@title
Routing
@intro
We add the Angular Router and learn to navigate among the views
@description
We received new requirements for our Tour of Heroes application:
* Add a *Dashboard* view.
* Navigate between the *Heroes* and *Dashboard* views.
* Clicking on a hero in either view navigates to a detail view of the selected hero.
* Clicking a *deep link* in an email opens the detail view for a particular hero.
When we’re done, users will be able to navigate the app like this:
We'll add Angular’s *Router* to our app to satisfy these requirements.
The [Routing and Navigation](../guide/router.html) chapter covers the router
in more detail than we will in this tutorial.
Run the for this part.
## Where We Left Off
Before we continue with our Tour of Heroes, let’s verify that
we have the following structure after adding our hero service
and hero detail component. If not, we’ll need to go back and follow the previous chapters.
The application runs and updates automatically as we continue to build the Tour of Heroes.
## Action plan
Here's our plan:
* Turn `AppComponent` into an application shell that only handles navigation
* Relocate the *Heroes* concerns within the current `AppComponent` to a separate `HeroesComponent`
* Add routing
* Create a new `DashboardComponent`
* Tie the *Dashboard* into the navigation structure
*Routing* is another name for *navigation*. The *router* is the mechanism for navigating from view to view.
## Splitting the *AppComponent*
Our current app loads `AppComponent` and immediately displays the list of heroes.
Our revised app should present a shell with a choice of views (*Dashboard* and *Heroes*)
and then default to one of them.
The `AppComponent` should only handle navigation.
Let's move the display of *Heroes* out of `AppComponent` and into its own `HeroesComponent`.
### *HeroesComponent*
`AppComponent` is already dedicated to *Heroes*.
Instead of moving anything out of `AppComponent`, we'll just rename it `HeroesComponent`
and create a new `AppComponent` shell separately.
The steps are to rename:
* app.component.ts file to heroes.component.ts
* `AppComponent` class to `HeroesComponent` (rename locally, _only_ in this file)
* Selector `my-app` to `my-heroes`
## Create *AppComponent*
The new `AppComponent` will be the application shell.
It will have some navigation links at the top and a display area below for the pages we navigate to.
The initial steps are:
* Create the file src/app/app.component.ts.
* Define an exported `AppComponent` class.
* Add an `@Component` !{_decorator} above the class with a `my-app` selector.
* Move the following from `HeroesComponent` to `AppComponent`:
* `title` class property
* `@Component` template `
` element, which contains a binding to `title`
* Add a `` element to the app template just below the heading so we still see the heroes.
* Add `HeroesComponent` to the `!{_declsVsDirectives}` !{_array} of `!{_AppModuleVsAppComp}` so Angular recognizes the `` tags.
* Add `HeroService` to the `providers` !{_array} of `!{_AppModuleVsAppComp}` because we'll need it in every other view.
* Remove `HeroService` from the `HeroesComponent` `providers` !{_array} since it has been promoted.
* Add the supporting `import` statements for `AppComponent`.
Our first draft looks like this:
The app still runs and still displays heroes.
Our refactoring of `AppComponent` into a new `AppComponent` and a `HeroesComponent` worked!
We have done no harm.
## Add Routing
We're ready to take the next step.
Instead of displaying heroes automatically, we'd like to show them *after* the user clicks a button.
In other words, we'd like to navigate to the list of heroes.
We'll need the Angular *Router*.
### *<base href>*
Open `index.html` and ensure there is a `` element
(or a script that dynamically sets this element)
at the top of the `` section.
~~~ {.callout.is-important}
base href is essential
See the *base href* section of the [router](../guide/router.html#base-href)
guide to learn why this matters, and what to add if the `base`
element is missing.
~~~
{@a configure-routes}
*Routes* tell the router which views to display when a user clicks a link or
pastes a URL into the browser address bar.
Let's define our first route as a route to the heroes component:
The `!{_RoutesVsAtRouteConfig}` !{_are} !{_an} !{_array} of *route definitions*.
We have only one route definition at the moment but rest assured, we'll add more.
This *route definition* has the following parts:
- **path**: the router matches this route's path to the URL in the browser address bar (`!{_routePathPrefix}heroes`).
**name**: the official name of the route;
it *must* begin with a capital letter to avoid confusion with the *path* (`Heroes`).
- **component**: the component that the router should create when navigating to this route (`HeroesComponent`).
Learn more about defining routes with `!{_RoutesVsAtRouteConfig}` in the [Routing](../guide/router.html) chapter.
### Router Outlet
If we paste the path, `/heroes`, into the browser address bar,
the router should match it to the `!{_heroesRoute}` route and display the `HeroesComponent`.
But where?
We have to ***tell it where*** by adding a `` element to the bottom of the template.
`RouterOutlet` is one of the directives provided by the `!{_RouterModuleVsRouterDirectives}`.
The router displays each component immediately below the `` as we navigate through the application.
### Router Links
We don't really expect users to paste a route URL into the address bar.
We add an anchor tag to the template which, when clicked, triggers navigation to the `HeroesComponent`.
The revised template looks like this:
Refresh the browser. We see only the app title and heroes link. We don't see the heroes list.
The browser's address bar shows `/`.
The route path to `HeroesComponent` is `/heroes`, not `/`.
We don't have a route that matches the path `/`, so there is nothing to show.
That's something we'll want to fix.
We click the *Heroes* navigation link, the browser bar updates to `/heroes`,
and now we see the list of heroes. We are navigating at last!
At this stage, our `AppComponent` looks like this.
{@example 'toh-pt5/ts/src/app/app.component.1.ts' region='v2'}
The *AppComponent* is now attached to a router and displaying routed views.
For this reason and to distinguish it from other kinds of components,
we call this type of component a *Router Component*.
## Add a *Dashboard*
Routing only makes sense when we have multiple views. We need another view.
Create a placeholder `DashboardComponent` that gives us something to navigate to and from.
We’ll come back and make it more useful later.
### Configure the dashboard route
Go back to `!{_appRoutingTsVsAppComp}` and teach it to navigate to the dashboard.
Import the dashboard component and
add the following route definition to the `!{_RoutesVsAtRouteConfig}` !{_array} of definitions.
#### !{_redirectTo}
We want the app to show the dashboard when it starts and
we want to see a nice URL in the browser address bar that says `/dashboard`.
Remember that the browser launches with `/` in the address bar.
#### Add navigation to the template
Finally, add a dashboard navigation link to the template, just above the *Heroes* link.
We nested the two links within `