Nuxt/docs/3.api/2.composables/use-router.md

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useRouter The useRouter composable returns the router instance.
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Source i-simple-icons-github https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt/blob/main/packages/nuxt/src/app/composables/router.ts xs
<script setup lang="ts">
const router = useRouter()
</script>

If you only need the router instance within your template, use $router:

<template>
  <button @click="$router.back()">Back</button>
</template>

If you have a pages/ directory, useRouter is identical in behavior to the one provided by vue-router.

::read-more{icon="i-simple-icons-vuedotjs" to="https://router.vuejs.org/api/interfaces/Router.html#Properties-currentRoute" target="_blank"} Read vue-router documentation about the Router interface. ::

Basic Manipulation

  • addRoute(): Add a new route to the router instance. parentName can be provided to add new route as the child of an existing route.
  • removeRoute(): Remove an existing route by its name.
  • getRoutes(): Get a full list of all the route records.
  • hasRoute(): Checks if a route with a given name exists.
  • resolve(): Returns the normalized version of a route location. Also includes an href property that includes any existing base.
const router = useRouter()

router.addRoute({ name: 'home', path: '/home', component: Home })
router.removeRoute('home')
router.getRoutes()
router.hasRoute('home')
router.resolve({ name: 'home' })

::note router.addRoute() adds route details into an array of routes and it is useful while building Nuxt plugins while router.push() on the other hand, triggers a new navigation immediately and it is useful in pages, Vue components and composable. ::

Based on History API

  • back(): Go back in history if possible, same as router.go(-1).
  • forward(): Go forward in history if possible, same as router.go(1).
  • go(): Move forward or backward through the history without the hierarchical restrictions enforced in router.back() and router.forward().
  • push(): Programmatically navigate to a new URL by pushing an entry in the history stack. It is recommended to use navigateTo instead.
  • replace(): Programmatically navigate to a new URL by replacing the current entry in the routes history stack. It is recommended to use navigateTo instead.
const router = useRouter()

router.back()
router.forward()
router.go(3)
router.push({ path: "/home" })
router.replace({ hash: "#bio" })

::read-more{icon="i-simple-icons-mdnwebdocs" color="gray" to="https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/History" target="_blank"} Read more about the browser's History API. ::

Navigation Guards

useRouter composable provides afterEach, beforeEach and beforeResolve helper methods that acts as navigation guards.

However, Nuxt has a concept of route middleware that simplifies the implementation of navigation guards and provides a better developer experience.

:read-more{to="/docs/guide/directory-structure/middleware"}

Promise and Error Handling

  • isReady(): Returns a Promise that resolves when the router has completed the initial navigation.
  • onError: Adds an error handler that is called every time a non caught error happens during navigation.

:read-more{icon="i-simple-icons-vuedotjs" to="https://router.vuejs.org/api/interfaces/Router.html#Methods" title="Vue Router Docs" target="_blank"}

Universal Router Instance

If you do not have a pages/ folder, then useRouter will return a universal router instance with similar helper methods, but be aware that not all features may be supported or behave in exactly the same way as with vue-router.