Dynamic Route Matching

Very often we need to map routes with the given pattern to the same component. For example, we may have a UserProfile component which should be rendered for all users but with different user IDs. In @esmx/router, we can use a dynamic segment in the path to achieve that.

Route Params

Dynamic segments are denoted by a colon :. When a route is matched, the value of the dynamic segments will be exposed as route.params:

const routes: RouteConfig[] = [
  // dynamic segment starts with a colon
  { path: '/users/:id', component: UserProfile }
];

Now URLs like /users/42 and /users/alice will both map to the same route:

// When the URL is /users/42
console.log(route.params.id); // '42'

// When the URL is /users/alice
console.log(route.params.id); // 'alice'
Tip

All param values are strings. Even if the URL contains /users/42, route.params.id will be the string '42', not the number 42.

Multiple Params

You can have multiple dynamic segments in the same route, and they will map to corresponding fields on route.params:

const routes: RouteConfig[] = [
  { path: '/users/:userId/posts/:postId', component: UserPost }
];
PatternMatched Pathparams
/users/:userId/posts/:postId/users/alice/posts/123{ userId: 'alice', postId: '123' }
/blog/:year/:month/:slug/blog/2024/01/hello-world{ year: '2024', month: '01', slug: 'hello-world' }
/:lang/docs/:page/en/docs/intro{ lang: 'en', page: 'intro' }

Optional Params

You can make a parameter optional by adding a ? after it. Optional parameters will match routes both with and without the segment:

const routes: RouteConfig[] = [
  { path: '/search/:query?', component: SearchPage }
];
URLparams
/search{ query: '' }
/search/vue-router{ query: 'vue-router' }

When an optional parameter is not present in the URL, its value will be an empty string ''.

Catch-All / 404 Routes

A wildcard pattern can catch all paths — useful for 404 pages or fallback routes. Use the (.*) pattern (or (.*)* for capturing the value as an array):

const routes: RouteConfig[] = [
  { path: '/', component: Home },
  { path: '/about', component: About },

  // This will match everything that didn't match above
  { path: '/:pathMatch(.*)*', component: NotFound }
];
// When the URL is /non-existing-page
console.log(route.params.pathMatch); // 'non-existing-page'

// When the URL is /files/a/b/c
console.log(route.params.pathMatch);      // 'a' (first segment)
console.log(route.paramsArray.pathMatch);  // ['a', 'b', 'c']
Warning

Make sure to place your catch-all route last in the routes array. Since routes are evaluated in order, a catch-all at the top would match every URL and prevent specific routes from ever being reached.

Accessing Params

route.params

An object containing key/value pairs of dynamic segments. Each value is a string. For repeating parameters (like (.*)*), only the first match is provided:

// Route: /files/:path*
// URL: /files/a/b/c
route.params.path  // 'a'

route.paramsArray

An object containing key/value pairs where each value is a string array. This is useful for repeating parameters and ensures you always get all matched values:

// Route: /files/:path*
// URL: /files/a/b/c
route.paramsArray.path  // ['a', 'b', 'c']

// Route: /users/:id
// URL: /users/42
route.paramsArray.id    // ['42']

Query Params

Query parameters are the key/value pairs after the ? in a URL. They don't need to be defined in the route pattern — they're always available:

// URL: /search?q=vue&sort=date&tag=frontend&tag=ssr
route.query.q       // 'vue'
route.query.sort    // 'date'
route.query.tag     // 'frontend' (first value only)

route.queryArray

For query parameters that appear multiple times, use queryArray to get all values:

// URL: /search?tag=frontend&tag=ssr
route.query.tag           // 'frontend'
route.queryArray.tag      // ['frontend', 'ssr']
  • route.query: Record<string, string | undefined> — First value for each query key
  • route.queryArray: Record<string, string[] | undefined> — All values for each query key

Hash

The hash fragment (everything after # in the URL) is available via route.hash:

// URL: /about#team
route.hash  // '#team'

The hash always includes the # prefix. If there's no hash in the URL, route.hash is an empty string.

Pattern Matching with path-to-regexp

Under the hood, @esmx/router uses the path-to-regexp library for pattern matching. This gives you access to advanced matching features:

PatternDescriptionExample Match
:idNamed parameter/users/42
:id?Optional parameter/users or /users/42
:path*Zero or more segments/files or /files/a/b
:path+One or more segments/files/a or /files/a/b
:id(\\d+)Parameter with regex constraint/users/42 (not /users/alice)
(.*)*Catch-all wildcardAnything

Custom Regex Constraints

You can restrict what a parameter matches using inline regex:

const routes: RouteConfig[] = [
  // Only matches numeric IDs
  { path: '/users/:id(\\d+)', component: UserProfile },

  // Only matches specific values
  { path: '/:lang(en|fr|de)/docs', component: Docs }
];

URL Encoding

Route paths should be URL-encoded. The router handles encoding and decoding automatically — when you define routes and access parameters, you work with decoded values:

const routes: RouteConfig[] = [
  // Define with encoded path if the literal path contains special chars
  { path: '/docs/:page', component: DocsPage }
];

// URL: /docs/getting%20started
route.params.page  // 'getting started' (decoded)

When navigating programmatically, you can pass either encoded or decoded paths:

router.push('/docs/getting started');   // works — encoded automatically
router.push('/docs/getting%20started'); // also works