Note: this is the Angular 1.x source for UI-Router version 1.0 alpha. If you are looking for the source for UI-Router version 0.2.x, it can be found here
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Angular UI-Router is a client-side Single Page Application routing framework for AngularJS.
Routing frameworks for SPAs update the browser's URL as the user nagivates through the app. Conversely, this allows changes to the browser's URL to drive navigation through the app, thus allowing the user to create a bookmark to a location deep within the SPA.
UI-Router applications are modeled as a hierarchical tree of states. UI-Router provides a state machine to manage the transitions between those application states in a transaction-like manner.
(1) Get UI-Router in one of the following ways:
- clone & build this repository
- download the release (or minified)
- link to cdn
- via jspm: by running
$ jspm install angular-ui-router
from your console - or via npm: by running
$ npm install angular-ui-router
from your console - or via Bower: by running
$ bower install angular-ui-router
from your console - or via Component: by running
$ component install angular-ui/ui-router
from your console
(2) Include angular-ui-router.js
(or angular-ui-router.min.js
) in your index.html
, after including Angular itself (For Component users: ignore this step)
(3) Add 'ui.router'
to your main module's list of dependencies (For Component users: replace 'ui.router'
with require('angular-ui-router')
)
When you're done, your setup should look similar to the following:
<!doctype html>
<html ng-app="myApp">
<head>
<script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.1.5/angular.min.js"></script>
<script src="js/angular-ui-router.min.js"></script>
<script>
var myApp = angular.module('myApp', ['ui.router']);
// For Component users, it should look like this:
// var myApp = angular.module('myApp', [require('angular-ui-router')]);
</script>
...
</head>
<body>
...
</body>
</html>
The majority of UI-Router's power is in its ability to nest states & views.
(1) First, follow the setup instructions detailed above.
(2) Then, add a ui-view
directive to the <body />
of your app.
<!-- index.html -->
<body>
<div ui-view></div>
<!-- We'll also add some navigation: -->
<a ui-sref="state1">State 1</a>
<a ui-sref="state2">State 2</a>
</body>
(3) You'll notice we also added some links with ui-sref
directives. In addition to managing state transitions, this directive auto-generates the href
attribute of the <a />
element it's attached to, if the corresponding state has a URL. Next we'll add some templates. These will plug into the ui-view
within index.html
. Notice that they have their own ui-view
as well! That is the key to nesting states and views.
<!-- partials/state1.html -->
<h1>State 1</h1>
<hr/>
<a ui-sref="state1.list">Show List</a>
<div ui-view></div>
<!-- partials/state2.html -->
<h1>State 2</h1>
<hr/>
<a ui-sref="state2.list">Show List</a>
<div ui-view></div>
(4) Next, we'll add some child templates. These will get plugged into the ui-view
of their parent state templates.
<!-- partials/state1.list.html -->
<h3>List of State 1 Items</h3>
<ul>
<li ng-repeat="item in items">{{ item }}</li>
</ul>
<!-- partials/state2.list.html -->
<h3>List of State 2 Things</h3>
<ul>
<li ng-repeat="thing in things">{{ thing }}</li>
</ul>
(5) Finally, we'll wire it all up with $stateProvider
. Set up your states in the module config, as in the following:
myApp.config(function($stateProvider, $urlRouterProvider) {
//
// For any unmatched url, redirect to /state1
$urlRouterProvider.otherwise("/state1");
//
// Now set up the states
$stateProvider
.state('state1', {
url: "/state1",
templateUrl: "partials/state1.html"
})
.state('state1.list', {
url: "/list",
templateUrl: "partials/state1.list.html",
controller: function($scope) {
$scope.items = ["A", "List", "Of", "Items"];
}
})
.state('state2', {
url: "/state2",
templateUrl: "partials/state2.html"
})
.state('state2.list', {
url: "/list",
templateUrl: "partials/state2.list.html",
controller: function($scope) {
$scope.things = ["A", "Set", "Of", "Things"];
}
});
});
(6) See this quick start example in action.
(7) This only scratches the surface
Another great feature is the ability to have multiple ui-view
s view per template.
Pro Tip: While multiple parallel views are a powerful feature, you'll often be able to manage your interfaces more effectively by nesting your views, and pairing those views with nested states.
(1) Follow the setup instructions detailed above.
(2) Add one or more ui-view
to your app, give them names.
<!-- index.html -->
<body>
<div ui-view="viewA"></div>
<div ui-view="viewB"></div>
<!-- Also a way to navigate -->
<a ui-sref="route1">Route 1</a>
<a ui-sref="route2">Route 2</a>
</body>
(3) Set up your states in the module config:
myApp.config(function($stateProvider) {
$stateProvider
.state('index', {
url: "",
views: {
"viewA": { template: "index.viewA" },
"viewB": { template: "index.viewB" }
}
})
.state('route1', {
url: "/route1",
views: {
"viewA": { template: "route1.viewA" },
"viewB": { template: "route1.viewB" }
}
})
.state('route2', {
url: "/route2",
views: {
"viewA": { template: "route2.viewA" },
"viewB": { template: "route2.viewB" }
}
})
});
(4) See this quick start example in action.
- In-Depth Guide
- API Reference
- Sample App (Source)
- FAQ
- Slides comparing ngRoute to ui-router
- UI-Router Extras / Addons (@christopherthielen)
- Introduction Video (egghead.io)
- Tim Kindberg on Angular UI-Router
- Activating States (egghead.io)
- Learn Angular.js using UI-Router (LearnCode.academy)
Please read our Contributor guidelines before reporting an issue or creating a pull request.