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@wordpress/components

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# `Navigator` `Navigator` is a collection components that allow rendering nested views/panels/menus (via the `Navigator.Screen` component) and navigate between them (via the `Navigator.Button` and `Navigator.BackButton` components). ## Usage ```jsx import { Navigator } from '@wordpress/components'; const MyNavigation = () => ( <Navigator initialPath="/"> <Navigator.Screen path="/"> <p>This is the home screen.</p> <Navigator.Button path="/child"> Navigate to child screen. </Navigator.Button> </Navigator.Screen> <Navigator.Screen path="/child"> <p>This is the child screen.</p> <Navigator.BackButton>Go back</Navigator.BackButton> </Navigator.Screen> </Navigator> ); ``` ### Hierarchical `path`s `Navigator` assumes that screens are organized hierarchically according to their `path`, which should follow a URL-like scheme where each path segment starts with and is separated by the `/` character. `Navigator` will treat "back" navigations as going to the parent screen — it is, therefore, the responsibility of the consumer of the component to create the correct screen hierarchy. For example: - `/` is the root of all paths. There should always be a screen with `path="/"`; - `/parent/child` is a child of `/parent`; - `/parent/child/grand-child` is a child of `/parent/child`; - `/parent/:param` is a child of `/parent` as well; - if the current screen has a `path="/parent/child/grand-child"`, when going "back" `Navigator` will try to recursively navigate the path hierarchy until a matching screen (or the root `/`) is found. ### Height and animations Due to how `Navigator.Screen` animations work, it is recommended that the `Navigator` component is assigned a `height` to prevent some potential UI jumps while moving across screens. ### Individual components `Navigator` is comprised of four individual components: - `Navigator`: a wrapper component and context provider. It holds the main logic for hiding and showing screens. - `Navigator.Screen`: represents a single view/screen/panel; - `Navigator.Button`: renders a button that allows navigating to a different `Navigator.Screen`; - `Navigator.BackButton`: renders a button that allows navigating to the parent `Navigator.Screen` (see the section above about hierarchical paths). For advanced usages, consumers can use the `useNavigator` hook. #### `Navigator` ##### Props ###### `initialPath`: `string` The initial active path. - Required: Yes ###### `children`: `string` The children elements. - Required: Yes #### `Navigator.Screen` ##### Props ###### `path`: `string` The screen's path, matched against the current path stored in the navigator. `Navigator` assumes that screens are organized hierarchically according to their `path`, which should follow a URL-like scheme where each path segment starts with and is separated by the `/` character. `Navigator` will treat "back" navigations as going to the parent screen — it is, therefore, the responsibility of the consumer of the component to create the correct screen hierarchy. For example: - `/` is the root of all paths. There should always be a screen with `path="/"`. - `/parent/child` is a child of `/parent`. - `/parent/child/grand-child` is a child of `/parent/child`. - `/parent/:param` is a child of `/parent` as well. - if the current screen has a `path` with value `/parent/child/grand-child`, when going "back" `Navigator` will try to recursively navigate the path hierarchy until a matching screen (or the root `/`) is found. - Required: Yes ###### `children`: `string` The children elements. - Required: Yes #### `Navigator.Button` ##### Props ###### `path`: `string` The path of the screen to navigate to. The value of this prop needs to be [a valid value for an HTML attribute](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/syntax.html#attributes-2). - Required: Yes ###### `attributeName`: `string` The HTML attribute used to identify the `Navigator.Button`, which is used by `Navigator` to restore focus. - Required: No - Default: `id` ###### `children`: `string` The children elements. - Required: No ###### Inherited props `Navigator.Button` also inherits all of the [`Button` props](/packages/components/src/button/README.md#props), except for `href` and `target`. #### `Navigator.BackButton` ##### Props ###### `children`: `string` The children elements. - Required: No ###### Inherited props `Navigator.BackButton` also inherits all of the [`Button` props](/packages/components/src/button/README.md#props), except for `href` and `target`. #### `useNavigator` You can retrieve a `navigator` instance by using the `useNavigator` hook. ##### Props The `navigator` instance has a few properties: ###### `goTo`: `( path: string, options: NavigateOptions ) => void` The `goTo` function allows navigating to a given path. The second argument can augment the navigation operations with different options. The available options are: - `focusTargetSelector`: `string`. An optional property used to specify the CSS selector used to restore focus on the matching element when navigating back; - `isBack`: `boolean`. An optional property used to specify whether the navigation should be considered as backwards (thus enabling focus restoration when possible, and causing the animation to be backwards too); - `skipFocus`: `boolean`. An optional property used to opt out of `Navigator`'s focus management, useful when the consumer of the component wants to manage focus themselves; ###### `goBack`: `( path: string, options: NavigateOptions ) => void` The `goBack` function allows navigating to the parent screen. Parent/child navigation only works if the paths you define are hierarchical (see note above). When a match is not found, the function will try to recursively navigate the path hierarchy until a matching screen (or the root `/`) is found. The available options are the same as for the `goTo` method, except for the `isBack` property, which is not available for the `goBack` method. ###### `location`: `NavigatorLocation` The `location` object represents the current location, and has a few properties: - `path`: `string`. The path associated to the location. - `isBack`: `boolean`. A flag that is `true` when the current location was reached by navigating backwards. - `isInitial`: `boolean`. A flag that is `true` only for the initial location. ###### `params`: `Record< string, string | string[] >` The parsed record of parameters from the current location. For example if the current screen path is `/product/:productId` and the location is `/product/123`, then `params` will be `{ productId: '123' }`.