Enables eager loading of child routes and creates a navigation menu based on routes and child routes.
Install with npm
npm install aurelia-navigation-menu --save
If you're using the CLI add the dependency
"dependencies": [
// ...
"aurelia-navigation-menu",
//...
]
By Default only routes that have nav
set to true will be eager loaded
configureRouter(config: RouterConfiguration, router: Router) {
config.options.eagerLoadAll = true;
config.map([
{ route: ['', 'home'], name: 'home', moduleId: 'routes/home/index', nav: true, title: 'Home' },
{ route: 'cats', name: 'cats', moduleId: 'routes/cats/index', nav: true, title: 'Cats' },
{ route: 'dogs', name: 'dogs', moduleId: 'routes/dogs/index', nav: true, title: 'Dogs' },
{ route: 'birds', name: 'birds', moduleId: 'routes/birds/index', title: 'Birds' }
]);
this.router = router;
}
In the above example Home, Cats and Dogs will be checked for a router component.
If you have nested child routes then you need to add eagerLoadAll to each child configureRouter function.
configureRouter(config: RouterConfiguration, router: Router) {
config.options.eagerLoadAll = true;
config.options.eagerIgnoreNav = true;
config.title = 'Child Route Menu Example';
config.map([
{ route: ['', 'home'], name: 'home', moduleId: 'routes/home/index', title: 'Home' },
{ route: 'cats', name: 'cats', moduleId: 'routes/cats/index', title: 'Cats' },
{ route: 'dogs', name: 'dogs', moduleId: 'routes/dogs/index', title: 'Dogs' },
{ route: 'birds', name: 'birds', moduleId: 'routes/birds/index', nav: true, title: 'Birds' }
]);
this.router = router;
}
This plugin add's a navigation property each navigation item within the App Router.
For example using the above code you can get Cat's routes by checking: router.navigation[1].navigation
** if you return ensureMenu from the activate method - the app will deadlock. **
import { NavigationMenu } from 'aurelia-navigation-menu';
import { inject } from 'aurelia-dependency-injection';
@inject(NavigationMenu)
export class App {
constructor(navigationMenu) {
this.navigationMenu = navigationMenu;
}
activate(params) {
this.navigationMenu.ensureMenu()
}
}
You can also access the navigation menu from the NavigationMenu
object/class. In the above example the navigation items will be under: navigationMenu.menu
- Create a Custom Element (nav-menu.html)
<template bindable="navigation">
<ul>
<li repeat.for="row of navigation">
<a href.bind="row.href" class="${row.isActive ? 'active' : ''}">${row.title}</a>
<nav-menu if.bind="row.navigation" navigation.bind="row.navigation"></nav-menu>
</li>
</ul>
</template>
- Require and refence it in your View (app.html from above example)
<require from="resources/elements/nav-menu.html"></require>
<nav-menu navigation.bind="router.navigation"></nav-menu>
To build the code, follow these steps.
- Ensure that NodeJS is installed. This provides the platform on which the build tooling runs.
- From the project folder, execute the following command:
npm install
- Ensure that Gulp is installed. If you need to install it, use the following command:
npm install -g gulp
- To build the code, you can now run:
gulp build
-
You will find the compiled code in the
dist
folder, available in three module formats: AMD, CommonJS and ES6. -
See
gulpfile.js
for other tasks related to generating the docs and linting.
To run the unit tests, first ensure that you have followed the steps above in order to install all dependencies and successfully build the library. Once you have done that, proceed with these additional steps:
- Ensure that the Karma CLI is installed. If you need to install it, use the following command:
npm install -g karma-cli
- Ensure that jspm is installed. If you need to install it, use the following commnand:
npm install -g jspm
- Install the client-side dependencies with jspm:
jspm install
- You can now run the tests with this command:
karma start