Angular routing with multiple routes and router-outlet

Israel picture Israel · Aug 10, 2018 · Viewed 10.2k times · Source

I'm trying to add navigation to components in addition to the navigation of the app root, but it is not navigating to component route.

I'm using two router-outlet:

  • router outlet for the app root (app.component.html)
  • router outlet for users component (users.component.html)

With two routes:

  • route for the app (app.routing.module.ts)
  • route for users (users.routing.module.ts)

When navigating to "users" I can see users.component.html with two links, but when pressing on the link "list", it is not navigating to: UsersListComponent defined in users.routing.module.ts

I'm not sure if this is the correct way to do this.

Below is folder structure of the project and source code:

-- app.routing.module.ts
-- app.component.html
-- components
   -- dashboard
   -- users
      -- users.component.html
      -- users.module.ts
      -- users.routing.module.ts

app.routing.module.ts

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { Routes, RouterModule } from '@angular/router';
import { UsersModule } from './panels/users/users.module';

const AppRouting: Routes = [
    { path: '', redirectTo: 'dashboard', pathMatch: 'full' },
    { path: 'dashboard', component: DashboardComponent },
    { path: 'users', loadChildren: () => UsersModule  }
    { path: '**', component: DashboardComponent }
];

@NgModule({
    imports: [RouterModule.forRoot(AppRouting, { enableTracing: true })],
    exports: [RouterModule],
    providers: []
})
export class AppRoutingModule { }

app.component.html

<div class="app-wrapper">
    <router-outlet></router-outlet>
</div>

users.component.html

<a [routerLinkActive]="['active']" [routerLink]="[{ outlets: { 'users':['list'] } }]" [skipLocationChange]="true">List</a>&nbsp;
<a [routerLinkActive]="['active']" [routerLink]="['create']" [skipLocationChange]="true">Create</a>&nbsp;
<router-outlet name="users"></router-outlet>

users.routing.module.ts

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { Routes, RouterModule, RouterOutlet, RouterLink, RouterLinkActive } from '@angular/router';
import { CreateUserComponent } from './user-create/user-create.component';
import { UsersListComponent } from './users-list/users-list.component';
import { UsersComponent } from './users.component';

const UsersRouting: Routes = [
     { path: 'list', component: UsersListComponent, outlet: 'users' },
     { path: 'create', component: CreateUserComponent, outlet: 'users' },
     { path: 'edit', component: CreateUserComponent, outlet: 'users' },
     { path: '', component: UsersComponent }
];

@NgModule({
  imports: [
      RouterModule.forChild(UsersRouting)
  ],
  declarations: [],
  exports: [
      RouterModule
  ],
})
export class UsersRoutingModule {}

users.module.ts

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { CreateUserComponent } from './user-create/user-create.component';
import { UsersComponent } from './users.component';
import { UsersListComponent } from './users-list/users-list.component';
import { UsersRoutingModule } from './users.routing.module';

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    UsersRoutingModule,
  ],
  declarations: [
    UsersComponent,
    UsersListComponent,
    CreateUserComponent
  ]
})
export class UsersModule { }

Thanks in advance

Answer

DeborahK picture DeborahK · Aug 11, 2018

Do you really need a named router outlet?

<router-outlet name="users"></router-outlet>

Or could you just use a child router outlet:

<router-outlet></router-outlet>

I have a video about routing here that may help: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LaIAHOSKHCQ&t=1s