# Routing
There are new requirements for the Tour of Heroes app:
* Add a *Dashboard* view.
* Add the ability to navigate between the *Heroes* and *Dashboard* views.
* When users click a hero name in either view, navigate to a detail view of the selected hero.
* When users click a *deep link* in an email, open the detail view for a particular hero.
When you’re done, users will be able to navigate the app like this:
## Add the `AppRoutingModule`
In Angular, the best practice is to load and configure the router in a separate, top-level module
that is dedicated to routing and imported by the root `AppModule`.
By convention, the module class name is `AppRoutingModule` and it belongs in the `app-routing.module.ts` in the `src/app` folder.
Use the CLI to generate it.
ng generate module app-routing --flat --module=app
`--flat` puts the file in `src/app` instead of its own folder.
`--module=app` tells the CLI to register it in the `imports` array of the `AppModule`.
The generated file looks like this:
Replace it with the following:
First, `AppRoutingModule` imports `RouterModule` and `Routes` so the app can have routing functionality. The next import, `HeroesComponent`, will give the Router somewhere to go once you configure the routes.
Notice that the `CommonModule` references and `declarations` array are unnecessary, so are no
longer part of `AppRoutingModule`. The following sections explain the rest of the `AppRoutingModule` in more detail.
### Routes
The next part of the file is where you configure your routes.
*Routes* tell the Router which view to display when a user clicks a link or
pastes a URL into the browser address bar.
Since `AppRoutingModule` already imports `HeroesComponent`, you can use it in the `routes` array:
A typical Angular `Route` has two properties:
* `path`: a string that matches the URL in the browser address bar.
* `component`: the component that the router should create when navigating to this route.
This tells the router to match that URL to `path: 'heroes'`
and display the `HeroesComponent` when the URL is something like `localhost:4200/heroes`.
### `RouterModule.forRoot()`
The `@NgModule` metadata initializes the router and starts it listening for browser location changes.
The following line adds the `RouterModule` to the `AppRoutingModule` `imports` array and
configures it with the `routes` in one step by calling
`RouterModule.forRoot()`:
The method is called `forRoot()` because you configure the router at the application's root level.
The `forRoot()` method supplies the service providers and directives needed for routing,
and performs the initial navigation based on the current browser URL.
Next, `AppRoutingModule` exports `RouterModule` so it will be available throughout the app.
## Add `RouterOutlet`
Open the `AppComponent` template and replace the `` element with a `` element.
The `AppComponent` template no longer needs `` because the app will only display the `HeroesComponent` when the user navigates to it.
The `` tells the router where to display routed views.
The `RouterOutlet` is one of the router directives that became available to the `AppComponent`
because `AppModule` imports `AppRoutingModule` which exported `RouterModule`. The `ng generate` command you ran at the start of this tutorial added this import because of the `--module=app` flag. If you manually created `app-routing.module.ts` or used a tool other than the CLI to do so, you'll need to import `AppRoutingModule` into `app.module.ts` and add it to the `imports` array of the `NgModule`.
#### Try it
You should still be running with this CLI command.
ng serve
The browser should refresh and display the app title but not the list of heroes.
Look at the browser's address bar.
The URL ends in `/`.
The route path to `HeroesComponent` is `/heroes`.
Append `/heroes` to the URL in the browser address bar.
You should see the familiar heroes master/detail view.
{@a routerlink}
## Add a navigation link (`routerLink`)
Ideally, users should be able to click a link to navigate rather
than pasting a route URL into the address bar.
Add a `