The API of @reach/router
departs a bit from
react-router
in a couple ways.
The location
prop which you may be used to having access to automatically
is instead available through the
Location
component.
import React from 'react';
import { Location } from '@reach/router';
const MyComponent = () => {
return (
<Location>
{({ location }) => {
return <p>Current Location: {location.pathname}</p>;
}}
</Location>
);
}
This is a contrived example, but you can imagine how you'd use it to access
state
or even create an HOC similar to withRouter
.