selector: 'product-details',
  template: `
    <div>
      Showing product details for product: {{id}}
    </div>
  `,
})
export class LoanDetailsPage implements OnInit, OnDestroy {
  id: number;
  private sub: any;

  constructor(private route: ActivatedRoute) {}

  ngOnInit() {
    this.sub = this.route.params.subscribe(params => {
       this.id = +params['id']; // (+) converts string 'id' to a number

       // In a real app: dispatch action to load the details here.
    });
  }

  ngOnDestroy() {
    this.sub.unsubscribe();
  }
}

The reason that the params property on ActivatedRoute is an Observable is that the router may not recreate the component when navigating to the same component. In this case the parameter may change without the component being recreated.

Plunkr example

Information from here

17
votes

In the end, I just needed to use an array to pass my params... See param1 and param2 below.

this.router.navigate(['./', { outlets: { 'list-outlet': ['list', param1, param2]} }]);

Note... I had to change the path in my routing configuration:

{
    path: 'list/:param1/:param2',
    component: ClaimListComponent,
    outlet: 'list-outlet'
}

And then in my ngOnInit function, I can pull the params out of the router as Muirik shows.