Build a react-router clone from scratch

React router is a package that I use in almost all of my projects. Not too long
ago, Michael Jackson tweeted this. This made me curious as to how difficult it would be to rebuild react router from scratch.

Before we dig into this I want to clarify tha…


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Thomas Cullen

React router is a package that I use in almost all of my projects. Not too long
ago, Michael Jackson tweeted this. This made me curious as to how difficult it would be to rebuild react router from scratch.

Before we dig into this I want to clarify that if you need a router in your project you should just use react router. It has a lot more features, handles a lot more edge cases and is incredibly well tested. This is purely a learning exercise.

In this post we are going to build a simplified version of react-router that is based on the newer v6 API's.

At the heart of react router is another package called 'history'. This package is responsible for managing the router history. For this post we are only concerned about creating a router for the web and so we are going to bake this directly into our react components. The first thing we are going to need is a root Router component and a context for our other components to consume. Let's start with the context.

Our router is going to be much more simplified than react router in that we aren't going to provide support for location state, hashes and other cases that react router provides. Our router context is going to provide 2 keys; location and push:

  • location is simply a string of the current path.
  • push is a function which can be called to change the current path.

And with that we can create our basic router context.

const RouterContext = React.createContext({
  location: "",
  push: () => {},
});

This context is useless without rendering a provider. We are going to do that inside of our main Router component. The responsibility of this component is to provide information about the current route and provide ways to manipulate it. We are going to store the current location path in react state. This way when we update the location our component will re-render. We also need to provide the push function to our context which will simply update the browser location and update our location state. Finally we also listen for the window 'popstate' event to update our location when using the browser navigation buttons.

function Router({ children }) {
  const [location, setLocation] = React.useState(window.location.pathname);

  const handlePush = useCallback(
    (newLocation) => {
      window.history.pushState({}, "", newLocation);
      setLocation(newLocation);
    },
    [setLocation]
  );

  const handleHashChange = useCallback(() => {
    setLocation(window.location.pathname);
  }, [setLocation]);

  useEffect(() => {
    window.addEventListener("popstate", handleHashChange);
    return () => window.removeEventListener("popstate", handleHashChange);
  }, [handleHashChange]);

  return (
    <RouterContext.Provider value={{ location, push: handlePush }}>
      {children}
    </RouterContext.Provider>
  );
}

In order to test our component we are going to need a way to update the current route to check the correct components are rendering. Let's create a Link component for this. Our link component will simply take a to argument of the new path and call our push function from the router context when clicked.

function Link({ to, children }) {
  const { push } = React.useContext(RouterContext);

  function handleClick(e) {
    e.preventDefault();
    push(to);
  }

  return (
    <a href={to} onClick={handleClick}>
      {children}
    </a>
  );
}

Now that we have a way to navigate around, we need a way to actually render some routes! Let's create a Routes and Route component to handle this. Let's start with the Route component because all it needs to do is simply render the children we give it.

function Route({ children }) {
  return children;
}

Next we need our Routes component. Here we need to iterate through the route components and find one that matches the current location. We will also want to render the matched route inside of a route context, so that our route children can access any params that matched in the path. Let's start by creating the functions we need to match the routes. The first thing we need is a function that takes the path prop on a route and converts it into a regex that we can use to match against the current location.

function compilePath(path) {
  const keys = [];

  path = path.replace(/:(\w+)/g, (_, key) => {
    keys.push(key);
    return "([^\\/]+)";
  });

  const source = `^(${path})`;

  const regex = new RegExp(source, "i");
  return { regex, keys };
}

This will also give us an array of any keys that represet any params in the path pattern.

compilePath("/posts/:id");
// => { regex: /^(/posts/([^\/]+))/i, keys: ["id"] }

Next up we need a new function that will iterate through each child route and use the compilePath function to test if it matches the current location, while also extracing any matching params.

function matchRoutes(children, location) {
  const matches = [];

  React.Children.forEach(children, (route) => {
    const { regex, keys } = compilePath(route.props.path);
    const match = location.match(regex);

    if (match) {
      matches.push({
        route: route.props.children,
        params: keys.reduce((collection, param, index) => {
          collection[param] = params[index];
          return collection;
        }, {}),
      });
    }
  });

  return matches[0];
}

Finally we can create a new RouteContext and put together our Routes component. We'll pass the provided children into the matchRoutes function to find a matching route and render it inside of a provider for the route context.

const RouteContext = React.createContext({
  params: {},
});

function Routes({ children }) {
  const { location } = useContext(RouterContext);
  const match = useMemo(() => matchRoutes(children, location), [
    children,
    location,
  ]);

  // if no routes matched then render null
  if (!match) return null;

  return (
    <RouteContext.Provider value={{ params: match.params }}>
      {match.route}
    </RouteContext.Provider>
  );
}

At this point we actually have a functioning router, however, we are missing a small but crucial piece. Every good router needs a way to extract parameters from the URL. Thanks to our RouteContext we can easily create a useParams hook that our routes can use to extract this.

function useParams() {
  return useContext(RouteContext).params;
}

And with all of that we have our own basic working version of react router!

function Products() {
  return (
    <>
      <h4>Example Products</h4>
      <ul>
        <li>
          <Link to="/products/1">Product One</Link>
        </li>
        <li>
          <Link to="/products/2">Product Two</Link>
        </li>
      </ul>
    </>
  );
}

function Product() {
  const { id } = useParams();
  return (
    <>
      <h4>Viewing product {id}</h4>
      <Link to="/">Back to all products</Link>
    </>
  );
}

function App() {
  return (
    <Router>
      <Routes>
        <Route path="/products/:id">
          <Product />
        </Route>
        <Route path="/">
          <Products />
        </Route>
      </Routes>
    </Router>
  );
}


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Thomas Cullen


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Thomas Cullen | Sciencx (2021-03-10T12:38:17+00:00) Build a react-router clone from scratch. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2021/03/10/build-a-react-router-clone-from-scratch/

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